of another species, which flowered at Glasgow in the autumn 
of last year, sent from the Organ Mountains by Mr. Garp- 
nER, which has a horn very similar to this: but it is in other 
respects very different, especially in the presence of two 
blunt, horn-shaped processes on the column. 
Descr. Pseudo-bulb three inches long, oblong, com- 
pressed and furrowed. Leaf one, or, probably, more fre- 
quently, two, five to six inches long, oblong, lanceolate, 
coriaceous, glossy. Peduncle from the base of the pseudo- 
bulb, soon branching into a panicle. Flowers small. Se- 
pals lanceolate, green, the two lateral, or lower ones, com- 
bined almost to the apex : the upper one erect, leaning, as 
it were, against the column. Petals narrow obovate, waved, 
yellow blotched with rust colour. Lip three-lobed, yellow, 
blotched with red in the disk ; the lateral Jobes small, nar- 
row, intermediate one narrow at the base, but gradually 
widening so as to become transversely rhomboidal, notched 
at the apex: at the base of the disk is a sharp, transverse, 
elevated ridge, and within a long, subulate, curved horn, 
pointing upwards. Column green, slender, elongated, quite 
destitute of wing, acute at the point. Anther-case small, 
lodged in front a little below the point. 
Fig. 1. Posterior view of a Flower. 2. Anterior view of ditto: magnified. 
Sage eee ORR Teton ee irae a asrie z a ess ba . aS eas 
pero sa: couiinanaiediieie Fass a soctaay ORE ibemasla lod ibewongan crags STR inept AR, 
