64 
March, 1843. It is a pale lemon-coloured species, with the 
habit of E. longilabris, and is said to be a most profuse 
flowerer. Mr. Llewellyn says that his plant had two spikes 
of flowers on each of eight pseudobulbs.— Bot. Mag. 
It is not to be found among Cuming’s dried plants. 
68. BLANDFORDIA intermedia. 
W. Herbert in litteris. 
B. intermedia; folis rigidis profundè angulatè canaliculatis acutè carinatis 
j5 unc. latis viridibus margine scabro bracteis foliiformibus suberectis 
ima 23 unc. superioribus gradatim minoribus caule ultrapedali apice 
florali brevi (2-unciali), floribus viginti vel ultra pedunculis subfulvis 
seriüs subvirescentibus 13-1-unc., perianthio subpendulo sesquiunciali, 
tubo inferne tenui infundibuliformi superne sexgibbato valde inflato ore 
ipso angustato pulcherrimè aheneo, limbo brevi (4 unc.) subreflexo latè 
luteo petalis latioribus subretusis antheras vix æquante, filamentis apice 
resurgenti-deflexis £ unciæ infra perianthii apicem medii tubi gibbis in- 
sertis inferne tubo adnatis.— W. H. 15%) 
This beautiful plant now in blossom at Spofforth with twenty 
flowers, was imported by Messrs. Loddiges from New Holland, 
under the name of B. grandiflora. It approaches nearer to 
B. nobilis. It is to be observed that the filaments of B. mar- 
ginata, which approaches more to B. grandiflora, are inserted 
one-eighth of an inch below the mouth of the tube, the limb 
being longer than in this plant. In B. nobilis the flower is 
much slenderer, only an inch and a quarter long, the middle 
of the tube inflated without the conspicuous knobs, and gra- 
dually constricted from the middle towards the mouth, which 
as well as the limb is bright yellow. Its filaments are 
inserted in the wide middle of the tube, and conform with 
those of B. intermedia, which is altogether a more robust 
and much finer plant.— W. H. 
69. ELEUTHERINE anomala. 
Botanical Register, 1843. t. 57. 
When that remarkable plant, with six stamens to each of 
its flowers, though belonging to a triandrous genus, was 
figured in the Bot. Reg. from the collection of the Horti- 
cultural Society, it appeared to me that no dependence could 
be placed on the permanence of that phenomenon, even as a 
