By Richard Anthony Salisbury, Esq. 333 



round some support; and when the plant is vigorous, it will 

 continue flowering here from September till the middle of 

 November. The best lime to shift, or part the roots, is in 

 April; and to make sure of seeds, the stigma, when fully 

 expanded, must be fecundated by the pollen of a later blown 

 flower. 



LILEyE. 



Lilium Monadelpiium. Ker in Bot. Mag. U. 1405. 

 cum Ic. — Bieberst. Fl. Taur. v. 1. p. 267- Lilium orientale 

 latifolium flore luteo maximo odoratissimo. Tournef. Cor. 

 1.25. 



A native of the mountains of Caucasus, from whence its 

 seeds were received, and plants raised, by Messrs. Loddiges, 

 in 1804. It will thrive in almost any soil. 



Lilium Tigrinum. Dryand. in Hort. Kew. ed. 2. v. 2. 

 p. 241 . — Kevin Bot. Mag. n. 1237. cum Ic. Lilium speciosum. 

 Jacks, in Bot. Rep. n. 586. cum Ic. Kentan, &c. K&mpf. Amaen. 

 Exot.p. 871. 



There is hardly a doubt, that this splendid species will 

 succeed, in the most smoaky courts of our metropolis. It 

 grows wild in China, from whence it was introduced, in 1804, 

 by Captain Kirkpatrick ; and, through the care and libe- 

 rality of Mr. Aiton, at least ten thousand plants of it are 

 already spread over the kingdom. A bulb is formed in the 

 axil of almost every leaf; and these bulbs, in two years, be- 

 come strong enough to flower. 



Lilium Concolor. Par. Lond. n. 47. cum Ic. — Kcr in Bot. 

 Mag. n. 1655. cum Ic. 



Introduced in 1804, from China, by the Right Hon. 



