Ixx 



NATURAL ARRANGEMENT. 



136 Wachend6rft'a L. 

 133 Xiphidium Aubl. 



137 Haemodbrum Sm. 

 139 Dilatris L. 



942 ArgolasiaJ. 



140 Lachnanthes Ell. 



941 Lopbiola Ker 



944 Barbacem'a Vand. 



945 Con6stylis R. Br. 

 943 Anigozanthos R. Br. 



447. Order CLXXXIX. HYPOXI'DEvE. 



Genera 3, Species 29 ; Hot-house Species 7 ; Green-house Species 20 ; Hardy Ligneous Species 0; 

 ifonfy Herbaceous Species 2. JO feet ; j£ 3| feet ; & 0 feet. 



America, New Holland, the Cape of Good Hope, Polynesia, and the Indian Archipelago give birth to these 

 plants, which have sweet yellow flowers and linear leaves, protected by long weak hairs. Nothing is known of 

 their medicinal qualities. Divisions and offsets. 



981 Hyp6xis L. 



0 2 | 982 Curculigo Gae. 



| 983 Molinena ColL 



448. Order CXC. AMARYLLI'DEiE. 



Genera 30, Species 464 ; Hot-house Species 198 ; Green-house Species 138 ; Hardy Ligneous Species 0 ; 

 Hardy Herbaceous Species 128. ± 0 feet ; £ 20| feet ; ^ 0 feet. 

 Here we have another group of vegetation so lovely as to have excited admiration from the days of Solomon, 

 who called them the lilies of the field, down to our own period. Their roots are all bulbous. In stature they 

 seldom exceed a foot or two : in Doryanthes, and some species of Crinum alone, much surpassing such a size ; 

 in foliage they possess a uniformity of figure which is very singular; in colour they vary from white and 

 yellow to deep scarlet and azure blue; in fragrance they vie with the violet and the primrose. Some of the 

 species are natives of thickets in the cooler provinces of Europe and Asia ; others are found deep-rooted in the 

 burning shores of islands where scarcely a blade of grass interposes itself between them and the torrid rays of a 

 scorching sun ; many spring up in the gloomy, damp, and sultry woods of equinoctial America ; and another 

 set intermingles with the Ixias and Gladioluses of Southern Africa. Several of the Narcissi, independently of 

 their beauty, possess emetic qualities ; from the viscid juice of Brunsvig?'a toxicaria, the Hottentots procure 

 a poison wherewith to smear their arrows. Offsets and seeds. 



973 Sternberg^ Kit. 



974 Zephyranthes Herb. 



975 Habranthus Herb. 



969 Amaryllis L. 

 968 Nerlne Herb. 

 963 Strumaria Jac. 

 967 Brunsvigz'a Hei. 



970 Phyc^lla Lindl. 

 972 Griffima Ker 

 960 Haemanthus L. 



0 



5 



964 Crinum L. 0 3 



934 



Pancratium L. 



0 



2 



0 



3 



971 Vallbta Sal. 



935 



Ismeni? Sal. 







0 



2 



966 Gastronema Herb. 



933 



Narcissus L. 



*0 



98 



0 



3 



965 Cyrtanthus H. K. 



3333 



Coburghm Swt. 











3335 Clivea Lindl. 



961 



Galanthus L. 



*0 



2 







940 ChrysipMala Ker 



362 



Leucbjum L. 



*0 



4 







939 Chlidanthus Herb. 



3334 



A N cis Sal. 



0 



4 







936 Eucrbsia Xer 



977 



Gethyllis L. 











938 Calostemma R. Br. 



979 



Alstrcemerz'a L. 



0 



2 







937 Eurycles Sal. 



976 



Doryanthes Corr. 







449. Order CXCI. HEMEROCALLI'DEjE. 



Genera 18, Species 261 ; Hot-house Species 14 ; Green-house Species 238 ; Hardy Ligneous Species 0 ; 

 Hardy Herbaceous Species 9. JO feet ; }£ 6| feet ; ^ 0 feet. 



