Phalænopsis Mariæ, Burbidge [Plate 80].—We have been requested by Professor Reichenbach to mention that there exists some misapprehension as to the above quoted name, which was not given by him, as stated in the text which accompanies [Plate 80], but was used by Mr. Burbidge, who dedicated the plant to his wife on the very spot where he found it, in a little Sondaic island. “I have, indeed,” he adds, “accepted the name, but of course left the publication to the author; had I named the plant, I would have published it in the Gardeners’ Chronicle. It is painful to me to write thus, but to justify myself I must do so; for now-a-days one is frequently worried with prescriptions how some unknown plant must be named provided it be new, and I have always declined to name plants in honour of ladies whom I have never seen, and who do not, so far as I know, stand in any special relation to plants.”

PL. 88. CATTLEYA LABIATA.

CATTLEYA LABIATA.
[[Plate 88].]
Native of Brazil.

Epiphytal. Stems (pseudobulbs) short, club-shaped, furrowed when old, invested by greyish membraneous sheaths, one-leaved. Leaves coriaceous, oblong obtuse, of a dark green. Scape issuing from an elongate oblong compressed double sheath, of a paler green than the leaves. Flowers two to five—usually about three—on each spike, large though not equalling in size many of the forms of C. Mossiæ, the lip very richly coloured; sepals lanceolate, acute, plane and entire at the margin, recurved at the apex, of a very pale delicate tint of rosy blush; petals of the same colour, but three times as broad, ovate, bluntish at the apex, the margin undulated; lip obovate, with the two sides connivent over the column, of the same delicate blush tint as the sepals and petals, the front part beyond the tubulose portion expanded (about two inches broad and long), rounded, deeply emarginate, almost wholly of a very rich lustrous deep magenta-purple, a broad bar of which is continued towards the base down the centre of the tube, and on each side of this bar at the mouth of the tube is a roundish-oblong patch of creamy yellow, which becomes paler as it spreads towards the edge; the margin neatly and densely frilled, and having at the extreme edge a narrow border of pale rosy blush, which is continued around the whole of the richly-coloured front lobe. Column clavate, semi-terete, shorter than the tube.

Cattleya labiata, Lindley, Collectanea Botanica t. 33; Id., Genera and Species of Orchidaceous Plants, 116; Id., Botanical Register, t. 1859; Id., Paxton’s Flower Garden, t. 24 (varieties); Hooker, Exotic Flora, t. 157; Id., Botanical Magazine, t. 3998; Loddiges, Botanical Cabinet, t. 1956; Paxton’s Magazine of Botany, iv., 121; Van Houtte, Flore des Serres, tt. 1893-4; Jennings’ Orchids, t. 45; Williams, Orchid Grower’s Manual, ed. 5, 122.

Epidendrum labiatum, Reichenbach fil., in Walpers’ Annales Botanices Systematicæ, vi., 313 (var. a. genuinum).


This fine species has been known in England since 1818, and Cattleya Loddigesii excepted (originally grown as Epidendrum violaceum), was the first Cattleya introduced and the type of the genus, which was named in compliment to W. Cattley, Esq., of Barnet. There are two or three varieties of the autumn-flowering C. labiata, the one having foliage of a light green, and the other of a darker green with the under side of the leaf also darker-coloured than in the first. It is the same in the case of C. (labiata) Warnerii, the sub-species named in honour of Mr. R. Warner, the two forms of which may be easily distinguished from the typical C. labiata, since they generally bloom in May and June. There are many wonderful sub-varieties of C. Warnerii, both as regards the colour of lip and the size of the flowers, and some of these have been sold by collectors as the true autumn-flowering C. labiata, though that is easily distinguished from C. Warnerii by those who really know the two plants.

We have been cultivating Orchids for nearly forty years, and have never known the original C. labiata to be imported during that period. It is this that makes it so scarce, and causes it to fetch the high prices that it does. Another reason is, that it blossoms when few Cattleyas are in flower, i.e., in October and November, and so every grower desires to possess it. We remember many years ago seeing plants of this species two feet in diameter in the collection of R. Hanbury, Esq., The Poles, near Ware. Mr. Hanbury had a wonderful specimen in his first collection, which went to Germany. Many other such plants were to be seen in those days; and it would appear that these plants have been divided, and distributed among growers. It is greatly to be regretted that our collectors do not again discover its habitat.

The specimen we now illustrate is from a well-grown plant in the fine collection of H. Gaskell, Esq., Woolton Wood, Woolton, Liverpool, where it bloomed with five very fine flowers on a spike. A most wonderful and lovely spike it was, and we regret not being able to depict it full size, in order to show off its beauty.