138 
3011. TETRANDRIA, MONOGYNIA. PROTEACE*. 
HA KEA CL’CULA 1A. I L^af'’ 3h j Ce b II ® reen l 10use shrub, from Swan River, 
CUCULATE-LEAVED HAKEA. I Flower, 1 mill li in 1844, flowers in April, red & yellow. 
Named after Baron Hake, a German patron of botany. Seeds of this plant 
were collected by Mr. Drummond ; and plants propagated from them flowered 
at Kew in 1850. Its clusters of flowers are not very showy. bot. mag. 4528 . 
3012. CRYPTOGAMIA, MUSCI. BRYACE1B. 
HYPNIJM MEDIUM. j Stem, 2 inch I 1 , plant, 1 the natural size. 2, leaf; 3, 
long-headed feather-moss. ji Seta, 1 inch . capsule; 4,lid; 5, hood; magnified. 
Hvpnum,see No. 2789. One of the numerous mosses’which spread'a living 
net-work over the decaying bark of the trunks of trees. Its capsules, which ap- 
pear early in spring, are nearly erect, but not very numerous. 
3013. DIDYNAMIA, ANGIOSPERM I A. GESNER ACE.E. 
HYPOCYR 1A GRA'CILIS. II Plant, IS inch i Stove suffruticose plant, from Brazil, 
I Leaf, 1 inch 
SLENDER H YPOCVRTA* II Flower, 1 mch I in 1848, flowers in April, cream-while. 
Hypocyrta, see No. 2517. Imported by the Messrs. Backhouse, of the York 
Nursery. An epiphyte growing on trees in the moist forests of tropical America. 
Its treatment should be similar to that of Orchidaceous epiphytes, bot. mag- 4531 , 
3014. DIANDRIA, MONOGYNIA. JASMINACE£. 
JASMI'NUM laurifo / lium. || Plant, 4 feet *| stove shrub, from the East Indies, 
Leaf, 2A inch „ 
laurel-leaved jasmine. II Flower, l.j inch I in 1810, flowers in the Summer, white. 
Jasminum,see No. 2003. This Jasmine may be considered of value in the 
stove, for the fragrance of its blossoms, which somewhat resembles that of frank- 
incense. Some authors have made it a variety only of angustifolium. bot.reg.521. 
3013. gynandria, monandria. orchidace*. 
LI'PARIS LILIFO'LIA- II Plani, s inch 11 Hardy herb, perennial, N. America, 
Leal. 4 inch L ' 
lily-leaved liparis. || Flower, I mch II 1 '58, flowers in Sum. green & purple. 
Erom liparos, unctuous ; in allusion to the surface of the leaves of the original 
species. Here is a hardy and beautiful Orchis which should be seen in every good 
garden. It only requires peat, shade, and moisture. bot. mag. 2004 . 
3010. HEXANDRIA, MONOGYNIA. LILIACEE. 
ORNlTHOG , ALUM fimbria / tum. 11 Scape, 1 inch n Hardy bulb, from the Crimea, in 18211, 
FRINGED star of Bethlehem. || Flower, l inch 1 flowers Feb. to March, green & white. 
Ornithogalura, see No. 2036. Notwithstanding the apparent difference in size 
and habit of this Ornithogalum, its flowers are scarcely distinguishable from um- 
bellatum. Discovered by a Russian botanist in the Crimea. bot. reg.sss. 
3017. GYNANDRIA, DIANDRIA. ST YLIDIACEE. 
STYLID'IUM saxifracoi'des. ij c - s inch || Greenhouse herbaceous peren., Swan 
saxifrage-like stylidium. || Fiow'er, 1 inch I Biver, in 1849, flowers in May, yellow. 
Stylidium, see No. 2634. A pretty greenhouse plant, or probably it may prove 
sufficiently hardy for frame culture. It was imported by the Messrs. Yeitch, of 
Exeter ; and will prove an interesting addition to the genus. bot. mag.452». 
3015. CRYPTOGAMIA, MUSCI. BRYACEE. 
TOR'TULA RURA'LIS. |i Stem, 1} inch II 1, plant, the size of nature. 2, 
GREAT HAIRY SCREW-MOSS. || Seta, 1 inch ,| leaf; 3, capsule ; 4, lid; magnified. 
Tortula, see No, 2522, This erect-growing, branched, moss is most frequently 
found on thatched roofs, although sometimes on walls and trees. It is in perfection 
in spring, forming dense patches, with erect capsules. 
