PAUT III. ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. 



2567 



F. excorticdta. Page 945., add to the end of the paragraph : " The berries are 

 so sweet, that the missionaries have been trying to introduce the species 

 into Otaheite, as a sugar plant; but have been unable to procure seeds, 

 as in New Zealand the berries are eaten greedily by the pigs, as soon 

 as they appear." 

 " F.fu/geiis Dec, Lindl. in Bot. Reg., n.s. t. 1. This is a splendid plant, a 

 native of temperate regions of Mexico, which will probably prove hait-hardy." 



Philadelpha'ce^. 

 Vhiladilphiis. 954., before § ii. insert : — 



" P. Gordomkna Hort. is a kind received from the banks of the Columbia; 

 which grows in its native country like underwood, and flowers later than 

 most of the species." 



After § ii., &c., insert : — 



" ^ Q.* P. sPECio^sus Schrad. The showy-^owercd Philadelphus, or ikToc^ 



Orange. 



Identification. Schrad. Diss. Phil. ; Lin. Bot. Reg., t. 2003. 

 Engraving. Bot. Ueg., t. 2003. 



Spec. Char., §v. Leaves ovate, rarely oval-ovate, long-pointed, sharply 

 toothed and serrated: hairy beneath. Flowers ternate and solitary. Lobes 

 of the calyx ver}- sharply pointed. Style deeply 4-cIeft. Stigmas longer 

 than the stamens. (Sc/irad.) P. speciosus is a hardy shrub, 8 ft. or 10 ft. 

 high, with gently bending branches, loaded with very large and scentless 

 white flowers. This species. Dr. Lindley observes, though one of the hand- 

 somest of the genus, is one of the least common. There are plants in the 

 Horticultural Society's Garden." 



P. grandifldrus. 954., dele the line headed " Sijnonyvw" the words "and our 

 Jig. 676.," and the last sentence in the paragraph headed " Spec. Char." 



Deidzvd scdbra. 956., Mr. Gordon informs us, proves to be quite hardy. 



956., add, after the paragraph headed " D. Briaidn'm : " 

 " D.grandrflora Hort. There is a plant bearing this 



name in the Horticultural Society's Garden, which 



was received from China." 



il/VRTA^CE.'E. 



Eucalyptus robusta. 959. 1. 2., add after parenthesis : 

 " fig. 2767. shows a full-grown tree of this 

 species, growing near Port Jackson." 



959., in the paragraph headed " E. «mygdalina," for 

 " 94., " read " 694." 

 Before the last paragraph, insert : — 

 " E. alpina Hort. There is a plant bearing this name 



in the Norwich Nursery, which appears hardier than 



any other species of the genus : it is also of much slower 



growth, and is of a bushy compact habit, sending out 



laterals at every joint. It is a native of Mount Welling- 

 ton, in Van Diemen's Land, where the climate is very 



similar to that of England; and the seeds of it were sent 



to England by INIr. James Backhouse, about 1834." 



961., add to the paragraph headed ^' Lcptoapirmjim 

 lanigeriim .•" " This species is called, in Van Die- 

 men's Land, the hoary tea tree; from the cir- 

 cumstance of the leaves having been used as a 

 substitute for tea. Several other kinds of Lep- 

 tospermum are designated tea trees, from the 

 same cause; such as L. baccata, the smooth, or 

 berry-bearing, tea tree ; L. flexuosum, the forest 

 tea tree; L. grandiflorum Lodd. Bot. Cab., t. 514., &c. They are all 

 beautiful myrtle-like evergreen plants, which would probably prove 



