88 Orv. 3. Tutsacnex. Cl. 5. Lorate. Lirioyame. 
teres. Bractee 2 preter interiores. Nomen a Squamis planis. 
Species 1. Tulbaghia Cepacea L. 
ese two Plants agree with the arcs Order in their Peri- 
carpium and Seeds, but stink abominably like Cepæeæ, from which 
they differ in having an additional limb to their Corolla, quite dis- 
tinct from their Stamina, which are inserted below that in two series. 
So important a distinction therefore very analogous to the Corona of 
sg as an Order. Tu ulbaghia has glaucous lorate Leaves, aud 
as 
ec e, erect, an 
not very unlike those of Calostemma, with 3 purple flattened cal- 
losities, somewhat retuse, but not forked; its Anthers are also in- 
the Tube 
serted lower down in , than those of Tulba GuERTNER 
describes the cells of a specimen called Tuthynia Inodora in the 
Banksian Herbarium, 2-spermous; in a Capsule taken from the 
same specimen however which I Mad. each cell contained 6 or 
7 Seeds, the greater part of which x perfect, with a strong smell 
of Garlic, and Dryanpvrr believed it to be no other than Cepacea. 
which indeed GÆRTNER quotes. 
Ord. 4. Ceram. 
Petala 6, varie coalita, ssepe tantum basi nec unquam in Tubum 
lon , Te , Seplus membran cea, marces tia. Filamenta 
n 
; Embryo excentricus, in multis tus; 
cula ad latus Hi Hilo proxima vel alterá extremitate obversa. Hote 
totius Orbis, preter forsan Novam Hollandiam, succo in plurim 
feetidissimo ciente, aE nanos Bulb magni- 
tudine Pisi — dum Rapam «quat, perennis. ù nulle. 
non desint. Fasciculus corymbosus se pare 7-150- -florus. Pe- 
dunculus medio foliorum, teres vel a tus. Bractee 1-3, spathacee ; j 
preter interiores nune deficientes. Pedicelli c: longive, apice 
crassi. 
Hexonychia. Petala basi ima coalita, incurvo-horizontalia, ellip- 
