26 
Mr. Ha worth's new Arrangement 
ramosa. 
5 
punctata. 
6 
Phyt. t. 129. f. 2. — " Aloe capcnsis valde aculeata. 
Pet. Gaz. Cat. 710. 463. t. 88. f. 2. Common prickly 
cape Aloe. The flowers are wholly purple in my 
Lord's (the Bishop of London's) paintings, and the 
stalk all green ; in mine, the first are partly yellow, 
and the last reddish, which may proceed from diffe- 
rent growths." 
Obs. This plant comes near my A, tuberculoid, and 
may follow that species in my arrangement. 
Aloe foliis lanceolato-ovatis acutis erectiusculis laevi- 
bus serrato-spinosis, caule frutescente dichotomo. 
A. spinosa arborescens ramosa. Pluk. Phyt. 1. 129- /. 4. 
A. capensis arborescens ramosa. Pet. Gaz. Cdt. no. 264. 
f. 87./. 9. 
Obs. This plant, if it does not belong to A . socco- 
trina or purpurascens, will range in my system after 
the latter, in the same subdivision: A. arborescens, 
which is figured on the same plate in Plukenet, (/. 4.) 
is the first of the next subdivision. 
Aloe subacaulis foliis imbricatis carinatis incurvatis 
undique albo maculato-punctatis. 
A. africana vulgari similis, floribus rubris et pauciori- 
bus. Pluk. Phyt. 129. L 
" A. macula ta laevis. Pet. Gaz. Cat. no. 463. t. 88./. 1. 
Common smooth Cape Aloe. The leaves edged and 
spotted with white ; the flowers red, but yellow next 
the stalk. Father Tachard's figure seems the same, 
but that he has omitted the white spots in the leaves. 
The flowers in the Bishop of London's paintings are 
all 
