SUBSTANCE, &C. OF LEAVES. 173 



natural habit of the genus, as in many 

 MimoscE of New Holland; see M. vtr- 

 tlciIlata,Curt. Mag. t. 110, and myr- 

 tlfolia, t. 302 ; also Lathjrus Nissolia, 

 Engl. Bot. t. 112. The germination 

 of this last plant requires investigation, 

 for if its first leaves be pinnated, it is 

 exactly a parallel case with the New 

 Holland Mitnosce'*. 

 Cucullatum,/. 102, hooded, when the edges 

 meet in the lower part, and expand in the 

 upper, as those of the curious genus 

 Sarracenia. See Curt. Mag. t, 780 and 

 849, and *S. adunca, Exot. Bot. t. 5S, 

 Appendlcidatiun,/. 103, furnished with an 

 additional organ for some particular pur- 

 pose not essential to a leaf, as Dioiiaa 

 muscipula. Curt. Mrto-. f. 780, cultivated 

 very successfully by Mr. Salisbury, at 

 BromptoJi, whose leaves each terminate 

 in a pair of toothed irritable lobes, that 

 close over and imprison insects ; or Ne- 

 penthes distillatoria, liwnph. Amhoitu 

 V. 5. t. 59, /. 2, the leaf of which bears 

 a covered pitcher, full of water. Aldro- 



* See p. 516, Note. 



