546 
AMARYLLIS longifolia; «. riparia. 
The Black River Amaryllis. 
it "ne 
HEXANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 
Nat. ord. Narcissi. Jussieu gen. 54. Div. I. 
AMARYLLIDEE. Brown prod. 1.296. Sect. I, 
AMARYLLIIS. Supra vol. 3. fol. 226. 
Div. Bulbisperme ; foliis multifariis. 
A. longifolia, umbella pauci-multiflora ; foliis lorato-elongatis, lato-subulatis, 
margine scabris ; pedicellis brevibus; limbo corollz turbinato-campanulato 
breviore tubo. Suprd vol. 4. fol. 303. 
Amaryllis longifolia. L'Heritier ser't. angl. 13. Hort. Kew. 1. 419. ed. 2. 2. 
227. Jacq. ic. rar. 2. 364. ejusd. coll. 4. 205, ejusd. fragm. 3. t. 2. 
Jig.1. Nobis in Curtis’s magaz. 661. Redouté liliac. 347. Willd. sp. 
pl. 2. 56; (excluso Linneo cum synonymis suis BRUNSvVIGIAM falca- 
tam intelligente). Nobis in journ. of science and the arts. 2. 366. 
Amaryllis bulbisperma. Burm. prod. 9. 
Amaryllis capensis. Mill. dict. ed. 8. n. 12. 
Crinum capense. Herbert in Curtis’s magaz. 2121. 5. 
(~) minor; bulbo instar caudicis elongato, angusto; foliis glaucis, germine 
colorato breviore pedicello. 
Amaryllis riparia. Burchell MSS. 
Crinum capense. 8. Herbert. l. c. 
(8) major; asus glaucis, germine viridi breviore pedicello. Nob. in Curtis’s 
magaz. lc. - 
(y) Needs longiflora, foliis non glaucis, germine lucido absque omni sulco 
v. gibbositate. Supra vol. 4. fol. 303. 
Crinum longiflorum. Herbert loc. cit. 6. 
_ In the 14434 article of Curtis's Botanical Magazine, we 
have shown the Linnean Amaryuxis longifolia to be Bruns- 
vicia falcata (the subject of that article), and the present 
species to have been erroneously put in its place by succeed- 
ing writers. The substitute having however circulated by 
the title of the true one in the Hortus Kewensis, Sertum An- 
glicanum of L’Heritier, Icones rariorum Plantarum of Jac- 
quin, and all succeeding botanical systems, the true plant 
proving, besides, reducible to a different genus from Ama- 
RYLLIS ; we have deemed it the best correction of the error, 
to restore the mutual synonyms to their respective species, 
_ without transposing a specific name by which one plant had 
been forgotten and another become universally known. 
VOL. VII. I 
