the base, thickly clothed with long shaggy hairs, 5
bearing anthers, which in our plants were always barren,
2 back sterile filaments elongated and curved
back like hooks. Germen downy. Aristae villous.
Style red, hairy ait the base, Stigmas 5, red, reflexed. and smooth upwards.
Our drawing was taken from a fine plant communicated
from the garden of the Horticultural Society.
Idto nis, tahto upgrehs ednets esrcvairncge ai np ltahcee cionl leecvteiroyn so naeb ofruotm L othne
eaabrulnyd iann scper ionfg ,i tsa npdr ectotyn tifnlouwese risn. fuIltl bbleogoimns tiflllo wlaeteri ning
autumn; an equal mixture of loam, peat, and sand,
is the best soil for it; and cuttings strike root freely,
planted in pots and placed on a shelf in the greenhouse.
In all the plants that we have had an opportunity of examining,
the anthers were without pollen; in Jacquin’s
figure they are represented perfect, though his flowers
are not larger than ours. Can it be dioecious?