Lirioyame. Cl. 6. Spathacee. Orn, 3. NancissE E. 105 
Linnean Society who received bulbs of it from France in 1819, but 
what part it grows naturally in, is not yet known here. The 
Nonsuch or Incomparable Daffodil I have devoted to the memory of 
Nicotas Lx Quetr, a Parisian rhizotomist ; its Flowers have a strong 
unpleasant smell, with a large crown and quill-shaped Tube ; 4 or 
5 Species I believe may exist, and Semipartita of Hawonrz is un- 
Transactions on account of its multitlorous Peduncle and insertion 
en this plat I rite suspecting will turn out to bé a pro- 
i h florists; Mr. J. B 
now also remove from Hermione two perfectly natural Plants indi- 
genous near Pisa and Naples, differing in the very delicate consistence 
of their Crown, as thin or thinner than the Petals, as well as ve 
the substancë of the Crown is thick and strong, remaining fresh sha 
finely d I make L'Ecrvuse's first e “igen grows wild 
abundantly in the meadows about Monpellier the type, and this 
er 
Plateana 1 now only detach Baselman major of the Dutch florists, 
well figured in the 940th number of the Botanical Magazi 
certainly i p ey female Organs and nearly so in its males ; from 
dissem d all over the western parts of Europe, it may be one of 
Nature’s E peces but I have not met with any Botanist who has seen 
it wild; in Great Britain it is only found in gardens and orchards, 
where it "ad evidently been planted. In the Hortieultural Trans- 
— I have retained the name of Poeticus for a species sent to 
me oc; this in our gardens blossoms imm. y after 
Nodieris: and is the same with a specimen of SHERARD's ; however 
as it is not positively certain that this specimen of SuERARD’s was 
gathered in Greece, I would still keep the name of Poeticus in abey- 
