No. 464. 
SEDUM MONREGALENSE. 
Chea.” Order. 
DECANDRIA PENTAGYNIA. 
A native of the Alps of Piedmont. We 
were favoured with this pretty little plant 
by our good friend Mr. Anderson, of the 
Chelsea Physic Garden, It was cultivated 
there, according to Mr. Haworth, in his 
Supplement, in 1816. It usually rises 
about three or four inches high, and 
flowers readily in the month of July. Itis 
i ock. 
pidiy, as every little bit will grow. The 
soil should be loam, mixed with a little de- 
cayed morter. 
A minute plant like this may be some- 
times thought undeserving of notice, but 
surely nothing which the Almighty has 
created, nothing that flows from God, no- 
thing that He says, nothing that relates to 
Him, can be trifling or indifferent.” 
