XLII. ERICA‘CEA : CASSI‘OPE. 561 
a dp. 4 latifolia Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 546., and our fig. 1039., has broad 
leaves, and is a larger plant. 
a A. p. 5 minima has small flowers. 
1057. A. p. angustifolia. 1038. A.p.granaiflora. 1059. a. p. latifolia, 1040. A. p. evatbin 
a A. p. 6 revoluta Lodd. Bot. Cab. t. 725., and our fig. 1040., has the 
flowers bent back. 
« A. p. 7 scdtica is common in Scotland. 
a A. p. 8 stricta has the branches erect. 
Cultivated in gardens in moist peaty soil; and it is only in such a soil, and 
in an open airy situation, that it can be preserved for any length of time. 
o 2. A. ROsMARINIFOLIA Pursh, The Rosemary-leaved Andromeda. 
Identification. Pursh Fl. Amer. Sept., 1. p. 291. ; 3Don! 3 Mill., 3. p. $29, 
Synonyme. A. polifdlia Michz. Fl. Bor. Amer. 2 p.2 
Engravings. Pall. Fl. Ross., 2. p. 53. t. 70. f. BL; a our fig. 1041. 
Spec. Char., Sc. Leaves linear-lanceolate, convex, re- 
volute, white beneath, and canescent above. Corollas 
nearly globose. Calycine segments oblong red. Flow- 
ers white, tinged with red. (Don's Mill.) A diminu- 
tive evergreen shrub. Newfoundland and Labrador. 
Height 6 in. to 1 ft. Introduced ? 1796. Flowers white, 
tinged with red ; June. 
—S + 
Andrémeda Drumméndii Hook., Gard. Mag. 1840 
p. 4., is a slender-growing plant, with the young leaves 
and shoots covered with a scurf, like that which is found 
on the Eleagnus. Horticultural Society’s Garden. 1041, A. rosmarinifolia. 
Genus V. 
LIL. 
CASSTOPE D. Don. Tue Cassiope. Lin. Syst. Decandria Monogs nia. 
Identification. D. Don in Edinb. New Phil. Journ., 17. p. 157. ; Don’s Mill., 3. p. 829. 
Synonyme. Andrémeda sp. Lin., Pall. 
z From Cassiope, wife of C and mother of Andromeda, whose foolish boast that 
her beauty was superior to that of the Were, provoked the wrath of Neptune. 
Gen. Char. Calyx 5-leaved ; leaves imbricated at the base. Corolla campanu- 
late, 5-cleft. Stamens 10, enclosed ; filaments glabrous ; cells of anthers 
short, tumid, furnished with one awn each. Style dilated at the base. 
Stigma obtuse. Capsule with a loculicidal dehiscence ; valves bifid at the 
apex. Placenta 5-lobed ; lobes simple. Seeds oblong, "compressed, shining. 
(Don’s Mill.) 
Leaves simple, alternate, exstipulate, evergreen; very small, acerose, 
imbricated. Flowers solitary, pedunculate, rose-coloured, lateral or ter- 
minal.— Shrubs, small, heath-like; natives of Asia and North America. 
: ¢, 1. C. HypNdipEs D. Don. The Hypnum-like Cassiope. 
Identification. D. Don in Ed. Phil. Journ., 17. p. 157. ; Don’s Mill., 3. p. 829. 
Synonyme. Andromeda hypnoides Lin. 563. 
mgravings. Pall. Fl. Ross., t. 93. £. 2.5 ot. Mag., t. 2936. ; and our fig. 1042. 
Spec. Char., &c. A small creeping shrub, resembling a kind of moss. Leaves 
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