PASSIFLORE.E. 
159 
may be added, with advantage in the opinion of those who 
indulge in that needless luxury. 
The Granadilla grows freely from cuttings. It has 
been remarked however that plants reared in this manner 
are not so productive as those which have been raised from 
seed. 
In the Dictionnaire de Matiere Medicale it is stated on 
the authority of M. liicord-Madiana that the root of the 
Granadilla is an active narcotic poison. There has evi- 
dently been some strange mistake. The root of some 
other plant, probably of an Echites, has been mistaken 
for that of the Granadilla. 
Section 5. Dysosmia. 
Involucre 3-phylIous $ leaflets multifid with the 
lobes setaceous and glandulose at the apex. Se- 
pals 5. Petals 5. Peduncles solitary. Fruit 
sub-capsular. 
17. Passillora feetida. Love in a Mist. 
Stem hairy, leaves cordate 3-lobatc, lobes sub- 
entire hairy with the hairs on the upper surface 
as well as that of the petioles capitato-glandulose, 
subfloral leaflets 3 multifido-capillary. 
P. vesicaria hcderacea, odore tetro, Pluli. aim. 3S2. t. 
TT4. f. 1. — Clematis Indica hirsuta feetida. Plum. Amer. 
71. t. 86. — Passiflora vesicaria, florum involucTis tri- 
phyllis multifido-capillaribus. Browne, 327. — P. hirsuta. 
Lodd. Bot. Cab. 128. 
II AB. By the road-sides, and on fences. 
F L. Throughout the year. 
This is a very common plant. The leaves are hirsute, 
especially on the upper surface, with capitato-glandulose 
hairs. Stipules multifido-capiliary. Tendrils axillary, 
simple. Peduncles axillary longer than the petioles. 
Hairs of the subfloral leaflets secreting a clammy adhe- 
sive fluid. Sepals oblong, 3-nerved with mid-nerve ter- 
minating below the apex in a setaceo-subulate apicula. 
Petals oblong, blunt, 1-nerved, thin, white. Filaments of 
the outer circle of the crown alternately short and long, 
purple tipt wflth white : inner circle forming an urceolate 
cup around the base of the gynaphore. Fruit size of a 
large gooseberry, yellow, at first, and during dry seasons 
