56 
NEW, RARE AND DESIRABLE GREENHOUSE PLANTS. 
ARAUCARIA BIDWILLII, 10s. 6 d. anil 15s. I ARAUCARIA CUNNINGHAMII, 10s. 6 d., 
,, COOKII, 15s. and 1 guinea I 15s. and 1 guinea 
ARAUCARIA EXCELSA. 
Mr. W. B. lias lately imported a fine lot of this handsome conservatory plant. 10s. 6 d. 
ARAUCARIA RULEI. 
A handsome ornamental plant, introduced from New Caledonia. It has verticillate horizontally 
spreading branches, the leafy twigs very long, about an inch in diameter, with oval elliptic oppressed 
leaves, rounded and sub-carinate beneath, and curved towards the trunk. 1, 2, and 3 guineas. 
ARIS2EMA SPECIOSUM HOOKERIA-| BIGNONIA GRANDIFLORA, 2s. 6d. &3s. 6d. 
NUM, 10s. 6 d. j „ 
ARUNDO DONAX VARIEGATA, 3s. 6(7. ' 
imd 5s. j ,, 
AZALEA, vide Index 
BEGONIA, vide Index | 
BIGNONIA CHERERE, 3s. 6 d. and 5s. 
JASMINOIDES ALBA 
M AGN A, 3s. 6(7. and 5s. 
JASMINOIDES SPLENDIDA, 
2s. 6 d., 3s. 6d. and 5s. 
YENUSTA, 3s. 6 d. and 5s. 
BLANDFORDIA CUNNINGHAMII. 
The late Dr. Lindley, in describing the previously known kinds of this genus, thus refers to 
Bland/ordia Cunninghamii : — “None of them are to be compared for beauty with a plant of which the 
late Allan Cunningham gave me a specimen, the flowers of which are fully twice as largo as 
TS. marginata, ( grandiflom). The leaves have neither serratures nor roughness on the edge, but are 
perfectly smooth. The flowers are of a deep rich red tint, except at the ends of the petals, where they 
are yellow.” 3s. 6d., 5s. and 7s. 6(7. 
BLANDFORDIA AUREA, 10s. 6 d. 
„ NOBILIS, 5s. and 7s. G d. 
„ PRINCEPS, vide page 4. 
BOMAREA BOGOTENSIS, 10s. 6 d. 
BORONIA DRUMMONDII, 2s. 6 d. and 
3s. 6 d. 
BORONIA MEGASTIGMA. 
A remarkably effective Australian greenhouse plant, desirable not only on account of the peculiar 
colour of its flowers, but also for their fragrance. It is of slender habit, with twiggy branches, clothed 
with spare foliage, and bearing copious axillary flowers. The leaves are sessile, pinnate, with 3 to 5 
narrow linear rigid leaflets. The flowers are drooping, half an inch in diameter, sub-globose, cam- 
panulate, the nearly orbicular concave petals being maroon purple outside, and yellow within. The 
aromatic fragrance of the flowers is most delicious. 10s. 6 d. 
BORONIA SERRULATA, 2s. G d. and 3s. 6 d. | BOUYAEDIA, vide Index. 
BRACHYCHITON ACERIFOLIUM. 
This plant is a native of New South Wales. It has long-stalked, deeply 5 or 7-lobeil, thin, shining 
glabrous leaves, often 8 or 10 inches in diameter, the lobes of which are oblong- lanceolate. The flowers, 
borne in loose axillary racemes or small panicles, are of a rich red colour, whence the colonists give it 
the name of Flame-tree. It is sometimes called Sterculia acerifolia. 7s. 6 d. 
BRACHYCHITON DELABECHII, 
This is the remarkable and curious gouty-stemmed Bottle Tree of Australia. 7s. 6 d. 
BRACHYSEMA UNDULATUM. 
A tall sub-seandent evergreen greenhouse plant, attractive when in blossom, on account of the very 
unusual colour of its flowers. It has long flexible branches, producing from their alternate or opposite 
leaf axils numerous small flowering twigs. The leaves are oblong-ovate, mueronate, silky beneath, 
and the flowers arc solitary or sometimes in pairs in the leaf axils, with a broad inflated brownish silky 
calyx, and deep violet maroon corolla having a broad obtuse keel. It is a native oi the West Australian 
colony. It has been figured in the Botanical Magazine, tab. 6114. 5s. and 7s. 6d. 
BRUGMANSIA ARB ORE A, 3s. 6 d. 
„ COCCINEA, vide page 4. 
,, KNIGHTII (flore-pleno), 
3s. 6d. 
„ SAN GUINEA, 3s. 6 d. 
„ SUAVEOLENS, 3s. 6(7. 
BURTONIA VIOLACEA, 3s. 6 d. 
CALCEOLARIA PAVONI, 3s. 6 d. and 5s. 
C ALLI CARP A PURPUREA, 3s. 6 d. 
CAMELLIAS, vide Index. 
CAMPHORA OFFICINALIS, 5s. 
CAMFSIDIUM FILICIFOLIUM, vide p. 22. 
