ejliaris, 
blephariglot- 
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— ere 
[ 136 ] 
CLASS XVII.—GYNANDRIA. 
ORDER IL—MONOGYNIA. 

} «© Anther adnate, subterminal and persistent.— 
Pollinia (masses of pollen) affixed by the base, 
composed of angular particles elastically co- 
hering.” R. Brown? Hort. Kew. 5. p. 188. 
332. ORCHIS. [Swartz. Act. Stockholm, 1800. p. 205.] 
( Orchidee.) 
Corolla ringent, upper leaflet vaulted. Lip 
dilated, the base beneath calcarate. Pol- 
linia (anthers, LZ.) 2, terminal, adnate.— 
Nutt. 
1. O. lip oblong-lanceolate, pinnate-ciliate, twice 
the length of the petals; horn longer than the 
germ.— Willd. 
Habenaria ciliaris, Brown, in Hort. Kew. 
Icon. Bot. Rep. 42. : 
Vellow-fringed Orchis. 
A very elegant plant, about twelve inches high, with rich 
orange-coloured flowers. In meadows, dry swamps and boggy 
grounds not uncommon, especially in Jersey. Perennial. 
July. 
2. O. lip lanceolate-ciliate, the length of the up- 
per petal; the horn longer than the germ.— 
Willd. 
Orchis testiculata floribus niveis, &c. Clayt. No. 
560. 
White-fringed Orchis. 
Also a handsome plant closely resembling the preceding, 
except that its flowers are snow-white. In the low boggy 
