268 THE DICTIONARY 
OF GARDENING, 
Lilium continued. 
c, peregrinum foreign). f. rather smaller than those of the 
type; divisions a little narrower, l. also narrower and fewer. 
The whole plant more slender in habit. SYN. L. peregrinum 
(under which name it is figured in S. B. F. G. ser. ii. 367). 
L. c. spicatum (spicate). A garden form, with petaloid white 
bracts. j 5 
Fig. 415. FLOWER-STEM OF LILIUM CANDIDUM, 
L. ©. striatum 
purple externally. (F. d. S. 
L. carniolicum (Carniolian). H. bright orange: yellow, passing 
sometimes into scarlet, 14in. to 2in. long; peduncles 2in. to Sin. 
long. June and July. J, thirty to forty, always scattered, much- 
ascending, linear-lanceolate, acute, the edge minutely ciliated. 
Stem 2ft. to 3ft. high, stout, erect. Bulb ovoid, with lanceolate 
seales lin. deep. South Europe, &c. $ 
; — (Carolina). A synonym of L. superbum caro- 
Lintanum. ; 
L. Catesbeei (Catesby’s).* f. bright orange-red, copiously spotted 
with purple, solitar , Jin. to Ain. long. 8 9 
whorled, twenty to thirty, ascending, sessile ; lower ones lanceo- 
late, acute ; the upper ones growing gradually smaller and nar- 
828 roar rom lin. = oe 1 0 flower. Stem lft. 
igh, slender, erect, straight. North America. (B. M. 
259; L. B. C. 807; S. B. F. G. ser. ii. 185.) 5 
chalcedonicum (Chalcedonian).“ fl. bright scarlet, rarel: 
3 from one to six, sub-corymbose, pendulous ; ia —— 
n. to ain. long. Summer. I., at the flowering time, fifty to 
ty, 2 ones sub- patent, upper ones ascending, all scattered, 
linear, Stem stiff, erect, 2ft. to öft. high, striated. Greece, 1796 
See Fig. 416. (B. M. 30; F. d. S. 2160.) An old and well-known 
garden favourite. There is a very desirable form, majus; and 
another, greeum, haying smaller flowers, but a taller habit 
than the type. 
— (Colchican). A synonym of L. monadelphum 
L. columbianum (British Columbi : 
8 n bian). fl. two or three, umbel- 
late, on slender in. to Ain. long; perianth of a Splendid 
A ge, I Bin. to ein. long, the lanceolate segments dotted 
Nel 3 J. few; lower ones disposed in four or 
to ain 1 whorls > upper ones rse, oblanceolate, acute, l4in. 
= „long, about n. broad. Stem Lift. to 2ft. high, slender, 
Ps. Oregon, British Columbia, 1872. 
- concolor (one-coloured), ñ. bright scarlet, Iain. to 2in. long, 
(striated). 80 having the segments striped with | 
Lilium—continued. 
disposed in corymbs of five or six; peduncles erecto-patent. 
Summer. J. twenty to thirty at the flowering time, scattered 
irregularly, spreading, lanceolate, the lower ones Sin. to 4in. long, 
narrowed to both ends. Stem 1ft. to 3ft. high, erect, sub-terete, 
obscurely pubescent. Bulb ovoid, about lin, deep. China, 1806. 
(B. M. 1165.) Syn. L. sinicum (F. d. S. 1206; I. H. 100). 
L. c. Buschianum (Busch’s).* f. splendid scarlet, lower portion 
of segments bearing numerous small black spots. Z. narrow, deep 
green. Southern Siberia. (L. B. C. 1628; B. M. 6005, under 
name of L. c. sinicum.) 
L. C. Coridion (Coridion). fl. bright yellow, scattered over, 
principally on the lower half of the face, with distinct reddish- 
brown spots, solitary. Japan. (R. G. 885.) 
L. C. Partheneion (Partheneion). fl. bright red-yellow, faintly 
spotted on the face, solitary. Japan. 
Fig. 416. FLOWER-STEM OF LILIUM CHALCEDONICUM. 
L. c. pulchellum (pretty). fl. bri i int 
: ght scarlet, with a fe t 
en * erect, twelve to fourteen lines looi e te tbe 
he plants, but produced in half-dozens under cultivation. 
8 3 to thirty at the flowering time, scattered irregularly, 
pote nan ascending. Stems slender, 6in. to 12in. high, 
—.— = cate. Bulb ovoid, about the size of a hazel-nut; the 
75 A —— r i 8 3 Mongolia, &c., 1834. 
y ttle variety, rarely seen in cultivati SIN 
L. pulchellum. See Fig. 417. (R. G. 1860, 284, Meth 
L. c. sinicum (Chinese). A synonym of L. e. Buschianum. 
L. be ake oer ase (heart-shape-leaved).* f. white, yellow, purple; 
pe a narrow, funnel-shaped ; racemes four to ten-flowered ; 
pedicels | floriferous, spreading; anthers yellow. August. l 
primordial ones tinged with bleod-colour; stem ones deeply 
corda i i 
te, on long petioles. Stem 3ft. to 4ft. high. Japan, 
SYN. H: 
cordata. 
