4 
is a conclusion that inevitably forces itself on the mind when such q 
species as S. rklyi, S. lutea, S. intermedia, &c., are examined — 
and compared with other forms. For these reasons I am in favour of — 
genera) a heterogeneous assemblage of species in each case, yet in most d 
the natives also eat them; three or four years later, Mrs. mA 
t 
But I learn from Sir Henry Barkly, and others, that this bee 
ren, be the case with regard to the whole of South A 
at 
first discovered, and I am told that it is still plentiful there now. of 
One interesting feature connected with Stapelias is the vitality 
