24 PROFESSOR LINDLEY'S CONTRIBUTIONS TO 
158. E. inconspicua, Griffith, Not. iii. 349. t. 326. 
This Malacca plant I have not seen. It seems to differ from 
the last in little beyond the processes on the labellum. 
159. E. BRACHYPETALA ; folis oblongo-lanceolatis, scapi vaginis 2 
longis membranaceis, racemo raro secundo, sepalis erectis lineari- 
lanceolatis, petalis conformibus multo brevioribus, labelli trilobi venis 
crispulis lobis lateralibus acutis intermedio multo longiore oblougo 
obtuso, calcare subgloboso. 
. N.W. Himalaya, Gurwhal at 2000-3000 feet, T. T. (216). 
I have not seen the pollen-masses of this plant, which might be 
mistaken for Ania angustifolia. It must be re-examined with 
better materials than I possess. Much like Е. Promensis, but the 
lip is different. 
160. E. virens, R. Brown. 
Courtallum, J. D. H. (221). 
161. E. herbacea, Lindi.l.c. (E. albiflora, Edgeworth, MSS.) 
Himalayas, Edgeworth, in hb. Bentham. ; Concan, Law, in hb. Hooker. 
(220). 
The long green narrow sepals, the much broader and shorter 
petals, and the fringed veins of the lip are peculiar. 
162. E. ocHREATA; folis oblongis acutis, scapo laxe trivaginato, 
bracteis linearibus acuminatis ovariis longioribus, racemo cylindráceo, 
sepalis ovalibus acutis concavis, petalis planis latioribus, labello ob- 
longo serrato venis omnibus fimbriatis, calcare parvo hemisphærico. 
` Concan, Law, in hb. Hooker. ; Canara, Stocks (71). 
A small-flowered species with a rather dense cylindrical raceme 
4 or 5 inches long. All the parts of the flower membranous. 
163. E. bicolor, Dalzell, in Hooker's Journ. iii. 43. 
Western Ghauts, Daizell in hb. Stocks. (23); Concan, Law, in hb. 
Hooker. 
Much like E. herbacea ; but the spike is longer and more slender, 
and the flowers are not half the size. "Moreover the spur is longer, 
and the middle lobe of the lip obovate with long fringes on the 
veins. 
164. E. campestris, Lindl. l.c. (E. ramentacea, Wight, Ic, 666.) 
Western India, Jacquemont (653 in Herb. Mus. Par.); plains of Rohil- 
cund, T. T. (218). 
Both these, especially Jacquemont's plant, are taller and more 
slender than Wallich's Oude specimens, but do not appear to 
differ otherwise. 
