the specimens of A. foliosa here figured, the leaves and 
flowers of which far exceed those found in the native state 
of the plant. 
A. foliosa was raised by Isaac Anderson Henry, Esq. 
(the introducer of A. sarmentosa, Tab. 6210) from seeds 
sent by his niece, Mrs. Johnstone, from the N. W. Hima- 
laya. It flowered on the 18th May of the present year, 
and continued in full bloom till September, throwing out 
flower after flower during all that time. Mr, Anderson 
Henry further informs me that he has raised young plants 
of what appears to be the same species, but with shorter 
and broader leaves. 
Dusor. Whole plant covered with lax soft hairs. Loot- 
stock woody, about the size of a nut, without stolons, 
sending up one or more very short stems, so reduced in 
native specimens that the leaves are to all appearance 
radical, whilst in the cultivated example here figured the 
stem is two inches high, and red. Leaves two to three 
inches long, elliptic or elliptic-oblong, obtuse or acute, 
deep green, hairy on both surfaces, narrowed into a petiole 
half as long as the blade or longer. Scape solitary, stout, - 
erect, three to five inches high. Umbel many-flowered ; 
bracts very small in native specimens, linear or obovate 
and sometimes leafy in cultivated ones; pedicels one-fourth 
to three-fourths of an inch long. Calyzx-lobes oblong oF 
oblong-lanceolate, obtuse. Corolla one-third to half an 
inch in diameter, pale flesh-coloured; mouth contracted, 
thickened, greenish ; lobes orbicular-obovate, tips rounded. 
Stamens minute, filaments very short. Ovary turbinate.— 
Ji Boi 
Fig. 1, Calyx; 2, corolla laid open; 3, ovary :—all enlarged. 
