than depth. The plant not having been yet cultivated in 
any of those countries from which we are supplied with 
oranges, the fruit has not found a place among the articles 
of commerce in this country. But we see no reason why it 
should not in course of time; it is produced as freely as that 
of the others in the conservatory at Wormleybury. We 
have heard that the tree does well at the Cape of Good 
Hope. The dwarf variety we suspect can scarcely be con- 
sidered of any consequence but as an ornamental shrub. 
———pa—— 
a The calyx. & Stamens. c Pistil and hypogynous pedestal. 
