color ( No. 588) of this work, varying with {potted leaves; to 
which alfo the éricolor of the firft volume of Jacguin’s Icones 
Pl. Rar. belongs. Thefe f{pecies are but too nearly allied; — 
quadricolor however is altogether a flendercr plant, having — 
narrower leaves, more channelled and acuminate, and not re- | 
cumbent from the bafe, from whence they are on the contrary — 
upright for fome diftance ; the inner fegments of its corolla are — 
befides about twice the length of the outer, while the fame in — 
tricolor are only about one-third longer. Both propagate — 
abundantly by offsets ; and flower early in the fpring. Quite 
icentlefs. 
Our drawing was made at Mr. Wittrams’s Nurfery, 
Turnham-Green. A native of the Cape of Good Hope. G, 
