224 
SWAINSONIA CORONILL^FOLIA. 
Propagation is easily effected by cuttings of the half-ripened wood, planted 
either in sand or very light soil, and the pots plunged in a little moist bottom-heat. 
Our drawing was made in April 1843, from a fine plant which bloomed in the 
gardens at Chatsworth, and specimens were also furnished to us at the same time, 
by Mr. Skirving, Nurseryman, Liverpool. 
The generic name was given in honour of Isaac Swainson, a great cultivator of 
plants about the end of the last century. 
