254 DEVELOPMENT OF THE FLOWER. 
length. The anthers are lateral with respect to the filament if 
regard be had to their relation of aspect with the corolla; at 
this time they are very much developed, and the upper ones 
have the lobe. 
At one line long, they can scarcely be called irregular. "The 
barren cell is present. 
Throughout, the two Paria look different ways: the 
lower looks to the ovary ; the upper looks upwards, or rather 
obliquely. 
Irregularity first appears in obliquity of the top of corolla, 
the upper lip being the highest, though originally simple. The 
pistilla are not united at the top of the margins ; below, they 
are thickly inflected. 
At calyx 14 line : the 5th lobe of the corolla which is open, 
is the most incurved ; the tube obsolete. 
A. Pl. 62, (ZEginetia continued.) 
a. Anthers detached. 
b. Upper. 
c. The anthers evidently point to the most inflexed lacinii, 
when lateral gibbosity appears. 
d. No vestige of ovary, centre a little convex : irregularity 
among the. petals. Sepals at this period separable, 
but greatly in advance in development. 
e. One erect and longer; the lower diameter greatest across 
the two staminal points. 
f. Convex disc, an irregular margin occurs here as if a petal 
was developed outside, at f. 
: " Outline as seen vertically. 
h. Calyx. Posterior flat margin. 
d Anteriorly convex, biparted. 
B.—Calyx at a still earlier period; k. ‘posterior side; 
convex base oblique; m. posterior face of cell; 
convex. . 
C.—Two large very fleshy, two upper staminal points, also 
large ; disc very convex. ; 
D.—Very young calyx; a. anterior—two lateral scales not 
approached by the margins; ġ. posterior. 
