The Gardener's New Director. 28r 

 jlem ; and, befides their being well refleded, are as broad 

 as an ordinary RanumnJus ; it is a moil: valuable flower, 

 and an early blower. ♦ 



15th. Ccilo niiUi, is an extreme pretty, large, new 

 flower; it has a fine high and noble flem, its bells are 

 very large, thick let, and well refieaed, of an exquifite 

 fine colour, and has a heart very prettily enamelled with 

 variety of colours, and continues long in bloom ; it is a 

 late blower. 



i6th. Brunette aviaibk, is a charming pretty flower, 

 having a pretty high llem, on which are thick fet dark- 

 coloured bells, which make a very pretty appearance ; 

 it is a fecond blower. 



17th. Rex Negros^ is a fine large dark-coloured flower, 

 with a high fl:em ; its bells are well refleikd, and difplay 

 a heart of the mofl: dark colours of all the blues ; it has 

 a noble afpe6t, and is a fecond blower. 



1 8th. Koiiing der Moorev, or King of the Moors, re- 

 fembles the flower immediately above defcribed, but has 

 a large black-coloured fl:em, and its bells are of a very 

 dark colour, nevertheleis they are vaflly pretty ; it is a 

 fecond blower. 



19th, Tros-Blcm, or Bouquet, or Clujler of Flowers, 

 ramed very properly, it being a large noble flower, 

 with a high, bold, and floriferous flem, and the bells 

 are numerous, and well reflected, with enamelled 

 hearts ; it is a fecond blower, and be:\rs its bells in a 

 long fpike. 



20th. Grandeur Superhe, although it is a low-priced 

 flower, yet is one of the prettiefl: and largeft flowers 

 amongfl; the whole tribes of Hyacinths; it has a high 

 floriferous ftem, its bells are very large, ere6t, and well 

 reflected, which difplay a pretty heart; it is a fecond 

 blower. 



2 1 ft. Overwinnaar, or Conqueror, is an exceeding fine 

 flower, it has a fmall ftem of a black colour, v/hich car- 

 ries at moft fix or feven bells, which are very large, c- 

 re£t, and of a round figure, are well rcflccled, and 

 have this particularity in them, that from the center of 

 the heart of the flower, there come out two fmall long 

 petals or leaves, which go to the outmoft verge of the 

 U 3 flower^ 



