1899) CONSPECTUS OF THE GENUS LILIUM 353 
$3. L. SUTCHUENSE Franchet, Jour. Bot. 6: 318. 1892. 
L, tenuifolium punctatum Bur. & Franch. in Franch. loc. cit. 
L, Chinense Baroni, Nuov. Giorn. Bot. It. 2 : 333. 1895. 
L. Chinense atropurpureum Baroni, Op. Cit. 335. 
L. Biondit Baroni, op. cit. 337. 
Bulb small, broad ovate, scales fleshy, ovate-lanceolate, about 
ls-I8imbricate : stem slender, 8—1o™ high, leafless below: leaves 
“attered, only slightly crowded, linear, the lower and upper 
mes one third the length of the others, those in the middle 
l-15 long, smooth: flowers solitary, or terminating 2-4 
long stiff branches, nearly erect when young; perianth intensely 
tddish-orange, often spotted with black; segments much 
curved from the middle, papillose on the inside: stamens 
shorter than the perianth, with the filaments smooth and the 
pollen golden: style 3-4 times as long as the ovary. 
Sw-tchuen, China. Shen-si, /egit Giraldi, fide Baroni. “The plant is 
more robust than L. tenuifolium, the leaves equally linear but a little larger, 
towers almost twice as large, covered with black spots, style two or three 
‘mes longer than the ovary.’’—Franchet. 
44. L. rexuirotium Fisch. Ind. Sem. Hort. Gorenk. 8. 1812. 
(Ed. 2. ] 
L. linifolium Hornem. Hort. Hafn. 1 : 326. 1813. 
£. pumilum DC. in Red. Lil. ¢, 978. 1815 cir. 
L. puniceum Sieb. & DeVriese. Ann. Hort. Pays-Bas 23. 1861. 
L. tenuifolium stenophyllum Baker, Linn. Soc. Jour. 14: 251. 1874. 
ane small, globose, with several lanceolate scales: stem 
lata slender : leaves 20-50, scattered, very narrow Bee 
siddin 8 with revolute margins: flowers 1-20, reece 2 
8 pedicels 5-7.5™ long, rich scarlet, unspotted ; periant 
ae long, much revolute: pollen red: ovary two 
a "g as Ae slender style. : ‘cae 
from bulb  . favorite in gardening, growing readily 
55. L, BoLanper Wats. Am. Acad. Proc. 20: 377: 1885. 
Bulb OV em Jong: 
tte ate, of numerous lanceolate scales 2.5-3-5 
Ms 15 
al high, 1—2-flowered: leaves mostly verticillate and 
