what he makes variety (<y) of his Trillium rhomhideum t 

 yet none, if that fhould be the cafe, but that it is fpecifically 

 different from the other varieties, the firft of which is no other 

 than the Trillium ercftumol Linnaeus. Poffibly the berry 

 might have been fcarlet, from being in an immature flate when 

 examined ; this is however mere conjecture. At all events our 

 plant appears to us a diftinct fpecies, not a variety of Trillium 

 ereftum (Michaux's rhomboideum) ; and is, we do not doubt, 

 the erythrocarpum of the above author. 



Our drawing was taken at Mr. Salisbury's Botanic Garden, 

 Brompton. Thrives belt in a moift ftiady fituation planted 

 in bog earth. 



The flowers as they fade become purplifh, as many other 

 white ones do. G. 



