AMARYLLIDACEyE. 
305 
Mr. Haworth has, besides an Ajax Lobularis growing 
near Tenby in Pembrokeshire ; limb exactly twice the length 
of the tube, cup three lines longer, six-lobed, which he con- 
siders the stock of the common double deep-yellow daffodil; 
Rugilobus, limb a third part longer than the tube, cup 6- 
lobed, wrinkled ; and Cambrieus, differing from the last 
merely in the lobes being crenate and but little wrinkled, 
and he makes them three distinct species ! They have been 
noticed by no other person, and belong, as far as I can judge, 
to Pseudonarcissus, having the limb darker than usual. 
6? Abscissus. — Haworth. Park. Par. 107. f. 1. Pseudo- 
narcissus tubo quasi abscisso. A daffodil with the 
cup as if its margin had been clipped. This plant 
and the following have the limb paler yellow than 
the cup, and are probably varieties of Pseudo-nar- 
cissus. Parkinson received this from the Pyrenees. 
7? Hexangularis. — Haw. Park. Par. 101. f. 5. Cup 
hexangular, dipt. These, together with albus, and 
two other daffodils, differing from minor in having 
the cup, as if dipt (but only known by the plates 
in Rudb. Elys. 68. f. 4. and 72. f. 15), have been 
most injudiciously erected by Mr. Haworth into a 
genus Oileus, on account of no other peculiarity 
than the entire and straight margin of the cup. 
They have been long lost ; and the description of 
them is too imperfect to enable their proper place 
to be ascertained with certainty. The two former 
are probably referable to Pseudo-narcissus, the 
two latter to minor. Haworth has an Ajax albus 
from Rudb. Elys. 70. f. 7. said to have the perianth 
white, the cup not fringed, and the style exceed- 
ing ; the plant about equal in size to minor. On 
reference to Rudbeck, I find a figure with some- 
thing indistinct like a curved style. In the text 
he does not call it white, as Haworth says, but 
white with a large yellow cup, and lie mentions 
three varieties, one with the cup fringed, and one 
not fringed. No reliance can be placed on such 
a figure and description. It comes nearer to Ajax 
Sabinianus than to any other plant. 
N. Cyclamineus (Rudb. Theat. flor. 20. called there N. 
Hispanicus minor, luteus, amplo calyce, foliis reflexis) is 
x 
