long. It is generally larger than asiaticum, but not so large 

 as amabile the finest flower we know of this natural order. 



A stove plant. Has been known in our collections, ac- 

 cording to Donn's Hortus cantabrigiensis, from the year 

 1790; but we are not informed by whom it was introduced. 



Multiplied both by off-sets, and bulbiform seed; of easy 

 cultivation, and flowers freely. 



The specimen from which the drawing was made was 

 sent us from the nursery of Messrs. Colville, King's Road, 

 Chelsea. It was small and few flowered, comparatively 

 with many others. 



a The pistil, dissected from the corolla, 





