Decandria Pentag. Cotyledon. 29 
beautiful order. And those which it has cr 
their great Architect to place in equinoxial lati- 
tudes appear to be more adapted to the recep- 
tion of nutriment above ground by absorption 
from the air, in the dewy places of their nati- 
vity, than those whose absorbing orifices are -— 
capaciously expanded in more temperate cou 
tries; or in those : still more chilly regions which 
the greàt business of — ippea to be 
from. the nm ira 
, per- 
e Alpine pies evince 
to heat, which tul -— and overpowers 
them. 
O Jehovah! in sapientia, ea fecisti.—Davtp. 
SEDUM. Linn. gen. pl. 
S, (Dwarf-whirled) folis verticillatis quaternis, ?)»7re- 
supra planis, subtus convexis, caule repente, galense. 
Willd. enum. l. 
-Hanrrar in in Apes ribus Pesesostenit, H. y. 
Curr. in hort. Chels, A.D. 1816 T 
s. (Biennial glaucous) foliis | idis flan. cy- po 
. ma trifida, ramis recurvato-patentibus, floribus 2. 
andris, eere ied ae numerosis uni- 
erii Willd. enum. 487. FAM. et Kit. 
Hung. 2. p. 198. t. [5 
HanrrAT in Hun UE YS. 
ngaria 
Curr. in hort. Ch., A.D.'1816. 
A Sedo glauco, nostro, omnino discrepat. 
S; (Pale). lens. 
Vigebat in hort. Chels., "ib hoc nomine, A.D. di 2. 
1816 cH. d. 
Non examinavi. 
