GADYEGALBADYERAH, 
OF NEW SOUTH WALES. 
this elegant and beautiful flower, which 
(has never before been figured, we are enabled 
fto give the native appellation. The pronun- 
ciation of the word may. be better guessed, 
Jpf exhibiting a division of most of the sylla- 
bles of which it consists, as they were written 
lown by the friend from whom we received 
)Oth the original drawing and the native 
lame ; viz. Gad-ye-gal-ba-dyerah : it is, how- 
ver, he assures us, only a single word — 
^adyegalbadyerah ; nor can we rind that it 
ias any other meaning, than to denote this 
lower. 
From the figure, it appears obviously a Bell- 
blower, but we do not possess sufficient infor- 
lation to assign it the exact station which it 
light to hold in systematical Botanv. It 
;effls to approximate both the Campanula, 
id the Hyacinthus. 
This 
