imagine, for there is only the slenderest resemblance between 
the two. His name is, however, on record, and the strict 
rules of Botanical nomenclature seem to forbid its change, 
But, as has often been observed, Summum Jus summa injuria ; 
and it is so manifestly absurd to retain for a plant a name 
that has originated in some misconception, that we venture, 
for once, to disregard rules for the sake of common sense. 
In doing so, we cannot but associate with this noble plant a 
gentleman whose knowledge of the order, and whose skill in 
the cultivation of it, have gained him a deathless name. 
Fig. 1. represents the lip; 2. the pollen-masses, and their 
apparatus, 
