12 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [JANUARY, 1914 
Morris, who visited British Honduras and sent a flower to Kew for 
determination in July, 1882, it is very common on logwood trees in 
swamps in the north, but rare elsewhere (Brit. Honduras, p. 69), and he 
alludes to it as possibly the handsomest Orchid in the Colony. These 
logwood swamps are said by Miller to be full of a tall cutting grass, about 
twelve feet high, which makes them very unpleasant, though there are said 
to be many Orchids, the beauty of which takes off some of the monotony 
of working through them (Proc. R. Geogr. Soc., ix. p. 422). 
Brassavola Digbyana long remained rare in cultivation, but Mr. John 
Fig. 4. BRASSOCATTLEYA MARONIE (See p. 15): 
Day, who painted it twice (Orch. Draw., v. t.°8; .xxxiv. t. 57), records: 
“I had a great many plants in 1879 and 1880, but sold them all in 1881, 
before they bloomed.” The first painting represents the typical form, 
with pale green sepals and petals, and was from a plant obtained at Mr. 
Charles Warner’s Sale in April, 1870; the second was painted at Mr. W. 
Bull’s in 1883, and has the sepals and petals tinged and margined with 
purple, as in the one we now figure. There are two or three other 
pecularities about the plant besides the deeply fringed lip. The long beak 
of the ovary, already mentioned, is well shown in figure 2 (page 10); 
from a capsule produced in the collection of R. G. Thwaites, Esq-s 
