154 



Botanical Register. 



No. VIII. for October, contains 

 1181 to 1187. — Bilbdrgifl! pyramidalis; ^romeMucecs. A beautiful- 

 flowered plant from South America, highly deserving cultivation. — Clivia 

 (named in compliment to Her Grace the Duchess of Northumberland. 

 " Such a compliment has long been due to the noble family of Clive, and 

 we are proud in having the honour of being the first to pay it ") nobilis; 

 kmaryWidecs. {fig. 29.) A fine green-house plant, much resembling a 

 Cyrtanthus, of easy culture, and may be propagated either by seeds or 



suckers. — Brodiae^a grandiflora ; fliemerocallideae. A beautiful, hardy, bul- 

 bous plant, with purple flowers, from North-west America, by Mr. 

 Douglas, to the Horticultural Society, in 1826, and grows freely in a peat 

 border. — Terbena (from ferfaen, the Celtic name) Melindris (the ver- 

 nacular appellation in the province of Buenos Ayres); Terbenaceae. A 

 handsome perennial scarlet-flowered plant, with opposite leaves, and 

 abundantly flowering from cuttings in June and September, but, probably, 

 requiring a frame in winter. It is common on the plains of the Pampas of 

 Buenos Ayres, and is found in the provinces of Cordova and San Luis. — 

 Sophora velutina ; Leguminosae. " A fine green-house shrub," which, if 

 naturalised, would be very desirable.^ It is a native of Nepal, and is 

 raised from seed. — Galardfa aristata. A handsome, hardy, nearly ever- 

 green, perennial plant, with fibrous roots, and found by Mr. David 

 Douglas in the north-west of North America. It is propagated from seeds, 

 or divisions of the roots and flowers, from June to October. — Coto- 

 neaster {cotoneum, the name of the quince, by Pliny, and ad instar, similitude ; 

 resemblance to quince) microphylla ; Pomaceae. A hardy evergreen shrub, 

 of great beauty, flowering in April and May ; the flowers frequently in 

 twos or threes. It strikes readily from cuttings or layers, and grows from 

 2 to 3 ft. high. 



No. IX. for November, contains 

 1188 to 1194. — Amaryllis acuminata var. longipedunculata ; Ama- 

 ryWidcce. This fine variety of A. acuminata was found near San Pablo 

 Quatro-Venados, in the state of Oaxacaj in Mexico, and differs from it in 



