34 DIANDRIA. MONOGYNIA. Satyrivm. 
Never found about Keswick, as reported; a primitive country, which 
does not produce limestone, and chalk plants. Mr. Winch. E.) 
P. June—July. 
S. vir'ide. Bulbs hand-shaped: lower leaves oblong, blunt: lip of 
the nectary strap-shaped, three-cleft; the middle segment 
obscure: (spur very short. E.) 
Dicks. II. S. — (Hook. FI. Lond. 130. E.)— E. Bot. 94.— Hall. 26. 2, at ii. 
p. 137— FI. Dan. 77 — Ger. Em. 224. 9— Park. 1358. 9. 
Flowers pale green, (rather few, in a lax spike. Petals approaching, forming 
a helmet. E.) Stem five to eleven inches high, solid; angles unequal, 
acute. Floral-leaves awl-spear-shaped, keeled, (somewhat incurved, half as 
long again as the flowers. E.) Calyx, tube investing the germen; border 
with three divisions; segments egg-shaped, nearly equal, with sharp 
longitudinal lines approaching upwards, before flowering cemented to¬ 
gether, and involving all the parts of fructification, except the nectary ; 
the side ones more convex on the outside, recurved sideways at the 
points, the middlemost rather smaller, more bent inwards. These, 
which are clearly an extension of the skin investing the germen, inclose 
as a calyx the other parts of fructification, and are of a texture similar 
to that of the floral leaves. Blossom of three petals, the two upper strap- 
sp^ar-shaped, concave, upright, as long as the calyx, inserted at the 
divisions at the base of the upper lip of the third petal. The third 
petal gaping, with two lips, surrounding the edge of the germen; upper 
lip roundish, concave, reddish brown, as short again as the two upper 
petals, divided within into two cells, each containing one of the stamens; 
lower lip oblong, strap-shaped, reflexed, somewhat longer than the 
calyx, flat, of a yellowish green hue, the sides and extremity tinged 
with brownish purple, the edges incurved at the base, with a longitudinal 
ridge along the middle, cloven into three at the end, the lateral segments 
strap-shaped, rather blunt, the middlemost very short, projecting 
underneath at the base into a nectary. Nectary roundish, slightly fur¬ 
rowed along the middle, concave, pendent from the base of the lower 
lip of the blossom. In Fumaria and the Personates, the nectary, as here, 
is. an expansion of the petals, containing honey-like juice. St. (Readily 
distinguished by the small two-lobed spur or nectary, and the peculiar 
form of the labellum. FI. Lond. E.) 
(Green Satyrion. E.) Frog Satyrion. (Habenaria viridis. Br. Hook. 
Satyrium viride. Linn. Huds. Lightf. With. FI. Brir. Orchis viridis. 
Sw. Willd. De Cand. Sm. E.) Meadows and pastures, in gravelly 
soil; rare. On Hellsefell-nab, near Kendal. Hudson. (Meadows between 
the house of Fron and the upper wood in the parish of Mold, Flintshire. 
Mr. Griffith. In Lligwy Wood, Anglesey. Welsh Bot. Near St. Anthony's 
Chapel, in the King’s Park, Edinburgh. Mr. D. Stuart, in Grev. Edin. 
E.) Fields in the way to Glenfield near Leicester. Pulteney. Shotover- 
hill, Southleigh, Carnbury, Burford Down, Oxon. Sibthorpe. (Marlow 
Wood, Buckinghamshire. Mr. Gotobed. Stevington, Thurleigh, and 
Bletsoe Meadows, Bedfordshire. Abbot. King’s Hedges; Hinton, in a 
pit near Chalk-pit Close, Cambridgeshire. Relhan. Cocker’s Fields, 
Staley Wood, Cheshire. Mr. Bradbury. Beamish Woods and fields ad¬ 
joining, meadows near Moreton, Durham. Mr. Winch. Many places 
about Sunderland. Mr. Waugh. Meadow near a wood called Ugly Park, 
Essex. Mr. Forster. St. Faith’s Newton Bogs, near Norwich. Smith. 
Meadow near Ludlow. Dr. Evans. Common about Yoxford, Suffolk. 
Mr. Davy. About Harleston, Suffolk, plentiful. Mr. J. Turner. Woods 
