t HA I*. I. 



/iANl'NCl'LA I'K/L. CI.K'.MATIS. 



Geography, History, $c. Found in North America, on woody hills in Caro- 

 lina and Virginia. It was sent to England by Banister, from the latter country, 

 in 1680, and was cultivated by Sherard in 1732; afterwards by Miller; and it 

 is now to be found in the principal botanic gardens, and in many nurseries. 

 As it does not grow to a great height (seldom exceeding 10ft.), it is most or- 

 namental as a single plant, trained to a rod or to a wire frame. As its branches 

 are not very decidedly ligneous or persistent, but consist mostly of annual 

 shoots from a suffruticose base, and are not much branched, the plant does not 

 exhibit a bushy head. As ligneous branches do not abound to facilitate the 

 propagation of it by layers, seeds are the readier means, and these are some- 

 times plentifully produced, and grow without difficulty. The sowing of them as 

 soon as ripe is advantageous to their vegetating in the ensuing spring. A plant 

 of this species, with shoots reaching to the height of 10 ft., and studded with its 

 pendulous peculiarly formed flowers (peculiar for a clematis), more or less pro- 

 jected on their rather rigid peduncles, is an interesting object. Plants, in the 

 London nurseries, cost Is. 6d. ; at Bollwyller, 2 francs ; and at New York, 50 

 cents. 



_A 10. C. CYLI'NDRICA Sims. 



The cylindrical-flowered Clematis. 



Pursh, in FI. 



Identification. Sims, in Bot. Mag., t. 1160. ; Ait., in Hort Kew., Sdedit, 3. p. 343. 

 Bor. Amer., 2. p. 385. ; Dec. Prod., 1. p. 7. ; Don's Mill., 1. p. 8. 



Synonymes. C. erf spa Lam., Michx. ; C. Vi6rna Andr., in Bot. Rep. C. divaricAta Jacq. -, the long- 

 flowered Virgin's Bower; Clematite & longues Fleurs, Fr. 



Engravings. Bot. Mag., t 1160. ; Bot. Rep., t. 71. ; Jacq. f. Eel., 1. p. 51. t. 33. ; and our fig. 15. 



Spec. Char. Peduncles 1 -flowered. Sepals thin, acuminated, reflexed at the 

 apex, with wavy margins. Leaves slender, pinnate; leaflets stalked, ovate 

 or oblong, middle one sometimes trifid, floral ones entire. (Don's Miller, 

 i. p. 8.) Flowers large, pale purplish blue. July, Aug. 1802. Height 4ft. 



Description. De Candolle has described this 

 in his Sy sterna from a dried specimen, and without 

 any acquaintance with it in a living state. He has 

 deemed it related to C. Viorna, reticulata, and 

 crispa, and discriminated it from these. C. cylin- 

 drica, he says, differs from C. Viorna, in all the 

 segments of its leaves being entire, not usually 

 trifid; in the flowers being blue, and twice the 

 size of those of C. Viorna (in this they are of 

 a reddish lilac, pale within) ; in the sepals being 

 not leathery, but somewhat of the consistence of 

 paper, with the margin waved ; the ovaries 12-15, 

 not 25-30. C. cylindrica differs from C. reticulata 

 in its leaves being in consistence papery, not 

 leathery ; scarcely veined, not reticulately veined, 

 and in other points. C. cylindrica closely re- 

 sembles C. crispa in habit and mode of flower- 

 ing, but differs from it in its sepals being waved 

 in the margin, not rolled backwards ; in its larger 

 flowers, and especially in its carpels having long 

 bearded tails, and not naked ones. C. Viorna 

 and cylindrica, seen together in a living state, are 

 very dissimilar in appearance. C. Viorna has 

 vigorous long branches and reddish flowers, which 

 are acorn-like in figure, except that they have a 

 spreading mouth ; there is also obvious dissimilarity in the foliage and shoots, 

 C. cylindrica being almost herbaceous. 



Geography t History, Use, $c. Found in North America, in Pennsylvania, 

 Carolina, and Virginia. It was discovered by Michaux, and In him 'sent to 

 Europe, where it may be found in several botanic gardens, and'in some nur- 

 series. Plants, in London, cost2s.6rf. each; at Bollwyller, ':; and at New York, 

 50 cents. 



