CCELOGYNE. (4) FLAccips. 
Wild in Bornro—Loddiges ; common on trees in shady places 
= water—Low, (v. v. ¢. et s. sp. in hb. Hooker.) 
very fine species, with leaves and raceme respectively eighteen and 
twenty inches long. The flowers, inches apart, are green, 
a pendent raceme furnished with brown cucullate deciduous bracts as long 
pedune ach flower is about four inches across if d, 
P p etals, and a singularly warted lip, marked with 
deep, broad, black veins and stains, upon a re yello he 
eep doublewarted lines on each side of a three-ribbed as 
disk ; these crests converge towards the. middle of th lip, where the 
themselves in a field of pallid, rugged, irregularly situated, often crore 
warts. The column is a ‘slightly expanded into thin rounded e 
of P 
own 
best Hoo kerian ‘behesne states the flowers to “ emit a a benutifal p perfume.” 
. ERECTA. 
The species grouped under = aioe resemble each other nearly, and 
=e are too much subdivided. No evidence, however, exists in Europe 
show the nature of their variation, if a iy. They are only known from the 
Fil iferous race by their petals not being extremely narrow; in general 
the flowers of the latter are almost solitary. 
. C. trine ds EL. 
C peai-veniened vain in rhizoma crassum squamosum, foliis 
longis 3-nervibus lanceolatis plicatis in petiolum lon angus- 
tatis, racemo brevi stricto vagina imbricata, bracteis deciduis, 
petalis lineari-lanceolatis, labelli trilobi lobis rotundatis : interme- 
dio subrotundo undulato lineis tribus flexuosis elevatis eequalibus 
e basi labelli ortis. 
Wild in Tavoy, on the Tenasserim Coast—Wallich, (v. v. sp.) 
A ver pretty species. Leaves fifteen to sixteen inches long, — and 
aceme not more than five Bet high, with about five flowers, 
the colour of which is unknown. 
ie at hyllis, folii 
- pseu nadie -corrugatis monophyillis, foliis rege ee 
lanceolatis coriaceis petiolatis ucifloris strictis basi imbri- 
petiolatis, scapis pai 
catim squamatis, bracteis latis oblbagls concavis persi racine, 
nein feos lateralibus obtusis intermedio a majore sub- 
1 ; rermedia 
C. eae Wight, ic. t eT R. 
Wild in Cevton—Walker; Niie@uerntes, on branches of trees 
in clumps of forest near — (v. 8. se in 
. oven Kiant Ge 8 0. Tei eadily known by its coriaceous 
