ee ee ee he Ce ee ee ee ee 
NARCISSUS POETICUS AND ITS ALLIES 9 
*** Seriores florendt. 
Ls 8 Rvus. Diagnosed as before, with the addition “ corolle 
ance i ovatis retusis cum muc crone, corons — sublate 
croceo interne parum albido sed minus quam in sequente 
Narciss. Sais p. 151. Floret Maio, post mediu 
. gracilior. Foliis scapoque fere duplo angustioribus glauces- 
centibus minus planis, paucis solum recurvis sed a es _ scapi 
seepius altitudine ; corons croceo margine sepe tenuio 
porticus Linn. (middle-sized May). With she’ diagnosis 
of N. patellaris in the Synop. Appendix (N. majalis of the 
Fevisio). 
N. poeticus L. Sp. Pl. et ejus herbarii; N. majalzs Curt. Bot. 
Mag. 193 (end) ; oeene. Revis. p. 150. 
. flor. plen 
omnibus a Bons exsertis. N. neue rhe Lil. t. 160. 
aL, PATELLARIS Carge, broad May). s 8 lineas latis, 
glaucis, pee Corolle amplissime laciniis abichlae obovatis, 
imbricatissimis, niveis, oris deflexis, 3 exterioribus subsemireflexis, 
3 inbériocinGa: horiz ote ibets corona patellari lute& superne alba 
ore denticulato-crispo croceo 
N. poeticus KE. B. 275. ‘N. medio purpureus maximus Park. 
Par. 
f. fi. pleno albo cum croceo 
12. sTELLARIS (long-petalled saffron-rim). Folia lorata viridia 
sive aliquantum glaucescentia. Scapus gracilis. Corolle elongate 
: : : a 
reflexis distinctis, corona perluted patellari, margine plicato crenu- ~ 
lato croceo mox intus albido, antheris omnibus subexsertis. 
N. medio purpureus serotinus Park. Par. 
Hort. post medium Maii. 
After the publication of his Monograph Haworth contributed 
the account of N. recurvus in Sweet’s British Flower Garden, 
No. 188 (1833), where the plat is beautifully figured. He 
suggests here that it is indigenous in Southern Europe, and adds 
the interesting remark that it is the common Narcissus of London 
flower-markets in May, while the rather ere but equally 
beautiful NV. ornatus is the market flower in April 
The same volume contains another meta plate (No. 132) under 
the name of N. stellaris Haw. The accompanying description is 
not written by Haworth, but probably by Sweet ; ore the enon is 
shown with flat and spreading perianth- “segments, mall coro 
with avery narrow white zone narrowly or with tight tere: 
and coemeee Bhoety insta bi, Seer ae fru 
Herbert's 
N. poe L. next dealt with he an 
Amaryilidacea, i Be 317 (1837), where roe ior are admitted as 
varieties, V 
* Harly flowering, April. 
1) grandiflorus Sabine MS. (Poetarwm Haworth), (2) angusti- 
folius Bot. Mag. 193, (3) ornatus (flat-crowned saffron-rim) Haw., 
(4) puibiaiag Haw., (5 ?) albus Haw 
JouRNAL OF Borany, Sept. 1915. ‘(Borruammer ih} -e 
