SLENOGLOT TS. 475 
small, pale rosy-purple flowers, each $in. across. The lip 
is spreading, trilobed at the apex, and is marked with a 
few purple spots. There is considerable variation in this 
species. Usually the spots on the leaves are numerous 
and well-defined; in some forms they are faint, and in 
others are entirely absent. A variety is in cultivation at 
Kew with unspotted leaves three or four times the ordinary 
size, and a strong flower-spike 1}ft. high. The blossoms 
are produced in autumn. 
Botanical Magazine, t. 5872. 
