50 
THE LADIES’ FLOWER-GARDEN 
fingered Lemon, which has a solid fruit without any cells or pulp, and is divided in the middle into five or more 
long round parts, a little crooked, and having the appearance of the human hand, with the fingers slightly bent. 
The limes used in maldng punch are a small round variety of the Lemon. 
4.— CITRUS PARADISI Macfayden. THE FORBIDDEN FRUIT. 
SvNONYMES. — C. Limonum Paradisi iJisso; Pomum Paradisi Ferr. 
Specific Character. — Leaves oval, rounded, crenulate, smooth ; petioles winged. Fruit large, subacid. ((?. Don.) 
Description, &c. — The tree of this species has numerous branches, and the leaves are much longer and 
narrower than those of any other kind of Citrus. The flowers are large, and have from four to seven unequal 
petals, which are tinged with purple like those of the Lemon. The fruit is very large, with a very thick rind, and 
scarcely any pulp, but what there is contains a veiy acid juice, and only two or three seeds. There are two 
varieties of this species, both of which are natives of Jamaica, where they form trees thirty feet high. The fruit 
makes an excellent sweetmeat, but is not good to eat uncooked. 
5.— CITRUS AURANTIUM Bisso. THE ORANGE. 
Varieties. — C. A. sinense Risso, the China Orange ; C. A. flore- 
pleno Risso, the double-flowered Orange ; C. A. Hierocunthicum Risso, 
the Maltese Orange ; C. A. minutissimum Risso, the Kin-kan Orange ; 
C. A. ilicifolium Risso, the Holly-leaved Orange ; C. A. nobile Risso, 
the Mand.arin Or.ange. 
Specific Character. — Petioles almost naked. Leaves ovate- 
oblong, acuminate, with a blunt point. Flowers with twenty or 
twenty-two stamens. Fruit globose, with a thin rind, and a sweet 
pulp. ((?. Don.) 
Engravings. — Nouveau Duhamel, vol. vii., t. 35, fiO- 3- Of the 
variety C. A. nobile, Bot. Reg., t. 211. 
Description, tfec. — The Sweet Orange forms a noble tree, growing to the height of from twenty to forty feet. | 
The trunk is nalved at the bottom, and the branches form a tuft at the top. The flowers are white and very . 
fragrant, and as they continue appearing for several months together, the tree has almost always flowers and fruit 
on it at the same time. The species is a native of Asia, but it has been long cultivated in the South of Europe, ' 
and many of the varieties have been originated there. These varieties are very numerous, but the best of them are i 
the following : — the China Orange, which is the land most generally sold in the market, and which not being so j 
sensitive to cold as the other varieties, is grown in the open air in great quantities at Nice and in the Azores ; the ' 
Genoa Orange, which is imported in great quantities from Genoa, and which has a thick rind, commonly marked 
with a little ridge down one side : this orange is considered very inferior to the preceding variety. The double- | 
flowered Orange has flowers composed of ten petals, the pistil is usually divided in two parts at the top, each ! 
bearing a yellow stigma, and the pulp of the fniifc is formed of a double range of cells, imequal in size, but all full of | 
very sweet juice : this tree is very seldom cultivated. The Maltese Orange has a very thin rind, and the pulp, } 
which is at first of a golden yellow, becomes of a deep red when it is ripe ; the juice is very sweet, and the seeds ! 
are very small. The small-fruited Orange has lanceolate leaves, and very long petioles ; the frait of this variety is 
not much larger than a cherry ; it is very ornamental, but the juice is acid. The Mandarin Orange has both the j 
rind and the pulp of the fruit reddish ; it has sweet juice, and a sweet eatable rind, which adheres so loosely to the i 
pulp as to be separable from it by the slightest effort, and which, when ripe, often separates natm'aUy. There 
are many other varieties, but these are the most important. The Sweet Orange trees are generally propagated by | 
budding or grafting on the Citron or the Sevflle Orange, as when Sweet Oranges are raised from seed, they do not ; 
