194 ON THE BRITISH DAFFODILS. 
ovato-acuminatis tubo tertio parte longioribus, corona perlutea 
alte sexlobata, lobis patulis vix rugosiusculis plicato-crenatis 
recurvantibus 
ommunicavit amicus Dom. Penny, fine Martii, 1831. 
‘* Habitat in Cambria. _ species, vel fortasse precedentis 
age soak Florem unum marcescentem solum vidi. 
« Sub p tttIncisilobe. ane ores et maximi, corone lobis 
peohundin. ristike sex, semper plus minus irregulariter laciniato- 
SeErats, seu crenatis. 
4. Major A. (the great), corolle perlutes ee patulis, 
corona patentissima amplissima, lobis omnium maxim recurvis 
subundato crenatis; foliis kinissimis spicalibus.” 
All these four were abundantly represented at the show, and 
the futlowing were the notes I made upon the specimens whieh 
begged from the renee particularly Mr. Dillwyn Llewelyn and 
Mr. Barr, to take hom 
Pseudo-narcissus. — Peduncles much more slender than in 
sag Mid about a foot long. Tube of perianth 3 in. long, half an inch 
arr, with lobularis, later than cambricus, earlier than major. 
2. lobularis. — Dwarfest of the four. Tube of the perianth 
4-8 in. long, and the same ee at fare were segments 
lemon-yellow, spreading; 2-1 in. long, oad. Corona 
orange-yellow, just Rees de i ee in dength, deeply 
6-lobed; lobes erect, 4 in. deep, 4-4 in, broad, their ma rgin 
crisped, ‘and minutely crenate. 
cambricus. — eae: about jeanally ren as in pseudo- 
Perianth with a . long, 2 in. diameter at the 
thivek not so green as in air per ‘ele edi rat segments 
oblong, lemon-yellow, 1} in. long, } in. broad. Coron a 1} in. 
long, orange-yellow, 14 in. diameter at the throat; alge rather 
spreading, 6-lobed, but not so deeply as in /obularis ; the lobes 
4. major. — Taller and more robust than the others; peduncle 
often 14-2 ft. long. Perianth sor Py ee 3 in. long; segme ents 
oblong, lemon-yellow, 14 in. lon . broad. Corona orange- 
yellow, 14 in. long, much lees distnatly 6. lobed than in lobularis, 
the margin crisped and copiously inciso-crenate. It flowers the 
latest of the four. 
Ps 
which occurs so Seatais at the lakes and <ihas Caton ae 
cape. 
tinguish cambricus clearly from seat oneen tk either of the two from 
obvallaris. Mr. Brockbank tells me that lobularis at the present 
day is plentiful as a wild plant in South Wales, extending over an 
area of twenty miles from Tenby westward across country to 
