BOOK [1. MONTHLY FLORICULTURAL PRODUCTIONS. 



933 



SECT. IX. Selection 

 6740. 



H'oor/y plants. Bambusa arundinacea, 

 Barringtonia speciosa, Carica papaya, 

 Catesbtea spinosa, Clerodendrum fra- 

 grans, Coccoloba cerifera, Cocos nuci- 



of Dry and Jiark-stove Plants, for such an have only 

 one Hot-house to contain them. 



fera, Corypha umbraculifera, Chamas- 

 rops humilis, Cycas revoluta, Phoenix 

 dactylifera, Coffea arabica, Crotolaria 



, , 



pulchra, Datura arborea, Dillenia spe- 

 ciosa, Dracaena draco, Flcus indica, 

 Hibiscus rosa-sinensis, Ixora coccinea, 

 Lagerstrcemia reginae, Mimosa ni- 

 lotica, odoratissima, Myrtus pimenta, 

 Neriuin coronarium, odorum, Nyc- 

 taiitlies arbor tristis, Portlandia gran- 

 diflora, Robinia violacea, Solandra 

 grandiflora, Sterculta platantifolia, 



Tectona grandis, Vinca rosea, Volka- 

 meria aculeata. 



HMHfb> Convolvulus speciosus, Cra- 

 tffiva fragrans, Dolichos urens, Ipo- 

 moea digitata, Jasminum sambac, Pas- 

 siflora coccinea, alata, racemosa. 



Succulents. Agave vivipara, Aloe pel, 

 lucens, Cactus grandiflorus, melocac-' 

 tus, speciosus, Euphorbia clava, Pan- 

 danus odoratissimus, Piper nigrum, 

 Stapelia grandiflora. 



BnVis. Amaryllis reginae, josephinse, 

 Crinum amaliile, erubescens, latifoU- 

 um, Haemanthus coccineus, Pancra- 

 tium amccHum. 



Herbaceous. ^Brides odoratum, Arum 



bicolor, Kpidendrum cochteatum, 

 Gloriosa superba, Gloxinia maculata, 

 Limodorum tankervillii, Phytolacca 

 octandra, Polypodium aureum, Pteris 

 grandiflora. 



Ai/uatics. Cyprus papyrus, Euryale fe- 

 rox, Meniaiithes indica, Nelumbium 

 speciosum, Nymphaea lotus, pubescens, 

 rubra, Thalia dealbata. 



Reedy. Alpina racemosa, Canna glau- 

 ca, indica, Heliconia bihai, Maranta 

 arundinacea, Musa paradisiaca, sapi- 

 entum, Saccharum ofncinarum, Stre- 

 litzia reginee, Zingiber officinale. 



CHAP. XV. 



Monthly Catalogue of the leading Productions of Ornamental Horticulture. 

 6741. Our catalogue of monthly ornamental productions extends only to a few of the 

 more generally known flowering plants and trees ; what respects the hot-house depart- 

 ment is to he understood as referring to flower-gardens,* which contain at least a bark- 

 stove, a dry-stove, one or more green-houses, and an adequate number of reserve-pits 

 and frames. Those plants are marked (*) which may be produced from a small garden, 

 where there is a green-house, flued-pit, and hot-beds ; not in any quantity, but suffi- 

 ciently to keep up a hope and a fear for every month. The keeping up of this sort of 

 hope and fear is much more conducive to the sort of happiness or interest which those 

 who have small gardens expect to derive from them, than a grand display of two or three 

 species of flowers, occurring only once or twice in the year. 



JANUARY. 



