STYPHELIA TRIFLORA. 
Class. Order. 
PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 
We had the pleasure of raising one single 
plant of this from seed, which was kindly 
communicated to us by Miss Ward about 
the year 1815. It is now three feet high, 
with several branches, three of which are 
adorned with flowers. The divisions of the 
corolla are very long, and for nearly half 
their length, lined with a sort of fur: when 
the flower opens, these roll back very grace- 
have yet tried, but flourishes in sandy peat , 
soil preserved in the greenhouse in winter. 
The name of triflora is not very happily 
chosen, as it seems rarely to have more 
than one or two flowers on the same pe- 
duncle. 
There is a remarkable degree of elegance 
about this plant, which added to the singu- 
lar form of its blossoms, render it a highly- 
interesting subject, and one which ought to 
