1870.] GARDEN RECORDS. 221 



Surpasse Gloire de Nancy. — A variety of moderately vigorous habit, with green 

 leaves; the flowers too nearly resembling those of Gloire de Nancy, but not 

 equal to that variety either in truss or in the quality of the individual blossoms. 



Tom Pouce Cerise. — A dwarfish-growing variety, with faintly zonate leaves and 

 compact trusses of pale cerise-scarlet flowers. 



Tom Pouce Pose. — A dwarf-growing variety, with faintly zoned leaves and 

 dense habit ; the flowers are of a rosy pink, loose and rough, and by no means 

 equal in quality to those of Marie Lemoine. 



Triumph. — Coarse-growing, with faintly zonate leaves, and large loose flowers 

 of an orange-scarlet colour, similar in tint to those of Le Vesuve, but of inferior 

 quality. 



Triomphe clc Lorraine**. — A variety of some merit, being of moderate growth, 

 with faintly zonate leaves and close trusses of carmine-scarlet flowers, of the 

 same colour as those of Emile Lemoine. 



Triomphe de Thumesnil**. — A vigorous-habited sort of some merit : the leaves 

 are green, not zoned ; while the flowers, which are scarlet with a faint tinge of 

 cerise, are large and full. 



Troubadour. — A tall coarse-growing variety, with indistinct zones and poor 

 trusses of light-scarlet flowers. 



Victor. — A coarse-growing sort, with faintly zonate leaves and orange-scarlet 

 flowers in good-sized trusses, but not equal to Le Vesuve. 



Victor (G. Smith)**. — Dwarf and free-blooming in habit, with the leaves faintly 

 zoned and the scarlet flowers in compact trusses. The flowers are of the same 

 colour as those of Wilhelm Pfitzer, and closely resemble those of that variety, 

 but the foliage is smaller. A variety well worth growing. Received from Mr G. 

 Smith. 



Victor Lemoine*** . — One of the finest of the varieties in the whole collection. 

 The plant is of a rather vigorous habit of growth ; the leaves are marked with an 

 indistinct zone and the flower-trusses are larger. The flowers themselves are 

 somewhat rough, having serrated petals ; but they form a fine head, and are of a 

 rich orange-scarlet, brighter than Le Veauve. 



Vivian. — A variety closely resembling Gloire de Nancy in every respect, but 

 scarcely equal to it in merit ; the leaves are very indistinctly zonate. 



Wilhelm Pfitzer**. — One of the useful second-class sorts, of moderately vigorous 

 growth, with indistinctly zonate leaves, and fair-sized trusses of good full flowers 

 of a light-scarlet colour. Received from Messrs Carter & Co. 



Zelinda. — Dwarf in habit, with indistinctly zonate leaves. The flowers are 

 small and poor, scarlet, resembling those of Triomphe de Thumesnil, but not so 

 freely produced. — 'Proceedings of the Royal Horticultural Society.' 



GAEDEN RECORDS. 

 NO. V. 



WORTON COTTAGE, ISLESWORTH, LONDON, THE RESIDENCE OF 

 W. BECK, ESQ. 



{Continued from page 178.) 

 Our illustration is drawn from this place — so long associated with the successful 

 cultivation of florists' flowers — for the sake of indicating what Mr Wiggins, the 

 gardener at Worton Cottage, is doing with the Cyclamen. Not that we wish it 



