publication, the O. bipunctata of Dr. Granam, in which 
the scapes and petioles are clothed with patent hairs. ‘This 
species is equally worth cultivating with the O. lasiopetala, 
to which we have already referred, and is rendered very 
ornamental by its copious and many-flowered scapes. _ 
Descr. Leaves all radical, on long flexuose petioles, 
ternate ; leaflets large, obcordate, approaching to trian- 
gular, with a rather deep but sharp sinus. Scapes radical, 
slender, flexuose, longer than the leaves, and bearing 
a rather ample cyme of deep, purple rose-coloured flowers. 
The branches of the cyme are slender, filiform, flexuose, 
more or less spreading, and more or less elongated, with a 
small bractea at the base. Calyx of five elliptical erect 
sepals, bearing two small orange-coloured glands at the 
tips. Petals cuneate oblique, a little hairy at the back. 
Filaments ten, united for about one-third of the way from 
the base into an angular, rather fleshy tube; of the free 
portion, five of the filaments are very short, and a little 
spreading, five much longer, quite erect. Anthers short- 
oblong, yellow. Ovary oblong, with five obtuse angles ; 
styles five erecto-patent, hairy ; stigmas dark green, dilated, 
and umbilicate. Jmmature fruit oblong, one-third longer 
than the calyx, with five acute angles, and tipped with the 
short remains of the five styles. 
Fig. 1. Calyx with the Stamen and Pistil. 2. Petal. 3. Stamens and 
Pistils removed from the Calyx. 4. Portion of the Stamens. 5. Pistil. 
6. Immature Fruit :—all more or less magnified. 
