THE ORCHID REVIEW. 135 
Swainson. Catasetum Hookeri is a Brazilian species, which flowered in 
Mr. Swainson’s stove at Halesworth, in 1818, doubtless sent or brought 
home by himself. 
Mr. Cattley’s collection was perhaps the leading one about this time, 
and we note that it furnished the materials for three other figures in the 
same work—Sarcanthus teretifolius (figured as Vanda teretifolia at t. 6), 
S. rostratus (t. 39 B), and Acampe multiflora (Vanda multiflora, t. 38). 
Trizeuxis falcata (t. 2) was a new genus which flowered with Mr. Griffin, 
of South Lambeth, received from Trinidad. Spiranthes pudica (t. 30) was 
introduced by the Horticultural Society from China, and flowered in their 
garden at Chiswick, in July, 1821; as also did Ionopsis utricularioides 
(t. 39 A) in May, 1824. This had been sent from Trinidad by the governor, 
Sir R. Woodford. Under t. 37 (Cattleya Loddigesii) we also find the record 
of a third Cattleya, C. Forbesii, a yellow-flowered species, sent from Rio to 
the Horticultural Society by Forbes. 
In 1822 very few additions were made. The most interesting were 
Eulophia guineensis, collected at Sierre Leone, by G. Don, for the Horti- 
cultural Society, in whose collection at Chiswick it flowered; Rodriguezia 
secunda, sent from Trinidad by the Rev. Mr. Adam to Messrs. Loddiges, 
who flowered it; Gomeza recurva, imported from Brazil by Messrs. 
Loddiges ; and Macradenia lutescens, which flowered with Mr. Griffin, of 
South Lambeth, who had obtained it from Trinidad. 
In 1823 a few other novelties were recorded; as Calanthe veratrifolia, 
which flowered finely in Mr. Colvill’s hothouse, at Chelsea, producing 
spikes three feet high; Eulophia gracilis, sent from Sierre Leone by G. 
Don to the Horticultural Society ; Xylobium squalens, sent from Rio by 
Forbes to the same collection; Oncidium luridum, which flowered with 
Mr. Griffin at South Lambeth; also Dendrobium Pierardi, Epidendrum 
nocturnum, and Cirrhea viridipurpurea, which flowered with Messrs. 
Loddiges. This year also saw the commencement of Hooker’s Exotic Flora, 
in the first volume of which we note the further additions of Dendrobium 
fimbriatum and Cymbidium lancifolium, both of which flowered at the 
Liverpool Botanic Garden. 
The most interesting additions of 1824 were Aéranthes grandiflora, sent 
from Madagascar by Forbes to the Horticultural Society—apparently the 
first Madagascar Orchid in cultivation; Brassia caudata, from the West 
Indies, which flowered in Mr. Lee’s Hammersmith Nursery ; and Catasetum 
macrocarpum, sent from Bahia by G. Don to the Horticultural Society. 
Some notable additions were recorded in 1825. In June of that year 
the beautiful Disa grandiflora flowered, for the first time in Europe, in the 
collection of Mr. Griffin, of South Lambeth, who had received it from the 
Cape of Good Hope. Oncidium Papilio, which had been sent from Trinidad 
by the Governor, Sir Ralph Woodford, flowered in Mr. Colvill’s Nursery, at 
