1872.] 
M0NTAGN2EA BIPINNATIFIDA 
157 
themselves, as it were, through the leafy carpet, are seen to very great advantage. 
—John Cox, Redleaf 
MONTAGNiEA BIPINNATIFIDA. 
F the many choice plants used for what is called Subtropical Gardening, 
that of which (thanks to the publisher of M. Alphand’s Les Promenades 
de Paris) we now introduce a woodcut, is second to none. Indeed, we 
think it shares, with the noble Wigandia, the first place amongst them all. 
It is majestic and dignified in habit, its stout erect stems being handsomely 
