No. 1030, 
COTYLEDON CORUSCANS. 
iin Order. 
DECANDRIA PENTAGYNIA. 
Mr. Haworth, who first noticed this 
plant in his Supplementum, mentions it as 
growing in the Royal Garden at Kew, in 
1818: it had been introduced from the 
Cape of Good Hope, of which it is a native. 
It is a dwarf suceulent plant, with leaves 
which are „curiously rolled in at their edges, 
and glittering on the surface, when shone 
upon by the sun. The flower stem is 
about a foot in height, and the blossoms 
are produced in the month of June. 
It requires the driest part of a warm 
greenhouse, and will readily strike by cut- 
tings, which should be planted in light 
loam. 
