314 82. ORCHIDACEA. 
with numerous wavy longitudinal lines.—Woods, very rare. 
‘‘Bank sloping to the south on Hampton Common, Gloucester- 
shire.” Sm. P. VI. VII. E. 
Tribe III. Malaxidee. 
13. CoraLLtoruiza Hall. 
1. C. innata (R. Br.); spur very short or wanting.—F£. B, 
1547.—Root of thick fleshy much branched fibres. ae of few 
yellowish flowers. Sep. and pet. lanceolate, acute. Lip oblong, 
white, with a few pwrple spots, sometimes with 3 equal lobes.— 
Boggy woods, rare. P. VII. Ss. 
14. Manaxts Sw. 
1. A. paludosa (Sw.); st. with 3—5 oval concave leaves, lip 
coneave acute.—E. B. 72,.—St. 1—4 in. high, 5-edged. Sep. 
ovate, spreading, 2 turning upwards. Lip above, erect, 3-nerved, 
its base surrounding the column. L. fringed at the end with 
bulbous gemme. Forming a small bulbous hybernaculum.— 
This plant and the next rather grow upon the moss as epiphytes 
than amongst it.—Spongy bogs. P. VIII. IX. 
15. Sruraua Reich. 
1, S. Loeselit (R.); 1. oblong-lanceolate, st. triangular, lip 
obovate longer than the petals—Malaais Sm., E. B.47. Liparis 
Rich., Hook., Lindl.—St. 6—10 im. high. Fl. 6—12, in a lax 
spike, yellowish. Sep. lanceolate. Pet. lmear. Hybernaculum 
large, ovate, inclosed in the whitish sheaths of the decayed 
leaves. An epiphyte ?—Liparis is the name of a genus of insects, 
and also of fish. I follow Koch in adopting Sturmia here.— 
Spongy bogs in Norf., Suff., and Camb., very rare. P. VI.—E. 
Tribe IV. Cypripediee. 
16. Cypripepium Linn. Lady’s Slipper. 
1. C. Calceolus (L.); st. leafy, middle lobe of the column 
nearly ovate obtuse deflexed, hp slightly compressed shorter 
than the calyx.—E. B. 1.—St. 12—18 in. high, downy, bearing 
3 or 4 large ovate pointed leaves. F'l. usually solitary, or 2, 
large; sep. 1—14 in. long, dark brown; pet. dark brown, rather 
narrower than sep.; lip | im. long, inflated, yellow, reticulated 
with darker vemns.—Dense woods m the north, very rare. P. V. 
VI. E. 
