Pratt LXXI. 
(A) NARCISSUS Payizztanvs, Parl.; (B, C, D) N. pusivs, 
Gouan. 
Natural Order AMARYLLIDACEX. 
Grn. Coar.—See description of Plate XXII. Part I. 
(A.) Spec. Cuar.—Flowers small, white, with a white tube, in a 
rather compact umbel. Scape very much compressed, and acutely two- 
edged. Divisions of perianth acute. Crown entire, sides somewhat 
curved, and the margin contracted, one-third of the divisions in length. 
Tube nearly twice as long as divisions of perianth. Leaves of a rather 
bright green, channelled. 
Narcissus Panizzianus, Parl. FI. Ital. 11. 128. 
(B, C, D.) Spec. Coar.—Flowers small, nearly pure white when 
fully blown, 3-5, all sloping in the same direction and at the same 
angle. Scape subcylindrical, compressed, rush-like. Divisions of pe- 
rianth very short, the outer suborbicular, the inner ovate. Crown more 
or less distinctly 3-lobed (in specimens C) or entire (specimen B), half 
as long as divisions of the perianth ; twbe twice as long as the divisions. 
Leaves not channelled, semicylindrical below, flat above on the upper 
and curved on the under face. Bulb small. 
Narcissus dubius, Gouan, Illus. 22; Gren. et Godr. Fl. de Fr. iii. 260; 
Woods, Tour. FI. p. 360. 
Hasrrats.—(A.) San Remo, collected by Mr. F. E. Hubbard, and 
verified by M. Panizzi, February 7, 1867. (B.) From a specimen grown 
in M. Thuret’s gardens at Antibes, gathered March 9, 1868. (C.) Spe- 
cimens with bulbs, collected by Dr. Shuttleworth on Mont Coudon, near 
Hyéres, March 24, 1868. (D.) Fruit collected by me in the same 
locality. 
Remarxs.—Narcissus Panizzianus, Parl., appears to me a doubtful 
and yet distinguishable species. Its much smaller flowers and brighter 
green leaves give it a very distinct appearance from Narcissus papyra- 
ceus, Gawl., but it approaches much more closely to N. polyanthus, 
Lois., from which its fewer flowers of acute divisions and sharply two- 
edged flattened scape may perhaps separate it. I have never seen a 
wild specimen of L. polyanthus, Lois., and prefer, therefore, to reserve 
my opinion till I have more material to judge from. N. Panizzianas, 
Par]., is only known to grow at San Remo. Narcissus dubius, Gouan, 
is one of the grateful exceptions to the rule among Narcissi, for it is 
found in wild rocky situations in the mountains near Toulon and 
Hyéres, and never, as far as I know, in cultivated ground. It will be 
