102 Notices of new arid beautiful Plants 



distinct individuals, each rooting in the parent trunk, and 

 forming, by its elongation upwards, new branches, and down- 

 wards, Avood and bark. 



Mr. Knevels's garden is yet new, and, being situated imme- 

 diately in the suburbs of the village, is comparatively limit- 

 ed in its extent ; but we anticipate every thing from the 

 knowledge and experience of his excellent German gardener, 

 than can be effected by industry and intelligence, aided by 

 the personal taste of his employer. A. J. D. 



Art. IV. Notices of new and beautifid Plants figured in the 

 London Floricidtural and Botanical Magazines ; vrith some 

 Account of those ivhich it would be desirable to introduce in- 

 to our Gardens. 



Edwards^s Botanical Register, or Ornamental Flower Garden and 

 Shrubbery. Each niimlier containintr eiiiht fi^^iires of Plants and 

 Shrulis. In monthly niitiiliers, 4s. colored, 3s. plain. Edited liy John 

 Lindley. Ph. D., F". R. S., L, S., and G. S., Professor of Botany iu 

 the University of London- 



Curlis's Botanical Magazine, or Flower Garden Displayed, containing 

 eijjht plates. In monthly niimhers, 3s. 6c?. colored, 3s. plain. Edited 

 hy William .Jackson Hooker, L.L. D., F. R. A., and L. S., Regius 

 Professor of Botany in the Utiiversity of Glasgow, 



Dicotyledonous, Monopetalous, Plants. 

 XXII. Berberidea?. 



£PIME'DUTM 



diphylliim Loddisps'' Bot. Cah., t. 1858. Twin-leaved Epimedium. Alow growing plant; 

 flowering earlv in Ihe spring ; color of Ihe tlowers white ; a native of Japan ; introduced 

 in 1834. Bot. Mag., t. 3448. 



A "rare plant," which flowered in the Botanic garden at 

 Edinburgh, in 1834. The growth is extremely slender. 

 The flowers appear in terminal racemes, expanding very ir- 

 regularly, and numbering from three to six, on each. It 

 was introduced from Berlin, in 1834. {Bot. Mag., Nov.) 



XXXII. Ternsiromikcese. 



CAME'l.hlJ. 



C. japonica elegans is now in splendid bloom in our col- 

 lection ; the flower measures four and a half inches across. 

 We have never seen but one other flower of this superb 

 variety, in this vicinity, and that was from -the collection of 

 Mr. Wilder of Hawthorn Grove, noticed at p. 23. It flower- 



