GYNANDRIA DIANDRIA. 



White Satyrion. Jnglis. 



In dry mountainous paliures not very uncommoii. 

 We obferved it at the Ifthmus of Tarhat^ in Can- 

 tire, in ArgyLfmre ; in the i(le of Arrmu near 

 Loch- Ran/a, &c. in Jura, on a dry hilly pafture 

 near Mr. Ca-nipbeU's, in Ijla, Colon/a and ^kye, 

 in fimilar places. "U. VI. VII. 

 1 he root confuls of fix or eight long tap-fhap'd 

 folid radicles : the ftalk is about ten inches high : 

 the fpike is about three inclies long, cylindrical 

 and thick {ti with numerous fmali v/hitifh de- 

 flexed flowers : the Braciece are lanceolate, and 

 rather longer than the ger.men : the petals are 

 white, and connive into the form of a galea, the 

 fide ones longed : the lip of the 7ie^arium is 

 green, and divided into three acute fegments, the 

 middle one largeft : the fpur is white, about half 

 (he length of xh^ germ en, obtufe at the end, and 

 recurved, but not didynious, as the generic cha- 

 i:a(5lt;r requires. 



SATYRIUM bulbis hbrofis, follis ovatis radica- 

 libus, floribus fecundis. Sp. pi. 1339. {Ger. em, 

 227. /. 4. Loes. priijj'. 210. /. 6'^. Halkr. hiji. 

 1595. tab. 22. Tre'vo. Lit. Ncrimb. anus. 173^. 

 hebd. ^1. p. 439. /. 6./. 7. bofja. ^ fig. yiojl.) 



Creeping Satyrion. Ai^giis. 



In old mofTy v.'oods, but very rare. We found it 

 growing amongft the Hypna, in an old fnady 

 mpift hanging birch wood, called, in the Erjs 

 ^^'^gVi2ge, Ca-bue, or Tellow-biU, facing the houfe 



of 



