gary, Croatia, Transylvania, and the Crimea. Professor Nyman and 
other authors have stated that Omphalodes verna is found in many parts 
of Spain, but MM. Willkomm and Lange, in their lately published volume 
of their Prodromus Flore Hispanice, distinctly say that this species does 
not grow wild in Spain. 
EXPLANATION oF Pirate LXXXIII. Fig. 1, the entire corolla, and 
fig. 2, the same cut vertically in half, magnified. Fig.3, one mature and 
three imperfectly developed achenes with the style, magnified. Fig. 4, a 
leaf of the natural size. 
Notr.—Fig. 3, is copied from that given on p. 178 of MM. Le Maout and Decaisne’s 
Traité de Botanique. 
