A 
CONCISE HISTORY 
O F 
FLOWERS. 
J O N U I L. 
HIS charming flower comei?, with all its 
graces, to deck the fpring ^ it confifts of fev- 
eral fpecies j but the great jonquil has a ftem, 
about a foot in height, which bears from a 
■third part upwards, feveral golden blofToms, 
confifting of five or fix leaves, all curling in 
a mofl agreeable and beautiful mannei. It 
is multiplied by feed ; but, more properly, by 
their bulb's. 'I'hey require a good, but not 
a very rich foil ; and are ulually planted along 
the borders; thus affording a mofl agreeable 
embelliflnnent to the walks and parterres of 
any garden meant to be diflinguifhed for its 
lafte and elegance. . 
ANEMONE. 
