4 
BARR AND SON, 12, KING STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 
White ( Trumpet ) Daffodils, continued. per doz. each 
s. d. s. d. 
William Goldring, long snow- 
white dog-eared perianth, which 
completely envelopes the primrose 
trumpet ; the flower is very 
drooping 27 6... 2 6 
THE DOUBLE-FLOWERED (TRUMPET) DAFFODILS. 
N. Pseudo-Narcissus el. pl. 
Half the natural size. 
Pseudo-Narcissus plenus (the Eng- 
lish double Lent-lily, or Gerard’s 
double Daffodil). “ Is assuredly 
first naturall of our owne countrey, 
for Mr. Gerard first discovered it 
to the world, finding it in a poore 
woman’s garden in the West parts 
of England, where it grew before 
the woman came to dwell there, 
and, as I have heard since, is 
naturall of the Isle of Wight. . . 
Sometimes the flower showeth a 
close and round yellow trunke in 
the middle, separate from the pale 
outer wings, which trunke is very 
double, showing some pale leaves 
within it, dispersed among the yel- 
low. And sometimes the trunke 
is more, open, or in part broken, 
showing forth the same colours in- 
termixed within it ; the flower pass- 
ing away without giving any seed.” 
— Parkinson, p. 104 10 6 ..1 o 
Telamonius plenus (Wilmer's 
great double Daffodil); “the stalk 
riseth to bee two foote high, grow- 
ing (in a fruitfull and fat soyle) 
strong, and somewhat round, bear- 
ing at the toppe, out of a thin 
skinne, one great and fair double 
flower . . . diversely intermixed 
with a rowe of paler, and a rowe 
of deeper yellow leaves, wholly dis- 
persed throughout the flower, the 
pale colour as well as the deeper 
yellow . . : Sometimes the 
leaves hereof are scattered, and 
spread wholly, making it shew a 
faire, broad open flower; and some- 
times the outer leaves stand separ- 
ate from the middle trunke, which 
is whole and unbroken, and very 
thicke of leaves ; and sometimes 
the middle trunke will be halfe 
broken . . . as it is likewise 
seene in the small English kinde 
. . . this beareth no seed.”— 
Parkinson, p. 102. 
1st size roots, per 100, 7s. 6d. 1 3 
2n d »» »» ,, 5s. 6d. 1 o 
Lobularis plenus, dwarf double 
yellow 4 6...0 6 
N. Lobularis Grandiplenus. 
Very much reduced from natural size. 
per doz. each 
s. d. s. d. 
Lobularis Grandiplenus, dwarf 
double yellow with many centres.. 7 6...0 9 
N. Capax fl. pl. 
Very much reduced from natural size. 
per doz. each 
s. d. s. d. 
Capax plenus (Queen Ann’s dou- 
ble Daffodil), also called eystet- 
tensis. Haworth supposed it was 
the double of Calathinus. Herbert, 
that it was the double of Minor. 
Parkinson places it with the trum- 
pet section under the name Pseudo- 
Narcissus gallicus minor flore-pleno, 
but he is doubtful, and remarks on 
it as follows: — “(if I may law- 
fully call it) a bastard Daffodill; for 
I somewhat doubt thereof, in that 
the flower is not made after the 
fashion of theother bastard (Trum- 
pet) Daffodils, but doth more 
nearly resemble the forme of the 
double white Daffodill (Poeticus 
plenus), expressed before among 
the true Daffodils, bearing 
one faire double flower . . . 
of a pale lemon colour, con- 
sisting of 6 rows of leaves, every 
row growing smaller than the other 
unto the middle, and so set and 
placed, that every leafe of the 
flower doth stand directly almost 
in all, one upon or before another 
into the middle, where the leaves 
are smallest, the outermost being 
the greatest.” — Parkinson, p. 105. 12 0...1 3 
CERNUUS FLORE ELEGANTISSIME 
pleno (the double white trumpet 
Daffodil) 25 0...2 6 
