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CompLeEaAT Bopy of Gar DENING: 
2 ae NUMBER XXXVI. 
For the End of May, and Beginning of June. 
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$EOT1ION A 
FLORA, or the 
Pieasure- GarDEn. 
CHAP. a 
Curious Plants and Filenaor now in their Perfeétion, | 
1 DOUBLE PEACH 
i , HE Gardener will recolle& that we have | 
| advis’d him to plant fome Anemone. 
Thefe will. 
Roots late in the Seafon. 
accordingly come after the others into Flower; nor 
is this Kind the laft of them. He knows fome 
- Roots bear this late Planting better than others, 
and we take the prefent Opportunity of fhewing 
him this is one. aft 
ftinguifh’d from the common Crimfon Kind by 
the “E ulnefs of the inner Tuft, and Shortnefs of 
the outer Petals; and to the mott ‘unacquainted 
Eye obvioufly by the Colour. 3 
It is one of the many Varieties we owe to Cul. 
ture from the common fine-leav’d Anemone Stock; 
and ’tis to that Plant in its plain State, the Student 
mutt refer for its Characters. 
It is the Species call’d by Camerartius, fim- 
ply, Anemone: by the Bauvuines, and the Ge- 
nerality of Writers their Followers, Asemone tenui- 
folia fimplict flore, and tenuifolia multiplex rubra : 
the fine-leav’d fingle, and the fine-leav’d double 
Anemone. 
Linn us and Van Royven at one Time call’d 
it a Pulfatilla, but in the laft Works of the Au- 
thor of the New Syfem, it is again nam’d Ane- 
mone; for he no longer feparates that and the 
Numb. XXXVII, | 
BLOOM ANEMONE, 
He adds av t#s BS 
ftinction, folits radicalibus ternato- déecompofitis, invo- 
Pulfatilla as two Genera. 
lucro foliofo : 
fubdivided i in Three’s, and a leafy Involucrtim. 
~The Student muft not think this Name too 
Anemone, with the radical Leaves 
May. 
long; the Number of Species tinder a Genus al- 
ways induces a 'Neceffity of particular DiftinGtions ; 
| and Linnvs, who has fhorten’d the Detail in” 
It is an elegant ‘ait beautiful iawn di- 
this, by cutting off the Varieties of Flower, which 
earlier Writers had confider’d as Species ; has yet 
encreas’d the Lift greatly, by comprifing undet 
the Name Anemone, marly before fuppos’d di- 
{tinct Genera. Thefe are, befide the Pulfatilla 
before named, the Hepatica, and a great many 
Plants ufually refer’d to the Ranunculus Kind. 
~The Root of this is tuberous, ' brown, arid. 
| irregularly {preading., 
The firft Leaves aré of a palé oréen, divided 
and fubdivided into Three’s. 
The Stalk is alfo of a pale green, ting’d with 
brown, and cover’d with a light filky Hidirynefs. 
Ie is round, a Foot high, and ufually wav’d or | 
bent feveral Ways. 
“About the Middle, or a little higher than thar, 
ftands what Linn us calls the Involucrum of the 
Flower: by this Term he expreffes a Kind of’ 
Cup, placed at a Diftance OE}OW ete Flower. 
ei ae cai The 
