By Professor Lindley. 



249 



at Falmouth, and at Carclew, where it grows and flowers 

 abundantly in the open border. G. juniper hut was killed in 

 the former place. 

 Goodia lotifolia was killed at Sketty, though unhurt by the previous 

 winter. 



Hake a acicularis and linearis lived without sustaining injury in the 

 open ground at Kilkenny. H. macrocarpa was untouched 

 upon a wall at Bicton. H. ceratophylla, and H. jjugioniformis, 

 both of which had been out for two years, were killed at 

 Carclew. 



Kennedy a bimaculata, 16 or 17 years old, in the conservatory at 

 Spofforth, was killed to the ground, but it sprung up again. 

 K. monophylla was killed at Falmouth. 



Lomatia longifolia was cut down at Redleaf. 



Leptospermu.m lanigerum, against a wall, was not materially injured 

 at Sketty. L. ambiguum, a beautiful shrub 8 feet high, in a 

 sheltered situation at the corner of the garden at Carclew, 

 was uninjured. L. obovatum lived without protection at 

 Kilkenny. Several species are said to have lived against a 

 wall at Belfast without suffering. In Mr. Fox's garden, at 

 Falmouth, a Leptospermum, called ambiguum, has been grow- 

 ing for 17 years, and is 10 feet high, flowering abundantly in 

 the summer. 



Melaleuca hypericifoUa, incana, and decussata, which had been 

 trained against a south wall at Carclew, had their bark split from 

 the points of the branches to the root, and consequently were 

 killed. A species of this genus is mentioned by Mr. Robert- 

 son as having been uninjured in the open ground at Kilkenny. 

 M. decussata, pubescens, ericifolia, and depressa, survived 

 with Mr. Fox, at Falmouth ; but the hypericifoUa was killed 

 even there. 



Pomaderris elliptica was killed at Bicton. 



Sollya heterophylla, although it had survived several previous 



