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1. _Car Clus. Hist. p. 181._ HYACINTHUS racemosus. _Dodon. Pempt. p. 217._ HYACINTHUS botroides minor caeruleus obscurus. The darke blew Grape-flower. _Park. Par. p. 114._ [Illustration: No 122] The _Hyacinthus racemosus_ and _botryoides_ are both cultivated in gardens, but the former here figured is by far the most common; _racemosus_ and _botryoides_, though different words, are expressive of the same meaning, the former being derived from the Latin term _racemus_, the latter from the Greek one [Greek: votrus], both of which signify a bunch of grapes, the form of which the inflorescence of these plants somewhat resembles, and hence they have both been called Grape Hyacinths, but as confusion thereby arises, we have thought it better to call this species the Starch Hyacinth, the smell of the flower in the general opinion resembling that substance, and leave the name of Grape Hyacinth for the _botryoides_. The _Hyacinthus racemosus_ grows wild in the corn fields of Germany, in which it increases so fast by offsets from the root as to prove a very troublesome weed, and on this account it must be cautiously introduced into gardens. It flowers in April and May. We have found the Nurserymen very apt to mistake it for the _botryoides_, a figure of which it is our intention to give in some future number. [123] ANEMONE HORTENSIS. STAR ANEMONE, or BROAD-LEAV'D GARDEN ANEMONE. _Class and Order._ POLYANDRIA POLYGYNIA. _Generic Character._ Cal. 0. Petala 5-9. Semina plura. _Specific Character and Synonyms._ ANEMONE _hortensis_ foliis digitalis, feminibus lanatis. _Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed Murr. p. 510._ _Ait. Hort. Kew. vol. 2. p. 256._ ANEMONE Geranii rotundo folio, purpurascens. _Bauh. Pin. 173._ ANEMONE prima. _Dodon. Pempt. 434._ ANEMONE latifolia purpurea stellata sive papaveracea. The purple Star-Anemone or Windflower. _Park. Parad. p. 204._ [Illustration: No 123] We are more and more convinced, that in our eagerness, for novelties, we daily lose plants by far more ornamental than the new ones we introduce; the present, a most charming spring plant, with which the Gardens abounded in the time of PARKINSON, is now a great rarity; its blossoms, which are uncommonly brilliant, come forth in April, and, like those of many other plants, appear to advantage only when the sun shines. It may be propagated either by seeds, or by parting its roots in Autumn, i
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