gefichedoages es 
To bloom fucceffively, the plant requires to be kept ina 
ftove. Its habit refembles the laft, to which its fynonyms 
were erroneoufly referred by i? ae but the /eaves are 
right angle with its tube, and the {tamens are long and diva- 
ricated. The flowers grow ona rather flender fpotted italk, 
fituated, as in the laft, on the outlide of the leaves, not grow- 
ing from among them, as drawn by Vallet. This author 
took his figure from a plant at es early in the Bk: cen- 
tury, and is copied by thofe old writers we have cited. In 
thefe the saatlal flower-fealls look jownted, though or iginally 
‘meant to reprefent fome flowers as having fallen This has 
led profeffor Willdenow to conttruct an erroneous fpecilic 
charader. 
5. H. tigrinus. Jacq. Hort. Schoenbr. v. 1. 29. te, Bs — 
different from any thing we find elfewhere aeferibed, ) 
or c Figured. Breynius’s t. 39. by no means accords with: 
Hi albifles. Jacq. Hort. Schoenbr. v. 1. g1. t. 
:s Mag. sa 239 —Leaves elliptical, flat, fmooth, 5B 
fringed. Stalk hairy, reclining. Involucrum mem 
9 reen-v 
and hairy flowers halk ditioggouh this from all the preceding, 
Jacquin makes yi involucrum {mooth, Edwards and Gawler 
in’Curt. Mag. fringed. The cor “olla is nearly erect, umbel 
clofe, anthers y aon berries — fearlet 
_H. toxicarius. Ait. . Kew. v. 1. 405. ‘Thunb, 
Prod. 59. Curt. Mag. t. 12 ie as rilis difticha ; Linn, 
Suppl. 195. Patte tfon’s Travels, 51, with a very bad plate. 
i onl 
The say dawele of this plant, known to have been pro- 
duced in England, were given us in April 1794, from the 
— of the Hon ase panes. at ae aa on 
Umbel level opped, Bente; fhorter: than the clofe, Spee, frale much compete, a fo ot or more in hei hey pre 
leaved iar —Native of the Cape of Good Hope, 
like — 8 te Tt flowered with Jacquin in Septem- 
ber. Mb is large and fcaly. Leaves two, {preading 
soem as in the firit free but not fo much de 
preffed. y are broad, dark-green, {mooth, except at 
the edge, which is denfely fringed, and their bafe externally 
fpotted, as in the two laft. Flower-ftalk ——— beauti- 
fully fpeckled with red. Jnvolucrum of about nine upright, 
fe, deep-fearlet t leaves, concealing the reese except 
the the tops of their ftamens and ityles. Coralia pale red, 
H. quadrivalvis. Jacq. Hort. Sc Sicsealeis 1.30. 
t. a —Leaves two; divaricated, sipeiciabttnges ‘frin aed 
hairy on the upper fide. Involucrum of four flightly ex- 
= elas, taller than the clofe ievehiocnee umbel.— 
ather {maller than the lait, and diftinguifhed by the rough 
rs “" iw — few beige < ties a ch 
di che ow ee in 14 
Sere An ft, and — 5 na 
q sn Flow versal Uhread-thaped, 
h, andas thic. 
ef 
or hOUL Given hes 
wees; an iach’ and half long’ and on 
umero' crave into a Foun 
cee 
te bw of the athens pins ed 5 vey 
ble, making a denfe umbel ; their ftalks two or three mene 
long, with many narrow white membranous leases among 
them. Corolla very pale rofe-colour, its fegments 1 
or reflexed, aor ba in H. multi —T Stamens of the 
ee colour an 
mi fate 
rum aoe} red, 2 fix. oblong : ea L. ; 
