Volume Ii Part 11 (2/2)
MESEMBRYANTHEMUM radiatum, ramulis prolixis rec.u.mbentibus. _Dillen.
Hort. Elth. 245. t. 190. f. 234._
[Ill.u.s.tration: 70]
The leaves of this species have small hairs, issuing like rays from their points, whence its name of _barbatum_; there are two others figured by DILLENIUS, whose leaves have a great similarity of structure, and which are considered by LINNaeUS as varieties of this species; our plant is the _Stellatum_ of MILLER's _Dict._ _ed._ 6. 4_to_.
Like most of this tribe it inhabits the Cape, flowers in July, and is readily propagated by cuttings.
[71]
~Statice sinuata. Purple-cup't Statice, or Thrift.~
_Cla.s.s and Order._
~Pentandria Pentagynia.~
_Generic Character._
_Cal._ 1-phyllus, integer, plicatus, scariosus. _Petala_ 5. _Sem._ 1.
superum.
_Specific Character and Synonyms._
STATICE _sinuata_ caule herbaceo, foliis radicalibus alternatim pinnato sinuatis: caulinis ternis triquetris subulatis decurrentibus. _Lin.
Syst. Vegetab._ _p._ 301.
LIMONIUM peregrinum foliis asplenii. _Bauh. Pin. 192._
LIMONIUM Rauwolfii Marsh Buglosse. _Parkins. Parad. p. 250._
[Ill.u.s.tration: 71]
That this singular species of _Statice_ was long since an inhabitant of our gardens, appears from PARKINSON, who in his _Garden of Pleasant Flowers_, gives an accurate description of it, accompanied with an expressive figure; since his time it appears to have been confined to few gardens: the nurserymen have lately considered it as a newly-introduced species, and sold it accordingly.
It is one of those few plants whose calyx is of a more beautiful colour than the corolla (and which it does not lose in drying); it therefore affords an excellent example of the _calyx coloratus_, as also of _scariosus_, it being sonorous to the touch.
Being a native of Sicily, Palestine, and Africa, it is of course liable to be killed with us in severe seasons, the common practice is therefore to treat it as a green-house plant, and indeed it appears to the greatest advantage in a pot; it is much disposed to throw up new flowering stems; hence, by having several pots of it, some plants will be in blossom throughout the summer; the dried flowers are a pretty ornament for the mantle-piece in winter.
Though a kind of biennial, it is often increased by parting its roots, but more advantageously by seed; the latter, however, are but sparingly produced with us, probably for the want, as PARKINSON expresses it, ”of sufficient heate of the Sunne.”
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