incurved ; lip superior erect-recurved tongue-shaped, almost as 

 long as the sepals, furnished below the middle and near the base 

 with numerous small fleshy calli or warts, appendage rising from 

 the base of the limb oblong subfleshy, traversed by an elevated 

 nerve, half as long as the lip. 



Described and drawn from dried specimens collected by Mr. 

 Flanagan as above. Colour of the flowers according to the 

 collector brown or smoky-grey, the bracts and foliage of a 

 similar tint, darker at the tips, the lip dark maroon. This is 

 the second species of this genus which has inverted flowers (as 

 compared with the remaining species of the genus), in which 

 respect and some others it is closely allied to Pt. invcrsiim, 

 figured on the preceding plate. In habit and general appearance 

 it much resembles Corycium microglossum, Lindley (see Plate 46), 

 which has similarly dry and withered leaves and bracts. This is 

 one of Mr. Flanagan's many interesting discoveries, and I have 

 much pleasure in associating his name with it. 



