470 ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. PART I11 
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differing little from those of P.ribra. The tree in the garden of the 
London Horticultural Society, which, in 1834, was marked /’scu- 
lus Pavia parviflora, was then 15 ft. high, after having been 10 years 
lanted. 
¥ pis, 3 sublaciniata Wats. The slightly cut-leaved red-flowered Pavia.— 
Figured in Wats, Dend., t. 120. Leaflets acutely serrated: in other 
respects it differs little from the species. In 1823, plants of it were 
in the Fulham Nursery, whence it was figured by Watson, The 
plants in the same nursery named 4’sculus Pavia serrata (see 
Gard. Mag., vol, xi. p. 248.) appear to be the same sort. 
2 P. r. 4 humilis. P. himilis G. Don. in H. B., and in his Mill.; and 
_  4B’sculus himilis Lodd. The dwarf red-flowered Pavia.—Figured 
in the Botanical Register, t- 1018. A diminutive, weak, straggling 
form of the species, probably obtained from some sport, and which, 
on its own root, is only a recumbent bush, from 2 ft. to 3 ft. in 
height; but which, when grafted on the common horsechestnut, 
forms the very beautiful pendulous low tree noticed below. A plant 
of P. humilis, in the garden of the London Horticultural Society, 
was, in 1834, 3 ft. high, after having been planted 7 years, 
¥ P.r. 5 himilis pendula. The pendulous-branched dwarf red-flowered Pavia. 
—Figured in our Second Volume. This is not properly a variety, but 
only a variation in form, produced by changing the position of the 
plant by grafting. There is a very handsome low tree of it in the 
arboretum at Messrs. Loddiges’s, which continues flowering and 
fruiting almost the whole summer. We consider this one of the 
most beautiful and interesting forms of Pavia, and would recommend - 
horsechestnut trees of 20 or 30 years’ growth to be grafted all over 
with it at the points of the shoots, care being taken afterwards, once 
or twice in every year, to rub off all the buds from the stock as 
