BRODI.ffiA 



THE BULB BOOK 



BEODI^A 



gardens as Hesperocordum lacteum), 

 has umbels of white flowers striped 

 with green behind. The form known 

 as lUaeina has larger white flowers 

 than lactea, suffused with lilac. 



pale blue or pinkish-purple. Other 

 forms have deep purple-blue flowers. 



B. Lelohtlinl {Milla LeichUini). — A 

 pretty species from the Chilian Andes. 

 It has narrow linear leaves, and in 



Fig. 76. — Brodicsa Howelli Ulacitia. 



B. ixioides (Ornithogalwn ixioides ; 

 Calliprora lutea).—A beautiful and 

 distinct species popularly called 

 " Pretty Face," having narrow, linear, 

 fleshy leaves, and scapes 1 to 2 ft. 

 long, bearing umbels of ten to twenty 

 bright yellow flowers. The variety 

 erecta is a fine form with large clear 

 yellow flowers of great substance. 

 Splendens is another fine variety, 

 rather earlier in blossoming. 



B. laxa (Milla and Triteleia laxa). 

 — A pretty and showy species with 

 narrow linear leaves, and scapes 1 to 

 2 ft. long, having umbels of twenty to 

 fifty or more pale or dark violet flowers 

 about li ins. long, with segments 

 shorter than the funnel-shaped tube. 

 Th&vssh&iy splendens is an improve- 

 ment on the type, with stouter scapes 

 and larger heads of blossom of a soft 



Fig. Tl.—Bndiaa laxa. (i.) 



March produces its • large, slightly 

 scented, pure white flowers with a 

 greenish band down the centre of the 

 segments. Only a few large blossoms 

 are borne on each umbel. 



B. multlflora {B. parviflora). — A 

 pretty species with six to twenty 

 rather small pale blue flowers in 

 umbels on long scapes. There are 

 three perfect stamens and three 

 staminodia. (Bot. Mag. t. 5989.) 



B. Orcuttl. — This distinct species 

 has linear flattish leaves and stout 

 scapes 1 ft. or more in length, and 

 umbels of five to fifteen or more 

 bright lUac flowers, each over 1 in. 

 in diameter, with three fertile stamens 

 and three staminodia {Gard. Chron. 

 1896, XX. 214, f. 40). 



B. Falmeri. — A species not yet well 

 known, with narrow lance-shaped 

 leaves, and bright purple flowers on 

 stems 1 to 2 ft. high {GarUnfl. 1889, 

 f. 107). 

 15 



