1142 AKBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. PARTY 111, 
A. n. 2 Alba et riibra, A. n, 23 pallida. 
3 amee‘na. 24 palliddsa. 
4 bl4nda. 25 papilionacea, 
5 carnea. 26. periclymenéides. 
6 caroliniana, 27 purpurascens. 
7 Cobirgia. 28 purpirea. 
8 colorata. 29 rosea. ( fig. 945.) 
9 conspicua. 30 rubérrima. 
i 10 crispa. 31 rubicfnda, 
11 cimula. 32 ribra. 
12 discolor. 33 rifa. 
13 fastigiata. 34 ritilans. 
14 fldre pléno. 55 serétina. 
15 flérida. 36 staminea. 
16 globdsa. 37 stellata. 
17 grandifldra. 38 tricolor. 
18 incana. 59 varia. 
19 incarnata. 40 variabilis. 
20 mirabilis. 41 variegata. 
21 montana. 42 versicolor. 
22 ochroleica. 43 violacea. 

% 18. R.ei’cotor G. Don, (A. (N.) svcotor Pursh.) The two-coloured-flowered 
Azalea. 
Identification. Ton’s Mill., 3. p. 847. 
Synonymes. Azalea bicolor Pursh Fl. Amer. Sept., 1. p. 153.; Azalea nudifldra var. bicolor Ait. 
Hort. Kew., |. p. 319., Trew Ehret., 48. 
Spec. Char., §c. Leaves oblong, clothed on both surfaces with fine hoary 
pubescence, not bristly on the nerve. Flowers small, not clammy, naked. 
Tube of corolla hardly longer than the segments. Calyxes very short ; 
having one of the segments linear, and 4 times longer than the rest. Fila- 
ments exserted. Branchlets hispid. (Don’s Mill., iil. p. 848.) The flowers, 
which are slender, and smaller than those of most of the species, are of a pale 
rose colour, or nearly white, with a deep-red-coloured tube. The plant is a 
native of Carolina and Georgia, on barren sandy hills; where it forms a 
shrub growing from 3 ft. to 4 ft. high, and flowering in May and June. It was 
introduced in 1734, and is frequent in British gardens ; though it does not 
appear to us to deserve to be considered in any other light than as a va- 
riety of 2. nudiflorum. 
% 19. R. cALENDULA‘CEUM Torr, (A. (¥.) caLenpuxa'cea Michz.) The Marigold- 
Jlowered Azalea. 
Identification. Torr. Fl. Un. St. p. 140.; Don’s Mill, 3. p. 847. 
Synonymes. Azalea calendulacea Michz. Fl. Bor. Amer., 1. p. 156., Lodd. Bot. Cab., t. 1394. ; A. nu- 
difldra var. coccinea Ait. Hort. Kew., 319. 
Engravings. Bot. Mag., t. 172.; Lodd, Bot. Cab., t. 1391; Bot. Reg., : 
t. 1454. : and our fig. 946. 
Spec. Char., §c. Leaves oblong, pubescent on both sur 
faces, but afterwards hairy. Flowers large, not clammy, 
rather naked. Teeth of calyx oblong. Tube of corolla 
hairy, shorter than the segments. (Don’s Mill., iii. p. 
847.) The plant is indigenous to North America, from 
Pennsylvania to Carolina; where it forms a shrub (77 
from 2ft. to 6 ft. high, and producing its yellow, red, « 
orange-coloured, or copper-coloured flowers from May 
till June; which, according to Pursh, is without ex- 
ception, the handsomest shrub in North America. 
Varieties. ee 
& R. c. 2 Morterii Sut. Fl.-Gard., 2d s., 10., is a hybrid between R. calen- 
dulaceum and one of the red varieties of #2. nudiflorum, of which 
there are two subvarieties ; one with a flesh-coloured corolla, having 
the upper segment orange-coloured, edged with flesh-colour, called 
R. Mortérii carneum ; and another, called R. Mortérii var. pree’stans, 
with pale copper-coloured flowers, tinged with blush. 
% R.c.3 filgidum Hook., A. c. falgida Hort., has the corollas of an 
orange-red colour, with bright green leaves, which spread out be- 
neath the corymbs of flowers, and form a rich background to them. 


