. Paxton's Magazine of Botany and Register of Flowering Plants. , and sothoroughly drained, that it may never be unnecessarily drenched with water. Arich loamy soil, to which a little heath-mould can bo added, is a proper mediumfor the roots; the species requiring a rather more nutritive earth than many plantsof its class, from the unusual vigour of its growth. A tolerably high temperatureand a moist atmosphere are essential to its full development in summer; and aplace in an Orchidaceous-house, where these conditions are secured, and where theAllamanda wU assist in forming a natural screen to


. Paxton's Magazine of Botany and Register of Flowering Plants. , and sothoroughly drained, that it may never be unnecessarily drenched with water. Arich loamy soil, to which a little heath-mould can bo added, is a proper mediumfor the roots; the species requiring a rather more nutritive earth than many plantsof its class, from the unusual vigour of its growth. A tolerably high temperatureand a moist atmosphere are essential to its full development in summer; and aplace in an Orchidaceous-house, where these conditions are secured, and where theAllamanda wU assist in forming a natural screen to the roof, is most treated, it will flower during the whole of the late summer and autumnalmonths. It is easily increased by cuttings of the younger shoots, which can be preparedat the most convenient period, and planted in the ordinary way, beneath a shadedglass, in a warm propagation-house or frame. The genus commemorates Frederick Allamand, a surgeon of Holme, whotravelled in Guiana about 1769, and probably discovered the plant that bears hb I. ^ ////i/////// /ft / >///I Cf//////t if<vt/rt/f f*i y 79 EPIPHYLLUM TRUNCATUM; var. VIOLACEUM. (vroLACEOUS-FLOWEKKD TRUNCATKD-STEMMRD EPIPHYLLUM.)CLASS. ORDER. ICOSANDRIA. MONOGYNIA. NATUR,\L Generic Character,—Sepals imbricated, numerous, confounded witli tlic corolLi. Corolla Icaf-lilie, flesiiy, usually smootli, but sometimes having a few spines on tbeir margin ; eachwith a midrib and diverging side veins, which terminate at the indentations on the edges. Flowersissuing from the extremities of the midrib or side veins. Stamens numerous. Specific Character,—Plant shrubby, dwarf. Stems short, flattish, becoming rough when old; branchesjointed, divaricated, compressed like a leaf, contracted at the base, with a few scattered serratures oneach side, crescent-shaped at the summit. Flowers whitish at the lower part, rosy-red above,terminal, sessile, solitary, drooping; petals im


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