ter. The inner petals are small, irregularly shaped, and very numerous. 
In some flowers, we have observed them pretty evenly arranged, so as to 
fill the centre, and cause it to have a globular appearance; but their 
usual character is to be all nearly of equal height, and to rise upright in 
a dense mass, like the centre petals of the Pompone. 
The name of White Waratah, or White Anemone-flowered, which has 
been given to this variety, is scarcely so appropriate as we could have 
wished, as it leads us to suppose that, excepting in the colour of its 
flowers, it is the same as the elegant variety represented at folio 8. We, 
however, think it better to adopt the name by which it is now so gene¬ 
rally known, than create confusion by giving it a new one. 
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