326 Catalogue of Works 07i Gardenings 8fc. 



AmarylUdi'kcead . 



960. H^MA'NTHUS [Mozambique 1839. D rub.s.l Bot. mag. 3870. 



tenuiflbrus var. mozambicus W. Herb, slender-flowered, Mozambique variety ?f (23 or 1 ap Bri 



This is a variety of a species of Haemanthus from Delagoa Bay, which has 

 not yet been introduced in a living state, though dried specimens have been 

 sent to this country. It is very handsome; and it is grown in a pot filled " to . 

 a considerable height with old bricks and pots pounded, putting light loam 

 above ; and keeping the round bulb above ground, with its prolonged base 

 under ground." {Bot. Mag., May.) 



979. ALSTRCEME^R/^ 28592 acntifblia. Synonyme : Bomarea acutifblia Mirb. 

 var. punctata W. H. Bot. Mag. 387. 



Bomarea is a genus divided by Professor Mirbel of Paris from Alstrce- 

 merjc! ; and this is a variety of A. acutifolia from the Caraccas, which has 

 the petals spotted inside. {Bot. Mag., May.) 



SPREKEX/yi Heister. (In honour of Dr. Sprelcel, a German botanist.) 



cybister PV. Herb. tumbler ?f [Z3 cu ap W Bolivia 1839. D r.l Bot. mag. 3872. 



A variety of this carious species was figured in the Botanical Register for 

 1840 ; and was noticed in the Gard. Mag., vol. xvi. p. 346., where it 

 was wrongly stated that Sprekelza was one of Mr. Herbert's names. The 

 genus was founded on the old Jacobea lily by Heister, a German botanist ; 

 and it contains the present species, S. formoslssima (the Jacobea lily), S. 

 glauca, and S. cinnabai'ina, all of which have flowered at SpofForth. {Bot. 

 Mag., May.) 



ELISE'NA W. Berb. (Derivation not given.) [3873. 



longipetala Lindl. long-petaled 5 IZ3 or 3 mr W Lima 1837. O s.l Bot. mag. 



This genus was founded by Mr. Herbert on the Pancratium ringens of the 

 Flora Peruviana ; but he considers the present plant to have completely the 

 aspect of an Ismene. The plant " flowered at Spoflbrth in the greenhouse, at 

 the end of March, in a 6-inch pot of white sand, with a very small admixture of 

 loam, and produced eight leaves, with a scape above a yai'd high, and six 

 flowers." {Bot. Mag., May.) 



REVIEWS. 



Art. I. Catalogue of Worh on Gardening, Agriculture, Botany, 

 Rural Architecture, 8^c., lately published, tvith some Account of 

 those considered the more interesting. 



The Field, the Garden, and the Woodland ; or interesting Facts respecting 

 Flowers and Plants in general. Designed for the Young. By a Lady. 

 12mo, pp. 3'^4, numerous woodcuts. London, 



" The design of the following work is to present to the young reader several 

 interesting facts, with which the botanist becomes acquainted in the pursuit of 

 science. ]By stating them in a familiar form to the unlearned, the author hopes 

 to awaken some interest in the study and observation of nature — a study 

 alike elevating and consoling in its influences on the mind. It has been her 

 object throughout the work, to direct the attention to the wisdom and good- 

 ness of God, as exhibited in the structure and arrangement of the vegetable 

 kingdom; and to demonstrate the confirmation which is added by Nature to 

 the doctrine declared by Revelation, of a superintending Providence." 



The work is arranged in twelve letters, which embrace many hundreds of 

 facts connected with flowers, and likely to be of popular interest. We do not 

 know a better book for creating or strengthening a love of plants in a young 

 person. 



