January 27 



Garden and Forest. 



41 







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Fi^. 9. — A New England Winter Scene. — See pagfe 37. 



leaves and crowded racemes of large handsome crimson 

 flowers, borne on numerous twiggy branches. It grows to 

 a height of about six feet. A figure of it was published in 

 Hooker's Icones last year (pi. 1994). 



Crinuji Roozenianum, O'Brien. — This is said to be near 

 C. Americanum, although the growth resembles C. eru- 

 bescens. The flowers are four to twelve in an umbel, six 



to eight inches long, with recurved segments three to four 

 inches long and three-fourths of an inch wide, white. It 

 has been introduced from Jamaica by A. Roozen & Co., 

 Haarlem. 



Cocos Pynaertii, Hort. , is a seedling form of C. Wed- 

 delliana with very narrow leaf-segments. It was raised by 

 Monsieur Pynaert, of Ghent, and figured in the Revue de 



