i)b BOTANY. 



ce -nua, but it is a different species. There are two varie- 

 ties, one with bright yellow flowers, the ether with red. 



Celosia. 



go5cp5dl8B oe^.bl. (flower yellow.) 8c8« 



gr/SqoSfn (501061. (flower reel) 



88ie8lVu 



SENSITIVE PLANT. 



Where " garden flowers grow wild," near deserted 

 iions the pink globular heads of the sensitive plant 

 may he often seen peeping through the grass. It is cul- 

 tivated by the Burmese, and is quite naturalized. 



Mi mora. 



cBco^Sh SSo8Scoj5o 



CHRISTMAS DAISY. 



A species of aster, or Christmas daisy, is seen occasion- 

 ally in European gardens. 



FEVERFEW. 



Feverfew a gaudy flowered annual, usually denominated 

 santhemum, but which the botanists have removed to 

 another genus, is often seen in gardens in Maulmain. 



COREOPSIS. 



The bright yellow flowered coreopsis, of the same tribe 

 as the above, which derives its name from the resemblance 

 of its seeds to an insect, is not uncommon in gardens. 

 Coreopsis. 



PERIWINCLE. 



Periwineles, both the red and white varieties, are fre- 

 quently cultivated by natives as well as Europeans. 

 Vine a rosea. 



OOGo5oG£§So^8a Gg'j|gn G£O|SspGO0 L)Sn 

 PLUMBAGO. 



Three different species of plun~:bago, the red, the white, 

 and the blue flowered, are common in gardens ; and the 



