lcS6 



III the fust, the seeds should be sown either in the autun^n, soon 

 after they arc fully ripened, or in the spring, in a moist shady spot, 

 or in pots to be placed in such situations. When the plants appear, 

 they should be kept free from weeds, and have occasional water when 

 the weather is dry, being shaded from the heat of the sun. When 

 the stems decay, they may be carefully removed and planted in moist 

 shady places, at the distance of twelve or eighteen inches, to remain 

 till the following autumn, when they should be finally planted in the 

 borders and other places where there are due shade and moisture. 



The roots may be removed, and the off-sets carefully taken off 

 from them about the latter end of August or the following month, 

 and immediately planted in such situations as the above, when ihej*^ 

 will be fully established before the frosts set in. 



These plants are found to be hardy, but incapable of succeeding 

 in dry soils or sunny situations. They afford ornament in the beds, 

 borders, or other parts of pleasure-grounds. 



2. DICTAMNUS A LB US. 



WHITE FRAXINELLA. 



This genus affords a plant of the herbaceous hardy flowering pe- 

 rennial kind. 



It belongs to the class and order Decandria Monogynia, and ranks 

 in the natural order of Multisiliqua. 



The characters are: that the calyx is a five-leaved perianthium, 

 very small, deciduous: leaflets oblong, acuminate: the corolla has 

 five petals, oval-lanceolate, acuminate, with claws, unequal; of which 

 two are bent upwards; two placed oblitjuely at the sides; one bent 

 downwards: the stamina consist of ten subulate filaments, length of 

 the corolla, situated between the two lateral declining petals, une- 

 qual; small point-like glands scattered over the filaments; anthers 



