fragalifolia. The colour of the flowers is nearest the 
former, but their spreading mode of growth resembles 
the latter. It was raised from seed the year before 
last, in the magnificent collection of Robert Henry 
Jenkinson, Esq. where our drawing was made last 
summer ; and we have seen it in the same collection 
this spring, covered with its elegant flowers. It grows 
freely, like its near relatives, in a mixture of turfy 
loam, peat, and sand, and the pots well drained with 
potsherds, keeping it dry when in a dormant state. It 
may be increased, though slowly, by cuttings, or by 
the little tubers from its roots, which must be planted 
with their tops above the earth, or the water is liable 
to injure them. 
