CALCEOLARIA INTEGRIFOLIA VISCOSISSIMA 
(very clammy-stemmed slipper- wort.) 
CLASS. ORDER. 
DIANDRXA. MONOGYNIA. 
NATURAL ORDER. 
SCROPHULARINEvE. 
Generic Character. — Calyx four parted. Corolla two-lipped, and inflated. Capsule two celled. 
Specific Character. — Stem shrubby, from two to four feet high, covered with ' soft downiness, very 
clammy. Leaves obcordate, very rough and unequal in appearance, opposite, scented, covered thickly 
with woolliness, clammy on the under side. Corymbs panicled. Flower-stalks half to three 
quarters of an inch long, slender. Calyx green, four cleft, segments broadly ovate. Corolla two 
lipped, upper lip about half the size of the lower one, bright orange colour. Stamens two, inserted 
at the base of the upper lip. 
Synonym. — Calceolaria salvisefolia. Feuill. Per. vol. 3. p. 13. 
Of this beautiful variety of Calceolaria integrifolia, we obtained cuttings from 
the London Horticultural Society. Its rich, yellow, dense corymbs of flowers, 
render it a very desirable plant for the flower-borders, during the summer season ; 
and in the winter it enlivens the greenhouse. 
It is scarcely ever out of bloom ; and becomes a shrub of some size. Dr. 
Hooker informs us that Mr. Cameron, of the Birmingham Botanic Garden, raised 
it from seeds. It may easily be propagated by cuttings. 
