BIANDRIA. MONOGYNIA. Satyrium. 
35 
at Winterslow, near Salisbury. Dr. Maton. Meadows and pastures 
about Great Comberton and Pershore, abundantly. Nash. Studley lime¬ 
kilns, and pastures near Rippon, not rare. Mr. Brunton, in Bot. Guide. 
Meadows about Cold Comfort; and Oversley Hill, Warwickshire. 
Purton. E.) P. June—Aug. 
S. al'bidum. Bulbs fasciculated : leaves spear-shaped: lip of the nec¬ 
tary three-cleft: segments acute: the middle one blunt: (spur one 
third the length of the germen. E.) 
Dicks. H. S.—(Hook. FI. Lond. 107— E. Bot. 505. E.)— FI. Dan. 11 6—Hall. 
26. 1. at ii. p. 137— Mich. 26. A, B, C. 
Stem nine to fifteen inches high, scored. Leaves , the lower oval, sheathing 
the stem. Floral leaves sharply acuminate, longer than the germens. 
Petals oval-spear-shaped. Lip short, the middle segment the longest. 
Petals white, lip green. Woodw. Spike one inch and a half long, cylin¬ 
drical, (with numerous flowers. E.) Leaves strap-spear-shaped. (Ac¬ 
cording to Prof. Hooker the proper character of the root is “ digitato-fas- 
ciculate, radicles round/’ (cylindrical?) “flexuose, thick, brown/’ E.) 
White Satyrion. (S. albidum. Linn. Huds. Lightf. With. Sm. Pers. 
Orchis albida. Sw. Willd. De Cand. Sm. Habenaria alhida. Br. Hook. 
E.) Moist meadows and also mountainous pastures, Llanberris. .Mr. 
Davies. Dry mountainous pastures in Argyleshire and the Hebrides. 
Lightfoot. (On the grassy hills which surround Hafod, Cardiganshire. 
Miss Johnes. Found with S. viride in Cocker’s Fields, Staley Wood, 
Cheshire. Mr. Bradbury. Mountainous pastures above Borrowdale. 
Mr. Turner. Near Wince Bridge, and the Wey Sike, Teesdale Forest, 
Durham. Rev. J. Harriman. Dallow Gill, Yorkshire. Mr. Brunton, in 
Bot. Guide. Rocky pastures near Blaen y Nant, near Llyn Ogwen. 
Carnarvonshire. Mr. Griffith. Lowdore, Cumberland; Shewing Shields, 
and at Nucton Brown, Northumberland. Mr. Winch. Campsie Hills, 
Scotland. Mr. Murray, in Hook. Scot. E.) P. June—July. 
S. re'pens. Roots fibrous: (radical leaves egg-shaped: lip and petals 
spear-shaped. Br. E.) flowers pointing one way. 
(Hook. FI. Lond. 144. E.) — E. Bot. 289—Jacq. Austr. 369— FI. Dan. 812 
— Lightf. 22. at p. 520 — Hall. 22. 3. Epipactis at ii. p. 132 — Gunn. ii. 6. 1 
— Cam. Hort. 35 — Ger. Em. 227. 4— Ger. 175. 4— Park. 1355. 8 — J. B. 
ii. 770. 2. 
(Root creeping. Leaves on broad leaf-stalks, reticulated with brown 
veins. Stem a foot high, somewhat hirsute, especially towards the top. 
Flowers whitish, or straw-coloured, fifteen to twenty, from one side of 
the fruit stalks, inclining to a spiral direction. Floral-leaves spear-shaped, 
longer than the germen. E.) Lip terminating behind in a gibbous boat¬ 
shaped nectary, which would seem to connect it with the genus Serapias. 
Lightf. Sowerby found two internal spear-shaped petals, like those of 
Orchis ustulata. 
Creeping Satyrion. (S. repens. Linn. Goodyera repens. Br. Hook. Sm* 
E.) Old mossy woods, but rare. Lightfoot. About Moy-ball, near In¬ 
verness, and other places in Scotland. In a wood near Gordon Castle. 
Dr. Hope. (Mountainous woods in Northumberland. Mr. Robson. 
Keswick. Mr. Hutton, in Bot. Guide : but the accuracy of these stations 
is doubted by Mr. Winch. Fir woods at Brodie, in Morayshire. Mr. 
Brodie. Near Duppin, Perthshire. Mr. Shillinglaw. In the woods of 
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