486 Amaryllidee—Narcissus. 
Flowers 3 to 6, yellow, with a tube 8 to 9 lines 
long . : ‘ é . 13. N. interméedius. 
Crown obconical, faites not more than a line 
deep. 
Flowers white ; leaves flattish, glaucous, 3 to 4 lines 
broad. : ; . 1d. N. pachybélbos. 
Flowers bright yellow; : leaves terete, bright green 
15. N. Jonquilla. 
Crown obconical, 1 to 13 line deep, the edge dif- 
fereni in texture to the rest, and much crisped 
and crenulate. 
Flowers in pairs ; crown with a yellow rim 16. N. biflorus. 
Flowers solitary ; crown with a scarlet rim 17. N. pucticus. 
Flowering in Autumn. 
Leaves contemporaneous with the flowers. 
Divisions of the flowers greenish . . ABN. viridiflorus. 
Divisions of the flowers white ; ‘ 19. WN. élequus. 
Leaves produced after the flowers. ~ 20. N. serotinus. 
Limb of the flower campanulate; crown nearly obsolete ; 
anthers shorter than their filaments . 21. N. Broussonétti. 
We have given the key in full in order to enable cultivators 
to identify their species; but we must limit ourselves to 
noticing more fully those only which are in yveneral culti- 
vation. 
1. N. Bulbocédium. Hoop Petticoat.—One of the com- 
monest in cultivation, and almost universally known. It is 
about 4 to 8 inches high; scape 1-flowered; flowers not 
drooping, with a very short pedicel within the spathe ; perianth 
gradually widening from the base upwards. Flowers bright 
yellow, appearing in April or May. A native of Southern 
Europe and North Africa, 
This species constitutes the genus Corbularia of Haworth, 
and includes several more or less distinct varieties, some of 
which have been described as distinct species. 
2, N. Pseudo-Narcissus. Daffodil or Lent Lily.—Usually- 
about a foot high ; scape flat, always 1-flowered ; flowers yellow, 
with the crown of a darker tint. This is a common European 
plant from Sweden to the Mediterranean. 
This forms the genus Aju.c of Haworth, and is readily divided 
into five tolerably distinct forms. The ordinary N. Pseudo- 
Narcissus ; N. méjor, larger in all its parts than the preceding, 
with all parts of the flower uniform in colour. Both of these 
