58. 
60. 
478 
A stamen with a compresseds filament and fae 
cumbent anther, P. 95. which is moveable; 
ibid. 
A malvaceous corolla, p. $3. with connate fila- 
ments, p. 92. | 
The double perianth, p. 75. of the same flower, 
in the centre of which is seen the united fila- 
ments. 
The stamina of the Carolinea princeps, the fila- 
ments of which are connected below, but a- 
bove stand free ; in this figure the most of the 
filaments are cut away, leaving’ one to shew 
that it is branched, p. 93. The anthera is | 
round and upright. 
The flower of the Centaurea Cyanus is com- 
pound, p. 86. and enclosed in a common peri- 
-anthium, p. 77. which is imbricated and turbi- 
nated, p. 78. 
A floret taken from the disc of the foregoing 
flower ; it is tubular, p. 81. and the germen is 
crowned with a pappus, p. 79. 
A floret from the radius of the same flower; 
which is difform, p. 82. 
The flower of the Campanula rotundifolia, with 
a five-parted perianth, p. 75. and a ee 
corolla, p. 81. 
The stamen of a Vaccinium has a filiform fila 
ment and an awned anther, p. 94. 
The stamen of the Yew-tree, with a peltated and 
dentated anther, p. 04. 
The stamen of a Lamium, with an incumbent 
anther, which is hairy, p. 94. 
The Galanthus nivalis has a one-flowered spatha, 
p. 50. a liliaceous, three-petalled corolla, p. 83. 
a triphyllous crown, p. 90. and a germen in] | 
ferum, p. 101, | 
Ovi 
