Hedera—continued. 
H. H., chrysocarpa (golden-fruited).* Z, smallish, sometimes 
nearly triangular and three-lobed; central lobe frequently pro- 
longed, with a few sharp lobes or notches ; colour greyish-green ; 
principal veins lined with markings of a lighter shade. A quick- 
growing climber. 
H. H. conglomerata (crowded).* A marked, slow-growing, erect 
variety, with small, wavy leaves, and very short internodes. An 
excellent subject for rockwork. See Fig. 184, 
H. H. cuspidata minor (smaller cuspidate). 
lobed, the lobes equal and crenated ; colour a deep rich glossy 
green, with whitish veins. A pretty small-leaved variety, with 
bright reddish-purple leaf-stalks, and stems purplish when young. 
H. H. deltoidea (deltoid). Z. bluntly deltoid, blackish-green, 
changing in autumn to a dull purplish-bronze. Stem purplish, 
rather stout. A distinct wall Ivy. (S: H. Ivy, 75.) 
H. H. dentata (toothed). A large handsome Ivy, somewhat like 
a. H: Rægneriana, but with less glossy leaves, which are not 
unfrequently distinctly toothed, See Fig. 185 
l. uniformly three- 
Fig. 186. HEDERA HELIX DIGITATA. 
H. H. digitata (digitate). l. more decidedly digitate than in most 
other Ivies, blackish-green, with whitish veins. A rather vigorous 
grower, and an excellent Ivy for walls. See me — — — 
Caenwoodiana is a plant which searcely differs (if at all) from 
H. H. digitata. 
Fic. 187. HEDERA HELIX DONERAILENSIS. 
H. H. Donerailensis (Donerail’s).* A very pretty, small-leaved 
form, with leaves which assume a dull purple-brown colour in 
Winter. A neat, compact plant, of medium rate of growth, good 
for walls, or for pot culture. See Fig. 187. 
Fig. 188. HEDERA HELIX LOBATA MAJOR. 
VoL II. 
AN ENCYCLOPÆDIA 
Hedera—continued. 
H. H. Glymii (Glym’s). 1. 
varying in form from lar ovate 
g obscurely thre 
eolon a Tat poe mant E ee e-lobed; 
0 ra very glossy, ee) u 3 
of a wiry habit of growth. One of the lest nee ans distinct form, 
a ; One of the best for pot culture. 7 
“ gracilis (slender). Z usually three-] bed; 
— dull green, at — in — Sema wee 
ver re variety fo i e 
ar y P mr 7 y tor covering a wall or a tree stump, 
H. H. lobata major (larger-lobed). 7, three to five-lobed (in old 
Piata arge), deep glossy green. A good, vigorous grower. See 
Fig. 189. HEDERA HELIX LUCIDA. —— 
H. H, lucida (glossy). Z. frequently deltoid, glossy ; larger ones, _ 
in vigorous — — kan three to five — 
lobes. A fast grower, suitable for clothing walls and tree stumps, 
or for pot culture. See Fig. 189. . —— 
H. H. luteola yi al reapers 1. from broadly ovate to irregular 
rhomboid, occasionally three-lobed ; stems and petioles usually 
green, sometimes slightly purplish; central parts dark green, 
mottled with grey; margin broad, of a yellowish cream colour. 
— tree Ivy, of robust habit, and an excellent form for pot 
culture. 
H. H. ta (margined). J. bluntly triangular; ground 
colour dull green, margined with creamy-white, brilliantly striped 
with red or pink in autumn. A somewhat slow-growing form. 
(S. H. Ivy, -78, 88.) : F 
H. H. marginata aurea (golden-margined), elongate tri- 
angular, bordered with faint ——— turning to red. An 
excellent Ivy for walls, — 
H. H. marginata minor (lesser margined). A pretty but slow- 
growing form, with smaller leaves than H, H, marginata. Not 
vigorous enough for walls, but a desirable plant for cultivation in 
pots, SYN. He Cavendishii. — 
mar: ta rubra (red- ined). This differs from 
— — sep rosy-red huo of the extreme 
H. H. marginata in the bright de ) 
edge of ma leaf ; the red colour does not appear until autumn, 
variety. SYNS. 
and disappears in spring. A slow-growing 
H. elegantissima, H. tricolor. : 
9 
Be 
Fic. 190. HEDERA HELIX MARMORATA MINOR, 
marmorata (marbled). A large-leaved form, of vigorous” 
—— — — of a creamy-white colour. 
walls or rough rockwork. Another and very distinct sub- 
varie is “marmorata minor, with much smaller leaves, The 
——— of this, too, is less apt to “run out” than that of — 
the larger form. See Fig. 150. as 
H. H. (palmate). l. medium-sized, three to five-lobed ; 
colour a dull deep green. This, in a young state, much resembles 
H. digitata, but, when mature, is distinct enough to deserve a 
varietal name. A neat, but rather slow grower. (S. H. Ivy, 75.) 
ida (translucent). J. medium size, bl 
— , mottled with green and white, or —— semi- 
t. Young stems red. Habit robust. 
H. H. (purple). A climbing Ivy with leathery leaves 
like of H. Rægneriana, but of a purplish colour. _ i 
eriana (Regner’s).* l large, dark green, leathery, 
gE ja A B———— and distinct variety, of vigorous 
y, of 
habit. The arborescent form of this is the most striking of all 
the tree Ivies. See Fig. 191. 
R 
