346 CODIiEUM 



Majeaticum. Lvs. narrow and long, mottled green and yellow, 

 and shaded with crimson. 

 Marquis de Oastellane. 

 Mortfortiense. 



Mrs. Ohas. Heine. 



Mrs. Dnrmaii. Lvs. linear-lanceolate, 1 ft., with scarlet rib 

 and green margins. 



Mrs. H. F. Watson. Large-lvd. : green, but as they mature the 

 green deepens and changes to a bright, bronzy crimson, striped, 

 spotted and blotched with rich golden yeUow and edged with 

 salmon, the midribs and veins bright red- 



Mrs. Swan. Lvs. broad-lanceolate and acuminate, golden yel- 

 low in the center and on the margins and petiole. 



Multicolor. Lvs. like Irregulare, but blotched and veined with 

 yellow, changing to orange and crimson. 



Musaicum. Lvs. oblong-janceolate^ wavy , acuminate, green, 

 crimson and c 



ogmg t 



l-color. R.H. 1883; 240. 



Nestor. Lvs. large, lanceolate, with a broad crimson midrib, 

 spotted margin, and bright yellow central variegation. 



Nevillice. Lvs. oblong-lanceolate, barred and marked yellow, 

 changing to orange and metallic crimson. 



Nobile. 



Orvilla. 



Ovalifolium. 



Pictum. Lvs. broad-oblong and acuminate, less than 10 in. 

 long, crimson, with irregular blotches of green and blackish. 

 Old but good. B.M. 3051. 



Picturatum. Lvs. similar to Interniptum, highly colored. 



Pilgrimii. Lvs. ovate and pointed, 10 in., green, overspread 

 with pink, golden-blotched. 



Prince of Wales. See Gloriosum. 



Princeps. Lvs. broad-linear, with yellow rib and margins, the 

 green becoming bronze and the yellow becoming crimson. 



Princess Matilda. 



Punctatum. 



Queen Victoria. Lvs. oblong-lanceolate, 12 in. or less, golden '■ 

 yellow blotched and magenta ribs. 



Kecurvifolium. Lvs. broad and heavy, reeurved,'veined with 

 crimson and yellow, and handsomely blotched. 



Boseo-pictum. 



Ruberrimum. Lvs. crimson, 

 creamy white. 

 Rubro-lineatum. 

 Bubro-striatum. 



, drooping, marked with 



CCELOGYNE 



Senitzianum. 



Sollerii. 



Spirale (Fig. .512). Lvs. long. ; 

 and marked with yellow, cl 



Stewartii. Lvs. obovate, blunt at base, olive green, with red- 

 dish rib and petiole and orange bands and margin. 



Sunbeam. Dark, bronzy lvs., from 9 to 10 in. long and about 

 2 in. wide, in the young stat« freely blotched with yellow, gradu- 

 ally ciianging into rosy crimson, which in turn, as the leaf ar- 

 rives at maturity, becomes of a rich blood^red. 



Superbit 



Thompsonii. 



Tricolor. Lvs. oblong-spatulate, very acute, gradually tapering 

 from the upper third to the base : margin sinuous : upper sur- 

 face dark, sliining green, central part and midrib golden yellow, 

 lower surface dull, reddish green. 



Triuiniihnns. Lvs. oblong, deep green and crimson, changing 



r,i.li,l,iiun, T.' I M. ,.I I.I.I iMHg, undulated or crimped, with 



Vcitchii. Lvs. l.inc.-oljloiig, rounded at base, bright green, 

 mottled yellow and crimson. R.H. 18G7, p. 190. 



Volutum. Lvs. broad, roUed at tip, golden veined. 



Warrenii. Lvs. linear-lanceolate, 2-1 ft. long, twisted, droop- 

 ing, overspread and mottled with orange and crimson, changing 



Weisnianii. Lvs. lance-linear, 12 in. or less long, very acute at 

 tip, more or less undulate-margined, sliining green and golden- 

 blotched. 



Williainsii. Lvs. ovate-oblong, \% ft. or less long and 4 in. or 

 less broad, undulated, magenta, crimson and yellow. 



Wilsonii. Lvs. linear-lanceolate, 1-2 ft., drooping, bright 

 green, overspread with yellow. 



Youngii. Lvs. long, nearly 1 in. wide, dark green, irregularly 

 blotched with yellow and rose-red. Robert Craiq. 



CODLIN, or CODLING. Used in England to mean a 

 small, green, half-wild, inferior apple. It is used in dis- 

 tinction from grafted or de.ssert fr. It is about equiva- 

 lent to our use of the word "crab." 



CIELIA (Greek, koilos, hollow: referring to the pol- 

 len masses). Orchidclcea, trihe VdndeiE. Six species of 

 central and South American epiphytic orchids, divided 

 into 2 strongly marked group^s with widely different 

 kinds o£ inflorescence. V. macrostachya is a type of 

 the first section, with long racemes of numerous small, 

 horizontal fls., which are much exceeded by the lonff 

 spreading bracts, and the base of the column short. 

 C. bella is typical of the second section, with the fls. 

 few, larger, erect, in groups of about 3, longer than their 

 bracts, and the base of the column produced to twice its 

 own length, which gives the fls. a tubular appearance. 

 Ctelias are of minor importance. They grow best in 

 pots of ]ieat and sphagnum, with a little charcoal. 



A. Fls. rosi/ red, numerous, small, in a long raceme. 

 macrostichya, Lindl. Pseudobulbs 2% in. long, almost 

 round, with brown scales at the base: lvs, about 3, from 

 the top of the pseudobulb, 1 ft. or more long, lanceolate, 

 arching, broader than in C. bella, and not channeled: 

 sepals red; petals white. Mexico. R.H. 1878: 210. B.M. 

 4712 shows a dense raceme 8 in. long, with more thaa 



AA. Fls. white, tipped purple, fetv, large. 

 hilla, Reichb. f. Pseudobulbs smaller and more con- 

 stricted at the top : lvs. 6-10 in. long, narrower, chan- 

 neled above, arching : fls. 2 in. long, erect, 3 or 4 in 

 number, with the midlobe of the lip orange-colored. 

 Guatemala. B.M. C«28. 



CCEL6GYNE iliullow pistil). Orcliiddcece. tribe Epi- 

 diUiilrrii . A i,'.iiiiis iif useful plants, all pseudobulbous, 

 finniil in lro|iii!il .\sia growing on trees and on rocks. 

 Sepals :incl pi-tuls lut-rabranaceous, labellum large, cucul- 

 late witli 2, ;( uv mure longitudinal ridges; column erect, 

 winged, niembranaceously margined at and toward the 

 apex; pollinia 4. The botanical details of Ctrjojrj/He spe- 

 ciosa are shown in Fig. 513. At the top is a general 



