will not take upon us to determine. The first variety (c.) 
which is marked in the Banksian Herbarium, as agreeing 
with the one in the Linnean, and was originally in that of 
Miter, exactly corresponds with Dittenius’s figure, and has 
a great number of nearly sessile flawers, crowded together into 
one capitulum, and seldom more than one of these heads of 
flowers on one leaf. In our plant (y.) the flowers were 
solitary, growing along the margin, several on the same 
leaf, which is much larger. This appears sufficiently distinct 
from Ditienius’s plant, but @ and ¢ making intermediate 
links, we think it safer to unite them under one. Of the last 
variety (*) we know nothing but from the specimen above 
quoted, the species of which, from the defect of flowers, 
cannot be certainly ascertained. 
A climbing plant, which, if planted in the border of the 
conservatory, will extend many feet. Flowers most part of 
the summer. Native of the Canary-Islands. Communicated 
by Jonn Wacker. Esq. of Arno’s-Groye. — : 
