There are many other new species from the same region 
deserving of a trial in our gardens.—W. B. H. 
Descr.—Stemless, perfectly glabrous. Leaves all radical, 
three to five inches long, spreading, flaccid, ovate-oblong 
in outline, glaucous green, pinnate; petiole short, and 
rhachis slender; pinne four to six on each side, three- 
fourths to one inch long, rather distant, sessile, on the 
lower part sometimes free and petiolulate, ovate-oblong, 
pinnatifidly lobed, lobes rounded, lobulate, lobules obtuse 
or rounded at the tip. Peduncles short, robust, with the 
raceme four to five inches long, bright green. LRaceme 
loosely many-flowered ; bracts lanceolate, shorter than 
the pedicels, which are one-quarter to half an inch long. 
Flowers about an inch long. Sepals ovate, caudately 
acuminate, pale brown. Petals golden-yellow. Outer 
petals linear-oblong, acuminate, tips recurved, upper pro- 
duced at the base into a very broad, incurved, slightly 
flattened spur rounded at the apex; lower with a deep 
groove on the disk bounded by a crenulate ridge, margins 
recurved, Petals narrow, stipitate, spathulately obovate, 
costa very thick, protruded beyond the rounded apex. 
Ovary very slender; stigma horse-shoe-shaped, with the 
tips of the incurved arms 2-lobed. Capsule very slender, 
arcuate.—J. D. H. 
LED hed 2,sepal; 3, anthers; 4, ovary :—all enlarged; 5, capsule of 
