This brilliant flowered plant is of hybrid origin,
and was raised in the superb collection of Robert
Henry Jenkinson, Esq. from had been fertilized by some ao tsheeerd s oofr tP, fwuhlgicidh ufmro,m th iatst
hPa. bmita cwuel asthuomu;l da ss utshpee cpt retose nhta vpel abnete nm uocnhe rreelsaetmedb letos
tihtsa tl etarvibees iint imtsu msto dhea voef bgereonw tohn; ea nodf tfhroe mla rtghee- lseizaev eodf tshoert ss. carIltest flfolowweersr inagr e snoortts ;s o bluatr gteh eaisr sbormillei aontchee ras nodf
abundance make good that deficiency. It thrives best
in a light sandy soil, like those to which it is nearest
related; and great care must be taken not to over
wtuartne rb irto,w ans, iitfs ilte acvheasn caerse tvoe royb taapitn ttoo og emt uccahn kmeroeidst uarned.
Cuttings of it strike root freely, if planted in pots and
placed on a shelf in the greenhouse.