and close; deaves oval lanceolate, about five inches long, and 
from one to two broad, tapering for a greater length down- 
wards than towards the summit, harsh. Spikes upright, many- 
‘flowered, loose, scattered, sometimes near a foot long; 
corollas of a tawny burnt yellow without, of a purer yellow 
within; inodorous, and shaped like those of the Acanruus 
or Bearsbreech. ‘The bloom begins to show itself in May 
‘and June; and there is generally a succession of it on the 
same plant until winter arrests the progress. 
Commonly raised from seed. The soil it prefers is a 
light sandy loam. Requires merely a protection from frost, 
but should be otherwise kept as hardily as is consistent 
with that precaution, and supplied with plenty of water. 
The drawing was made from a plant in the extensive 
nursery of Messrs. Whitley, Brames, and Milne, King’s 
Road, Parson’s Green, Fulham. 
I —— 
a The calyx and pistil after the corolla has been removed. . 4 The lower 
segment of the corolla dissected, so as to show the insertion and position 
of the stamens, 
