Ss . 
THE ORCHID REVIEW. 361 
mentioned, including B. grandiflorum; the remarkable B. Beccarii— which 
could not be called inconspicuous—B. barbigerum, of which a very graphic 
description by Dr. Lindley is given; B. comosum, whose head resembles a 
bottle-brush ; B. auricomum, which, owing to its pleasant fragrance, 1653. 
eK 
BULBOPHYLLUM TREMULUM, 
51. 
FTG, 
great favourite with Burmese ladies, who decorate their hair ,with it; and, 
among many others, B. tremulum (fig. 51), which has a peculiar, sensitive, 
hairy lip resembling a hand brush. 
The author then successively alludes to Megaclinium, a remarkable 
genus allied to Bulbophyllum, the numerous epiphytal and terrestrial 
