By Richard Anthony Salisbury, Esq. 265 



Hist. n. 1329. Juncoides Iatifolium alpinum glabrum paniculA 

 lute£ splendente. Scheuchz. Agrost.p.31^. 



A rare alpine species, with bright yellow petals, which 

 flowered last August, in the Comtesse de Vandes' collection 

 at Bayswater : here it is as easily cultivated as any other 

 species, and would be a great ornament to our grass plats. 



Juncus Maritimus. Brown Prodr.p. 258. — Decand. Syn. 

 p. 151. — SmithinErigL Bot. n. 1725. cum Ic. 



Several plants of this species came up in my court, two 

 years ago, from seeds collected at Port Dalrymple, in the 

 island of Van Dieman ; but though one of these stood the first 

 winter, it has been killed by the little frost of the last. The 

 plant had flowered abundantly, and it might have been the 

 case with the indigenous one of our own coasts. 



Lomandra Longifolia. Labill. Nov. Holl.v. I. p. 92. 

 t. 119. Xerotes longifolia. Brown Prodr.p. 262. 



This plant lived through two winters in the open ground 

 at Mill Hill. I received the seeds from Port Jackson, in 

 179^5 with the title of Brandy Bottles, and its flowers ex- 

 hale a strong vinous smell, like those of Nymphaea Lutea. It 

 is easily propagated by offsets ; but is so ugly and* prickly a 

 plant, that few people will preserve it here. 



PANDANE/E. 



Pandanus Humilis. Jacq. Fragm.p. 21. t. 14./. 2. Pan- 

 danus polycephalus. Lamarck in Encycl. Bot. v. 1. p. 367. 

 Pandanus odoratus. Prodr. p. 3. 



I purchased this species of Messrs. Lee and Kennedy in 

 1789, who had raised it, many years before, from seeds 