These are fine showy plants, bearing their flowers in umbels or racemes, either white, yellow, red, or blue ; 

 they are mostly inhabitants of temperate zones, and are of little utility, with the exception of the aloe, the 

 purgative powers of which need not be insisted on. This genus is, besides, remarkable among Monocotyle- 

 dones for its fleshy leaves, in which, and its woody stem, it offers a striking deviation from the usual structure 

 of these plants. Cuttings, offsets, and division. 



1007 Hemerocallis L. 



1008 Funkm Spr. 



1005 Agapanthus Her it. 

 978 Polyanthes L. 



1006 Blandfbrdm Sm. 

 1023 Tritoma Ker 



1024 Velthei'nu'a Gled. 

 1022 Aletris L. 



1025 Sanseviera Thun. 



1026 Tulbaghia L. 

 141 Brodi«\r Sm. 



1010 Pachidimdron W. 



1011 ^'loe L. 



1009 Rhipidodendron W. 



1013 Gasteria Haw. 



1012 Bowiea Haw. 



1014 Haworthia Duval 



1015 A'picra W. 



450. Order CXCII. DIOSCORIE^. 



Genera 3, Species 37 ; Hot-house Species 32 ; Green-house Species 3 ; Hardy Ligneous Species 0 

 Hardy Herbaceous Species 2. JO feet ; j£ 4| feet ; ^ 0 feet. 



A climbing stem, and broad, cordate, or angular leaves, inconspicuous yellowish flowers, and a large fleshy 

 root, are the obvious characteristics of this order, of which the yam is the representative; the roots of this 

 plant yield one of the most important articles of food in the tropical countries. Roots and seeds. 

 2786 Rajania L. I 2787 Dioscbrea L. 0 2 | 2785 Testudinaria Burc. 



451. Order CXCIII. TA v MEt£. 



Genus 1 , Species 2 ; Hot-house Species 0 ; Green-house Species 0; Hardy Ligneous Species 0; 

 Hardy Herbaceous Species 2. JO feet ; £ 3 feet ; & 0 feet. 

 Twining herbaceous plants, with large tuberous roots, heart-shaped leaves, and racemes of small axillary 

 flowers. The roots are purgative and dangerous. Roots and seeds. 



2784 Tamus L. *0 2 



452. Order CXCIV. SMILA v CEiE. 



Genera 12 Species 103 ; Hot-house Species 12; Green-house Species 17 ; Hardy Ligneous Species 25 ; 

 Hardy Herbaceous Species 49. f 10| feet ; £ 12 feet ; ^ 0 feet. 

 These scarcely differ from the baccate Asphodelese, except in their usually trifid style, and the membranous 

 integuments of the seed. Many are interesting plants, especially the lily of the valley, a species of Conval- 

 laria, the odour of v/hich is perhaps the most grateful in the vegetable kingdom. Several others, as Uvularia, 

 Smilaclna, Polyg6natum, and Trillium are objects of ornament. Smilax is remarkable for its twining stems, 

 and its leaves, which resemble those of Dicotyl^dones ; the roots of several species form the sarsaparilla of the 

 shops, a drug, the nature of which is mucilaginous and rather bitter, and which is employed as diaphoretic and 

 diuretic. Medkola is also an active diuretic. Suckers, cuttings, division, and offsets. 



2783 SmMaxL. 20 3 1039 Smilaclna Besf. 0 9 1114 MeAhola L. 0 1 



1037 Rip6gonum Forst. 1041 Ophiopbgon Ker 1221 Paris L. *0 3 



2819 iJuscus L. *5 0 1038 Convallaria L. *0 3 ? 1149 Roxburgh?** Jon. 



J040 Polyg6natum Besf *0 11 1034 Strept opus Mr. 4 1118 Trillium L. 0 15 



