256 
ENGLISH BOTANY. 
they are met with. Adding, in parenthesis, that to grow them 
requires only a bed of moderately good soil, into which they are 
to be planted, four inches from the surface, and as much from 
each other, as soon as they are procured, and after they have 
bloomed, to be tfaken up and kept as is usual with the more 
common kinds. 
Belle Alliance; deep vermilion. 
Conde Brabant; vermilion and 
yellow. 
Lac van Bhyn ; lilac and gray 
edge. 
Bride of Haarlem ; crimson and 
white. 
Vuurberg; deep scarlet crimson. 
Claramond; deep rose. 
Drap d’Or; vermilion and 
yellow. 
Pottebakker; yellow. 
white. 
Heine des Cerises; rose and 
straw colour. 
Bizard Pronkert; crimson and 
yellow. 
Superintendant; lilac and white. 
Golden Star; yellow and ver¬ 
milion. 
Thomas Moore ; brown. 
Royal Standard; deep rose and 
white. 
Cerise Parfaite; cherry and white. 
Eendragt; white vermilion edge. 
Pax Albo ; large white. 
Canary Yogel; bright yellow. 
Due Victor; rosy lilac, gray 
edge. 
Due de Holstein ; yellow and 
crimson. 
Violette Blanche; white and 
cherry. 
Samson; deep vermilion and 
yellow. 
Globe de.Riga; lilac and white. 
J. T. L. 
LITERARY NOTICE. 
English Botany, or the Plants of Great Britain; arranged 
according to the Linncean System, with their Descriptions, 
Synonymes, Places of Growth, fyc. Second edition. Reissue 
in parts. London : Judith Sowerby, 3, Mead Place, Lambeth. 
It is no inconsiderable task to chronicle and describe the plants 
which inhabit an extensive country, but to produce figures of 
them all is a much more herculean labour, and few countries can 
boast of any tolerably complete collections of delineations of 
