By Richard Anthony Salisbury, Esq. 351 



loam, under a frame with alpine plants, as it only requires 

 protection from severe frost. With this treatment it multi- 

 plied by off-sets abundantly, and often ripened seeds at 

 Chapel Allerton. 



Corbularia Turgida MSS. Narcissus Bulbocodium. 

 Decand. in PL Lil. n. 24. cum Ic. bo?id.—Curt. in Bot. Mag. 

 n. 88. cum Ic. — Linn. Sp. PL ed. 2. p. 417- auctoritate ejus 

 speciminis, nec non Cliff ortiani. Pseudo-narcissus juncifo- 

 lius luteus serotinus. Park. Par. p. 106. Pseudo-narcissus 

 Pyrenaeus flore subluteo amplo calyce juncifolius. Theatr. 

 PL t. 21. 



This is a Pyrenaean mountain plant, which grows wild 

 abundantly near Tarbes, quite hardy, and will thrive with us 

 in any soil, flowering late in April or May. It is now brought 

 forced to Covent Garden in great plenty every spring. Besides 

 these three species, Mr. Haworth possesses a dried speci- 

 men of a fourth, the bulb of which came from Holland, with 

 the title of White Trompet Marin ; this I have not yet seen 

 living, but it grows wild in Biscay, and was certainly culti- 

 vated by Parkinson in 1629. 



Qcjeltia Ampla. MSS. a. Narcissus maximus griseus 

 calyce flavo. Pass. Hort. Vern. t. 22. Butter and Eggs, nostra- 



tibus. (3. Narcissus Gouani. Decand. in PL Lil. v. 4. n. 220. 



cum Ic. ad exempl. siccum Roth. Catalect.fasc.2.p.32. Nar- 

 cissus Am plus. Prodr. p. 224. Narcissus Incomparabilis. 

 Curt, in Bot. Mag. n. 121. cum Ic. Narcissus Odorus. Gouan. 

 Obs. p. 23. auctoritate ejus speciminis. — Linn. Amoen. v. 4. p. 

 311. Narcissus latifolius, &c. sive Nonpareille. Park. Par, 

 p. 68. Narcissus omnium maximus. Pass. Hort. Vern. t. 4. 



vol. i. Z z 



