[Bulbiferum], 2 to 4 feet high, with erect crimson flowers spotted with brown; May and June.
[Candidum], the well-known "Madonna Lily," 3 to 5 feet high, with sweet-scented pure-white flowers, 3 to 4 inches across, and ten to thirty on an erect truss in June. When subject to disease in any locality, it is almost useless attempting to grow this Lily. (See [Plate 16], fig. 64).
[Chalcedonicum], a fine "Turk's Cap" Lily, 2 to 3 feet high, with drooping bright scarlet flowers in July and August; there are several varieties, including maculatum, a spotted one.
Croceum, the "[Orange] or Saffron Lily," with somewhat cobwebby stems 3 to 6 feet high, and golden orange, funnel-shaped flowers, spotted with purple at the base; June and July. (See [Plate 17], fig. 67).
[Dalhansoni], a pretty hybrid between dalmaticum and Hansoni, about 5 feet high, with dark brownish-purple flowers in June and July.
Dauricum or [davuricum] grows 2 to 3 feet high, and has orange-scarlet flowers spotted with blackish-purple.
[Henryi], 3 to 6 feet high (sometimes much taller) with jagged-surfaced orange-red flowers from July to September.
[Marhan], a lovely hybrid between the white-flowered Martagon and Hansoni. It grows 4 to 5 feet high, and has clear orange-yellow flowers with red-brown streaks and spots.
[Pomponium], a fine "Turk's Cap" species, 2 to 3 feet high, with drooping, bright-red, orange-yellow, flowers.