1258 



ARBORETUM AND FRUT1CETUM. 



PART III. 



is considered unwholesome, and even dangerous, to those who are long 

 exposed to it. In the Gard. Mag. y vol. ix. p. 586., Mr. Godsall, nursery- 

 man, of Hereford, mentions that he has seen the pavement of an arbour 

 over which a plant of Perfploca gree'ca was trained, and in full flower, 

 literally covered with dead house-flies, which appeared to have fallen from 

 the blossoms, apparently killed by some deleterious property contained in 

 them. The capability of extension of this plant is proved by one in the 

 Cambridge Botanic Garden having been trained, by means of a jack chain, 

 as high as the branches of one of the trees of Sophora japonica, mentioned 

 in p. 565. as being 50 ft. high, and which was clear of branches to a con- 

 siderable height. When twined round a tree, the periploca forms a deep 

 identation in the bark. (See Mag. Nat. Hist., vol. vi. p. 331.) Price of 

 plants, in the London nurseries, Is. 6d. each ; at Bollwyller, 60 cents ; and 

 at New York, 37^ cents. 



-$ 2. P. ANGUSTIFO V LIA Labill. The narrow-leaved Periploca. 



Identification. Lab. PI. Syr., dec. 2. p. 13. t 7. ; Don's Mill., 4. p. 163. 

 Synonymes. P. rfgida Viv. ; P. lasvigata Vahl. 

 Engravings, Labill. PI. Syr., dec. 2. p. 13. t. 17. ; and our fig. 1089. 

 Spec. Char., SfC. Leaves veinless, narrow-lanceolate, glabrous, per- 

 sistent. Cymes trichotomous. Flowers purplish inside, pale yellow 



beneath and round the mouth, with a white spot in the middle. 



Leaves 1 in. long. (Don's Mill., iv. p. 163.) A twining shrub, a 



native of Tunis, on Mount Schibel Jsekel ; and of the Island of 



Lampedosa, at the sea side, near Laodicea. An ornamental plant, 



which was introduced in 1800, and is quite as hardy as P. grae'ca. 



It is rare in British collections. 



fl_ P. tievigata Ait. ; P. jmnicaefolia Cav. Icon., 3. t 217. ; is a 

 twining evergreen shrub, a native of the Canary Islands, which was 

 introduced in 1779; and, though generally kept in green-houses, 

 would live through the winter against a south wall, with protection. 



The half-hardy species of Periploca, being deciduous, may be pre- 

 served through the winter with much less care than many other 

 tender trees and shrubs. 



CHAP. LXXIX. 



OF THE HARDY AND HALF-HARDY LIGNEOUS PLANTS BELONGING 

 TO THE ORDER 



THE genera belonging to this order which contain hardy species are, 

 Bignonia, Tecoma, and Catalpa, which are thus distinguished : 



Tourn. Calyx 5-toothed. Dissepiment of the fruit parallel. 

 Calyx 5-toothed. Dissepiment of the fruit contrary. 

 Calyx 2-parted. Dissepiment of the fruit parallel. 



GENUS I. 



TifcoMA Juss. 

 CATA'LPA Juss. 







BIGNO V N/^ Tourn. 



THE TRUMPET FLOWER. 

 Angiospermia. 



Lin. Syst. Didynamia 



Identification. Tourn. Inst, 72. ; Juss. Gen., 139. ; Ga>rtn. Fruct, t 52. ; H. B. et Kunth Nov. Gen. 



Amer., 3. p. 132. ; D. Don in Edin. Phil. Journ. ; Lindl. Nat. Syst. Bot, edit. 2., p. 282. : Don's 



Mill. ,4. p. 21fi. 



Synonymes. Bignbnza sp. of Lin. and others ; Bignone, Fr. ; Trompetenblume, Ger. 

 Derivation. So named by Tournefort, in compliment to the Abb* liignon, librarian to Louis XIV. 



Gen. Char., SfC. Calyx campanulate, 5-toothed, rarely entire. Corolla with a 

 short tube, a campanulate throat, and a 5-lobed bilabiate limb. Stamens 4, 

 didynamous, that is, 2 long and 2 short ; with the rudiment of a fifth. Lobes 

 of anthers divaricate. Stigma bilamellate. Capsule silique-formed, 2-celled ; 



