(from which country there is also a true Amphicarpxa) differs but in 
very slight characters; Clitoria, their next ally, is rather farther re- 
moved, by the bracts, the style, and the general habit. Amphodus of 
the Botanical Register, which has also been supposed to be very near 
Cologania, appears to have been founded on a mistake; it is not a 
West Indian, but an Australian plant, and is, in fact, nothing more 
than Kenedya rubicunda. 
INTRODUCTION; WHERE GRowN; CuLtTurRE. The Cologania pul- 
chella was raised from Mexican seeds, by G. Barker, Esq. of Springfield, 
Birmingham, and by him presented to the London Horticultural Society, 
where our drawing was made, last autumn. It is a very pretty green- 
house climber, requiring the same treatment and training as the smaller 
Australian Kennediez, for it does not gee to be of very tall growth. 
VATION OF TH 
Conocanta, named by enti: after the cae of Cologan, in Teneriffe. 
PuLcHELLa, pretty. 
CoLoGaNiA PULCHELLA. Humboldt and Swsith: Nova Genera et Species, v. 6, 
p. 413. Decandolle: Prodromus, v. 2, p, 23 
