198 
MUSS^NDA MACROPHYLLA. 
giri and Majarjoon, in Nepal, in blossom during the rainy season, in fruit duriri| 
the winter.” 
It does not appear to require a temperature much exceeding that of an ordi' 
nary greenhouse. In the stove its growth is more rapid, but less vigorous ; thl 
leaves are thin, and of a pallid green, and the flowers soon fall off. In the summe]l 
months, whilst it is flowering and ripening its shoots, a greenhouse will be quit 
warm enough. A very trifling attention will be sufficient to preserve it clothe('* 
with branches and foliage to the bottom of the stem. It may be planted in i 
loamy soil, or in a compost similar to that recently recommended for the Luculu 
gratissima. 
It is a species of rapid growth ; hence, handsome bushes may soon be obtainec 
from cuttings of the young wood, which strike root with facility, planted in sand 
or a sandy soil, and placed in a close, moist heat. . 
The family name Musscenda^ is the vernacular title of M. frondosa, Tli| 
specific appellation refers to the magnitude of the foliage. 1 
