supplementary to Eiic. of Plants, Hort. Brit., and Arh, Brit. 293 



698. IMPA^TIENS [22. 



+glandulfgera Lindl. gland-bearing iQJ or T2 au C Nepal 1839. S co Bot. reg. 1840, 



One of the four Indian species raised last year in the garden of the Horti- 

 cultural Society. The seeds were sown in May, and the plants were 12 ft. 

 high when they came into flower in August. " It is not so hardy as those 

 with the long fruit [see our p. 145.], but flowers freely all the autumn, and is 

 one of the most beautiful plants that can be looked upon " if grown in a moist 

 atmosphere. {Bot. Reg., April.) 



'Rutdcece. 



1154. CORRiE^^. [vii. p. 79. 



HarriszV Paxt. Mr. Harris's 11. i | or 2 ap.jn C hybrid 1837. C s.p.l Paxt. mag. of bot. 



This splendid hybrid was raised by Mr. Beaton, now gardener to Thomas 

 Harris, Esq., of Kingsbury, while he was gardener at Haffield, in Hereford- 

 shire, but it has flowered for the first time in the collection of Mr. Harris. 

 Mr. Beaton, several of whose valuable papers on hybridisation have appeared 

 in this Magazine, proceeded most carefully and scientifically with this corraea, 

 (the parents of which were C. pulchella and C. speciosa), and his endeavours 

 have been rewarded with complete success; the flowers of this plant being of 

 the most brilliant crimson. It is grown in a more loamy soil than is generally 

 used for corrgeas, and it is propagated by cuttings. (Paxt. Mag. of Bot., 

 May.) 



T^ka7nndcces. 

 668. CEANO'THUS 



+pallidus Lindl. pale * or 10 su Pa.B C co Bot. reg." 1840, 20. 



A beautiful shrub, "much hardier than C. azureus," which it greatly resem- 

 bles, except that the leaves are green, and not hoary beneath ; and that the 

 flowers are smaller and paler. This species was received from Bollwyller, and 

 is frequently confounded with C. ovatus and C. thyrsiflorus, " from both of 

 which it is certainly distinct." " It strikes readily from cuttings of the half- 

 ripened wood in autumn, and grows well in any soil, if not too poor, or too 

 wet." (Bot. Beg., April.) 



Legmninosce. 



1964. CY'TISUS 29801 racembsus Marnock. 



Synonyme : 1663. Genista bracteolata Link. Bot. reg. 1840, 23. 



This plant, which was sent home by Philip Barker Webb, Esq., from Tene- 

 riffe, under the name of Cjtisus racemosus, has been since recognised by that 

 gentleman to be the Genista bracteolata of Link. (Bot. Beg., April.) 



Cyclogyne canescens Benth. A Swan River perennial, with the habit and 

 aspect of a Galega. (B. B. M., No. 68., May.) 



RosdcecB. 



Cotonedster denticuldta H. B. et K. A hardy shrub, allied to C. rotundi- 

 folia, found in Mexico by M. Hartweg, and interesting as being " the first 

 species of the genus observed in the New World." ( B. M. B,, No. 58., 

 April.) 



Onagrdcees. 



Lopezia. linedta Zucc. A Mexican shrub, with pale pink flowers, which it 

 bears in the green-house " during all the winter and early spring." (B- M. B., 

 No. 60., April.) 



VhiladelphdcecB. 



Vhiladelphus mexicdnus Schlect. in Linnaea 13. p. 418., and Plant. Hartw. 

 p. 61. A Mexican plant with brown, downy, flexible branches, and somewhat 

 cordate leaves, which are covered with coarse hairs on the under side, and 

 are nearly entire at the margins. The flowers are large and white, and in the 

 native specimens they are placed singly at the ends of the twigs. (B. B. M., 

 No. 70., May.) 



CactdcecE. 



1472. CE'REUS 



multiplex Pfeiff. multiplied ti. ZD or J au Pk South Brazil 1838. C s.p Bot. mag. 3789. 

 Synonyme : Echinocfectus multiplex Hort. 



