NEW PLANTS. 
31 
subject.is from a full conviction of its being entirely correct: l 
have a long time practised and observed, and always found it 
so.—With kind regards, yours, &c. 
Senex. 
[We should be happy to receive a word or two from our re¬ 
spected Correspondents, on the subject of “ Run Flowers,” at 
their leisure.— Ed. F. J.] 
NEW PLANTS. 
Moncecia Polyandria — Begoniacea. 
Begonia Coccinca. This plant was imported by Messis. 
Veitch, of Exeter, from the Organ Mountains of Brazil, where 
it was discovered by their collector, Mr. Lobb, in 1841 : it 
blossomed soon after its arrival, and was exhibited at a meeting 
of the Horticultural Society in April, 1842. The plant was then 
about a foot in height: it has the usual appearance of Begonia 
in foliage and general habit, and bearing flowers of a deep rich 
red makes a beautiful variety in this extensive genus.— Bot. Mag . 
Gynandria Monandria — Orchidea. 
Phajus Albus. A fine caulescent species, stated by Dr. 
Wallich (to whom we are indebted for its introduction) to be a 
native of trees on Mount Chandaghiry in Nepal, and in the 
neighbourhood of Silhet. It flowered in the collection at the 
Botanical Garden, Kew, in July, 1842: the raceme of the flowers 
is produced from the base of the upper leaf, and is drooping; it 
consists of from six to eight large delicate white flowers, slightly 
tinged with pale green, on the disk of the labellum are five 
longitudinal lines of soft erect short purple spines. Bot. Mag. 
Didyn amia Angiospermia — Gesneriacete. 
Achimenes Multijlora. This fine free flowering stove plant 
is described as an annual by Mr. Gardner, who found it inha¬ 
biting dry banks in woods on the Serra de Santa Brida, and 
near Villa de Arayos, in the province of Goyaz, Brazil. The 
plants flowered first at the Royal Botanical Garden of Glasgow, 
