6 Mr. Haworth's new Arrangement 
and for much valuable and liberal information concerning the old 
ones, I am under great obligations to my good and much respected 
friend Mr. Aiton, of Kew, to whom my best thanks and best wishes, 
on this occasion, are but a trifling and inadequate reward. 
The loci natales, or habitats as they are usually, but perhaps 
inaccurately called, of the new species, and the names of their 
introducers into the British gardens, I have carefully given, under 
their proper heads, as far as I am acquainted with them. 
Little Chelsea, 
November 1801. 
SYNOPSIS SPECIERUM. 
ALOE. 
* Parviflor^:. Corollis plerumque virescentibus , laciniis scspius revolutis. 
■f Rigidse, plerumque caulescentes, Jbliis rigidissimis integris. 
viscosa. 
1 
aspera. 
2 
Aloe foliis trifariis ovatis acutis perviridibus minime 
tuberculatis, caule stricto. 
A. viscosa. Willd. Sp. PI. 2. 191. excluso synonymo et 
icone Tillii. 
A. africana erecta triangularis et viscosa. Comm. PrceL 
f.3l. 
A. africana, &c. Dill. Elth. t. 13. f. 13. 
A. viscosa. Plantes Grasses, p. 16, cum icone. 
Aloe foliis trifariis orbiculato-ovatis acuminatis viridi- 
bus ; supra subconcavis ; subtus valde tuberculatis, 
caule stricto. 
Habitat ad Cap. Bon. Sp. D. Masson. 
Obs. This species is of difficult culture, and proba- 
bly will not long remain alive in Europe. 
^ * foliolosa. 
