CHAP. LXIX. 



RICA CE/E. ERl CA. 



1081 



860 



S/)cc. Char., $c. The general appearance of this sort, Dr. 

 Lindlcy observes, i.s that of E. arborea ; but it seems es- 

 sentially distinct from that species, in its longer flowers, 

 more slender leaves, less hardy branches, and truly bell- 

 shaped corolla, which has by no means the globular form 

 of that of E, arborea j its stigma is, moreover, very small, 

 and not at all dilated or lobed, either when dried or recent. 

 It was cultivated in 1834, in the Maresfield Nursery, in Sus- 

 sex, where it is quite hardy, and forms a bush from 10 ft. 

 to 12ft. in height. It begins to blossom in February, and 

 continues till the end of May, disregarding both frost and 

 snow, being often covered with flowers from top to bottom, 

 and forming a most beautiful object. In the warmest parts 

 of Devonshire, and in the south of Ireland, it would form a 

 very ornamental undergrowth to fine woods. 



* 6. E. AUSTRA'LIS L. The southern Heath. 



Identification. Lin. Mant, p. 231. j Andr. Heaths, 3. t. 21. ; Ait Hort Kew., 2 p. 396. ; Lodd. Bot. 



Cab., t. 1472. ; Wendl. Eric., 9. p. 13., with a figure ; Don's Mill, 3. p. 795. ; Lodd. Cat, ed. 1836. 

 Synoni/me. E. pistillkris Sal. in Lin. Soc. Trans., 6. p. 368. 

 Engravings. Andr. Heaths, 3. t 21. ; Bot. Cab., t. 1472. ; Wendl. Eric., 3. p. 13, with a figure ; and 



our fig. 867. 



Spec. Char., $c. A shrub, 3 ft. to 6 ft. high. Leaves 4 in a whorl, scabrous, 

 spreading, mucronate. Flowers terminal, small. Corolla purplish red, 

 3 lines long, with a curved funnel-shaped tube, 

 and a recurved limb. Pedicels beset with 

 gemmaceous bracteas. Anthers crested. {Don's 

 Mill., iii. p. 795.) A native of Spain and Por- 

 tugal; introduced in 1769, and, in the neigh- 

 bourhood of London, forming a handsome 

 pyramidal shrub, of which there are specimens 

 at Syon 7 ft. high, and in the Edinburgh 

 Botanic Garden 10 ft. high. One of the most 

 showy of all the arboreous heaths, producing 

 in great profusion its fine red flowers from April to August. 



* 7. E. STRI'CTA Donn. The upright Heath. 



Identification. Donn Hort. Cantab., ed. 3. p. 69. ; Willd. Sp., 2. p. 366. ; Andr. Heaths, 2. t. 22. ; Ait 



Hort. Kew., 2. p. 393. ; Don's MilL.S. p. 796. ; Lodd. Cat, ed. 1836. 

 Synonymcs. E. multicaulis Sal. in Lin. Soc. Trans., 6. p. 369.; E. 



Corsica Dec. Fl. Fr.i E. ramulbsa Viv. 

 Engravings. Andr. Heaths, 2. t. 22. ; and our fig. 868. 



Spec. Char., $c. Stem diffuse, 2ft. to 3ft. high. 

 Leaves 4 in a whorl, obtuse, glabrous, having 2 fur- 

 rows beneath. Flowers terminal, in umbel-like 

 groups. Bracteas approximate to the calyx, sessile. 

 Calyx spreading. Corolla purplish red, 3 lines 

 long, with an ovate pitcher-shaped tube, and re- 

 flexed segments. Anthers crested. Style a little 

 prominent. (Don's Mill., iii. p. 796.) A native of 

 Corsica and Italy. Introduced in 1765, and fre- 

 quent in gardens, forming a fastigiate bush, in some 

 instances, as at Purser's Cross, as high as 12 ft. 



- 8. E. CILIA^RIS L. The ciliate-leaved Heath. 



Identification Lin. Sp., ed. 1. p. 354. ; Lafl. Res., p. 138. ; Lin. Diss., No. 39., with a figure 



868 



Spec. Char., %c. Leaves 3 in a whorl, ovate, glandularly ciliate, spreading, 

 rather remote. Flowers terminal, subracemose, directed to one side. Brac- 

 teas sessile, approximate to the calyx. Segments of calyx spathulate, 

 ciliate. Corolla smooth, ovate, more ventricose on the upper side, 4 lines 



