brought by myself. This specimen flowered in the Agricultu 
Society’s Garden, March 1854. John Sanderson.’ Mr 3. 
fruit, however, is given on a drawing sent to Kee by Mew. Barber, in 
which the follicles a are re represented as about 34 mches long and moder- 
ately stout. The odour of the flowers is described he Sir Henry Barkly 
as ‘ very fetid, like that of putrid fish.'—N. E. Bro 
Fig. 1. Corona. 2. Portion of corona, to show the attachment of the back of the 
segments of the inner corona to the outer corona. 3. Pollinia. All enlarged, 
