14 PROFESSOR LINDLEY’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO 
114. D. sPINESCENS ; caulibus erectis, foliis distantibus oblongo-lan- 
ceolatis, pedunculis oppositifoliis squamosis demum spinescentibus, 
' sepalis labelloque oblongis obtusis, petalis conformibus triplo mino- 
ribus. (Cymbidium spinescens, Ic. Reinwardt.) 
Java? Reinwardt. 
Very different, in its flowers having the sepals spreading and # 
of an inch long, from any of the allied species. According to 
Reinwardt’s drawing, the fruit is nearly cylindrical, angular, and 
surmounted by the sepals, petals, lip, and column, much enlarged 
and become quite green. There is no specimen in the herbarium 
of Reinwardt. - 
| ** Labello trilobo; cawe. 
115. D. BREVIFLORUM ; fasciculo florum sessili subgloboso, sepalis 
petalisque duplo brevioribus carnosis obtusissimis, labello oblato 
nudo lobis lateralibus falcatis auriformibus intermedio truncato plica 
utrinque sub sinubus. 
Singapore? Herb. Loddiges. 
' І know nothing like this, which flowered in 1844, in the nursery 
of Messrs. Loddiges. The flowers are white, fleshy, with stripes 
of crimson spots. 
116. D. stuposum, Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 1838, misc. 94. 
Khasija mountains, at 2000-4000 feet of elevation, J. D. H. & T. T. (11). 
The lip is 3-lobed, not entire as is stated in the original defi- 
nition taken from an imperfect garden specimen, which led Prof. 
Reichenbach to suppose that his D. sphegidoglossum was different, 
—a mistake the blame for which is mine. 
117. D. Blumei, Lindl. Gen. & Sp. Orch. No. 65. (Onychium fimbri- 
atum, Blume, Bijdr. p. 325. Dend. planibulbe, Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 
1843, misc. 70.) 
Java, Zollinger ; Manilla, Loddiges. 
An authentic fragment from Prof. Reichenbach shows that the 
Manilla plant is identical with that from Java. 
118. D. aqueum, Lindl. in Bot. Reg. 1843, misc. 6. t. 54; Bot. Mag. 
t. 4640. (D. album, Wight, Ic. t. 1645.) 
Khasija hills, T. Lobb. 
. This is not to be found in the collections of Hooker and Thom- 
son; nor have I seen any wild specimens, except a few flowers sent 
home by Mr. Thomas Lobb to Messrs. Veitch. These want the 
long hairs represented by Dr. Wight’s artist, but agree perfectly 
with the figure in the Botanical Magazine. D. ramoswn, an 
“obscure plant with a slender pendulous branched stem ана lan- 
