cool greenhouse climbers, and in certain conditions to our hardy 
ones also. Planted against a south wall, it will no doubt prove 
hardy. 
Its cultivation is very simple; it will grow in any garden- 
soil ; but as in most cases a little more attention to the compost 
is amply rewarded by the greater vigour of the plant and the 
abundance of the bloom,—a mixture of loam and peat, with 
the addition of some well-rotted manure, being suitable for it. 
It is also easily propagated, by taking good firm side-shoots in 
summer, and striking them under a hand light, potting off into 
small thumb-pots in a light soil, and giving them gradually 
light and air. It should be added, that the individual flowers 
remain a long time in bloom. 
