. The Gardeners' Chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. oliferous (tufted), the leavesforming a crowded cluster 4 feet through at the base,with a spread of about 12 feet; each leaf is 10 feetlong, the leaflets are 2 feet long, cuneate at the base,wider and jagged at the apex, dark green on theupper surface, silvery below. The male inflorescence NuVjsmbeh 0, THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 545 i< developed about a foot above the ground, and baaa ttout curved stalk clothed with large, boat-«haped,overlapping, purplish-brown bracts, below which isa dense
. The Gardeners' Chronicle : a weekly illustrated journal of horticulture and allied subjects. oliferous (tufted), the leavesforming a crowded cluster 4 feet through at the base,with a spread of about 12 feet; each leaf is 10 feetlong, the leaflets are 2 feet long, cuneate at the base,wider and jagged at the apex, dark green on theupper surface, silvery below. The male inflorescence NuVjsmbeh 0, THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 545 i< developed about a foot above the ground, and baaa ttout curved stalk clothed with large, boat-«haped,overlapping, purplish-brown bracts, below which isa dense cluster of drooping unbranched tails, about & Co , of Colchester, at the meeting of the onTuesday, October 29. Ljcoris is allied to Amaryllif,but is distinguished from that genus by the smallnumber of ovules in each cell of the ovary. The Plant Notes. PRIMULA. CASHMERIANA (CAPITATA).This North-western Indian 1rimroie is one of a foot long, clothed with pale pink flowers. This is length of the segments in L, aurea is 3 inches, and the most charming alpines for flowering at this. Fio 94.—ltcobis aurea: flowers orange. the first male inflorescence the plant has borne, theprevious ones hitherto being female,less crowded,withbranched tails and inconspicuous bracts. W. W., Km. LYCOEIS AUEEA. Several plants of this excellent autumn-floweringapeciei (fig. 94) were shown by Messrs. Wallace the colour ft rich orange; the anthers are yellow-coloured. The flowers appear usually in August andSeptember, and before the leaves; the plant isamenable to greenhouse culture. The bulb is sub-globose, 2 inches in diameter. It is figured in theBotanical Magazine, t. 409, as Amaryllis aurea,and it was introduced from China in 1777 byDr. Fothergill. season, decorating the otherwise bare rockery. Ithas strap-shaped, bright green leaves, which form arosette. The flowers are of a violet colour, and wellelevated on a stout stalk, which is covered with amealiness even to the calyces, resembling P
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecad, booksubjecthorticulture, bookyear1895