﻿A 



M 



A 



A. 



i8x 



Th 



ke the former, has 



kly ftem, whereby it commonly rifes 



the height of two, three, or four feet above the root; and then throws out a good 



many long and (lender branches 



fhrubs 



fpread 



d 



mb 



All the parts of this plant are extremely poifon 



g the neighbouring 



NERIUM 



3 



Foliis lanceolatis verticilliter ternatis t fore quandoque plena. 



Nerium. H. M. P. 9. t. 1, 2. 



Frangi-panier a Jleur double rouge. Barreri. 



The South-fea Rofe. 



This ftirub is cultivated in moft gard 



frequent flo 



7 



f 



full and 



rifes by a foft lignous ftalk, and moots commonly to the heigh 



of iix or eight feet, throwing out many flender and flexile branches on all iides 



It is a very agreeable flowering fhrub in a garden, and generally bears large com 

 poiite flowers; but I have fometimes found them iimple and fert 

 characters of the clafs. 



with 



a 



the 



NERIUM 4. Sarmentofum fcandens, ramulis 



torojis. 



Tab. 16. f. 2. 



tenuibus folliculis gracilibus 



The flender-branched Nerium. 



This curious plant is freq 



about the foot of the mountains in Liguanea ; I 



th it in the road thro' Mr. Elletfo 



It^s a weakly pla 



commonly 





fuftains itfelf by the help of the neighbouring bu flies, and frequently rifes 



derable height among them. The branches and follicules are extremely flender and 



delicate. 



PLUME RI A 1. Arbor efcens foliis lanceolatis, fori bus fauce ampliatis fub- 



ca mpanulatis. 



The narrow-leafed Plumeria. 



This plant grows commonly from four to feven or eight feet in height, and is 



always full of flender flexile branch 

 below the margin : it g 



flowers are yellow, and moderately open 



Port Moria, in St. Mary 



and 



Mo rant 





Bay 



St. Thomas 's in the Eaft 



PLUMERIA 2. Arbor efcens ramulis 



# 



obh 





biglandulisy fori bus geminatis per f picas terminals 

 oblongis. L. H. C. & Sp. PI. 



pet toll 



Plumeria /0/m 01 



Plumeria fore rofeo odoratijjimo. Inf. 6c Eh 



Plumeria Catefi. 



9 



&Pk 



7 



f. 



The Jafmin Tree. 



This flirub rifes by a robuft divided trunk, to the height of feven or eight feet, 

 or better. It is planted in the gardens on account of the beauty and fmell of its- 

 flowers : the branches are pretty thick, and the leaves veined and oval. It always 

 bloflbms before it throws out its leaves. 



PLUMERIA 3. Arborefcens racemis terminalibus pedunculis longis nudis 



dentibus 





The white-flowered Jafmin Tree. 



This tree is very like the foregoing both in fize and difpofition ; but the leave: 

 * narrower and ferrated ; and the flowers without fmell, and diipofed in a dif 



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ferent 



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