344 
Clitoria—continued. 
July. Li i-pinnate, with two to four pairs of oval or ovate 
eaflets. "India, 1729. "syn. Ternatea pe eni (B. M. 1542.) 
There are varieties of this species with blue and white flowers, 
and also variegated with those colours. 
CLIVIA (named after а Duchess of Northumberland, a 
member of the Clive family. ORD. Amaryllidee. SYN. 
Imantophyllum (often erroneously written Imatophyllum). 
Handsome greenhouse evergreen bulbs, requiring à high 
temperature and plenty of moisture when growing. 
During the season of rest, they need very little heat 
or moisture, only just enough of the latter to keep the 
soil from being dust-dry. Propagated by divisions, or by 
seed, There are three species, all natives of South 
. Africa, the best being the one here described. 
c. See Imantophyllum Gardeni. 
um miniatum, 
c. Л. red, yellow, forty-eight to fifty in a 
pendulous umbel; perianth Шы, вора | азаны outer 
shorter than inner. y. l.distichous, coriaceous, strap-shaped, 
sheathing at base, retuse and oblique at apex; margin rough, 
^. 1. SYN. Imantophyllum Aitoni. (B. M. 2856.) 
CLOCHES. See Bell Glasses. 
CLOMENOCOMA MONTANA. See Dysodia. 
CLOUDBERRY. See Rubus Chamemorus. 
CLOUD GRASS. See Agrostis nebulosa. 
vL рам or CLOVE PINE. See Dianthus Caryo- 
CLOVER. See Trifolium. 
CLOVE-TREE. See Caryophyllus. 
CLOWESIA (named after the late Rev. J. Clowes, at 
blishment the genus first flowered in this country). 
t i stove epiphytal orchid, 
gi to. pee and requiring the same treatment. 
rosea (rosy). jl. delicate white, ti ed with pink; 
radical, many-flowered, erect, shi rter a vgl Е 
Pseud-bulb Heshy, eal. A in. Brazil аре атов. М 3.) 7 
- m е formation of protuberances on 
roots, particularly those of the Brassica tribe, proving 
generally caused by some insect, See Cab à na 
ы GALL WEEVIL. See Pa Gall 
CLUB MOSS. See Lycopodium, 
CLUB RUSH. See Scirpa and Typha. 
Mee sip de. term is applied to groups of two or 
or other plants, arranged to form an 
owe ing, from i 
XXE PERGIT er 
erate or 2. 
description, attention should be given to summe gos ау 
 9xereised as to its appearance 
This especially applies to plant: 
ЗІ. (named in honour of Charle 
Artois, an acute botanist, er de RUM. >» 
and many other works; us 
sam-tree. ORD. Guttifere, Stove , 
nd often epiphytal, with 1.7 
Opposite leaves, and Beer edis. dt % 
a viscid juice. There are abont sixty speci s 
of tropical parts е : 
; j м of the Western М 
^ wit loque 7 grow well in light sandy soil, ‘The 1- 
"оом M be thoronghly drained. Cuttings of hae | 
Wil strike in sand, if placed Under а ben 
| freely, about April, in sand, under a bell glass. 
| southern counties; but in more northern localities, 
THE DICTIONARY OF GARDENING, 
Clusia—continued. 
8g rosea (rose-coloured). fl. beautiful rose-coloured, large; calyx 
the same colour, five to six-leaved ; tops of dense nectaries awl- 
l. obovate, obtuse, veinless, sometimes emar- 
shaped. July. 
h. Tit. to 20ft. Carolina, 
ginate, on short, striated petioles. 
1692 (on rocks and trees). 
CLUSTER CHERRY. An old name for the Bird 
Cherry. See Cerasus Padus. 
CLUSTER-FLOWERED YEW. See Cephalo- 
CLUSTER PINE. See Pinus Pinaster. 
CLUYTIA (named after Outgers Cluyt, 1590-1650, 
a Dutchman, who was Professor of Botany at Leyden). 
ORD. Euphorbiacee. Greenhouse evergreen shrubs, with 
white flowers. They thrive in a compost of sandy loam 
and fibry peat. Cuttings of small side shoots will root in 
sand, over a layer of sandy peat, covered with a bell glass; 
points of shoots, before they become hard, will serve as _ 
substitutes for cuttings, when the latter are not obtain- 
able. This genus contains about thirty species, from  . 
tropical and Southern Africa; they are of little beauty 
or interest, and those which have been introduced are _ 
rarely seen in cultivation out of botanical gardens. 
CLYPEATE. Scutate; shaped like a Roman buekler. a 
iN ls 
in an open border, in d 
wall The genus is 
