eautiful "EE is a native åg the West 
ry lately introduced 
log al plant in our 
stove last spring, “which grew fifteen or eigh- 
teen feet high, and has flowered abundantly 
the whole autumn, The leaves are regularly 
five parted, and the stem woody: it may be 
propagated freely by cuttings, and thrives 
in a loamy soil. 
Hardly any thing is more ornamental to 
the hot-house than the different kinds of 
Passiflora, when properly trained, there 
being a peculiar elegance in the blossoms (at 
least of all the large flowering kinds) which 
few plants can surpass. 
Their rapid growth and facility of culti- 
vation, added to their readiness in flowering, 
far as already known), we doubt not but a 
great many more species are yet to be disco- 
vered in the vast untrodden regions of the 
