at Clapton in December last, and is named in compliment — 
to Mr. Stuart Low by Dr. Reichenbach. fs 
Desor. Stem very short, with flattened creeping roots. 
Leaves two to three, a foot long and upwards, narrowly 
elliptic-oblong, obtuse, very coriaceous, dull yellowish-green 
above, paler and reddish beneath, young mottled above, older 
towards the base and beneath speckled with red. Panicle 
branched, drooping, many-flowered ; peduncle long, slender, 
branches divaricate; bracts small, coriaceous, ovate, ap- 
pressed to the base of the ovary, which is an inch long. 
Perianth two-inches in diameter, spreading. Sepals equal, 
elliptic, obtuse; dorsal pale green without and within ; 
lateral pale green, speckled with red on the half next the 
lip. Petals much larger than the sepals, nearly orbicular, 
obscurely four-angled, white with a few purple dots towards 
the base. ip golden or orange-yellow, speckled with 
crimson and with white tips to the lobes; lateral lobes — 
obliquely obovate, obtuse, or almost hatchet-shaped ; two 
calli between their bases are broadly cuneate, truncate, 
bright yellow, speckled with red; terminal lobe orbicular, 
with a forked appendage at the tip, the prongs subulate 
incurved.—J, D, H, : J ae 
Fig. 1, Side view of flower; 2 and 3, pollinia :—doth enlarged. 
