FLORA INDICA; ADVERTISEMENT. * Tue sons of my deceased friend Dr. Roxsurea being anxious that the Frora Inpica, on which he bestowed so many years of unremitting labour, should be presented without any farther delay to the scientific world, requested me to superintend the progress of these Volumes through the press, a request with which I cheer- ~~~ fally‘complied. The first Volume formerly published being out - of print, it became necessary to reprint it in order to complete the undertaking ; that volume was enriched by the invaluable notes and additions of Dr. Wallich ; but as Captains Roxburgh did not consider themselves at liberty to make use of those additions with- out the permission of that eminent, Botanist,, they have beep omitted in reprinting the Volume ; ; the ‘present « dition of the Fiona, to be completed i in four ‘Volumes, will therefore consist of the MSS. left late Dr. Roxburgh, without say addition. W. CAREY. SERAMPORE, Dec. 24th, 1831. . CONTENTS. —> - * CLASS I. .« MONANDRIA MONMOUENR 9... 1. tue cus vee Mieke ces = CLASS Ii. 3 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA vee ate hee ye, soe egy ee TRIGYNIA ee i ss ee CLASS IIL. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA «+. ees Ci 5 agains pave Coan DIGENIA © us. owe ec eee ee OO ee eee ee _ @ETRANDRYA MONOGYNIA ee Eerste DIGNTA_.” oe ica oe : : TETRAGYNIA «.. we on eae . : CLASS V, = | PENTANDRIA WON sas tee cs ee 454 * i FLORA INDICA. a CLASS IL. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. CANNA. Schreb. gen. No. 1. : _ Anther single, attached to the edge of the petal-like fila- ment. Style spatulate, growing to, the tube of the corolla. Stigma linear. Capsule three-celled, artes naked. C. indica, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, 1. 3. 3 Leaves ovate-lanceolate. Segments of the i oe border of the corol lanceolate, and biden, ae ee ees A eee _ Sans. Vuna-kelee, Surva-juya, geen Lat Mee ee the red» Wircty, id Shweta Sur- Feling el Katu-bala, Rheed. Mal. 11. p. 85. t.43. Cannacorus. Rumph, Amb. 5, p. 177. t. 17. fig. 2. | Common over India, and in Series ed ret paitiol a the year. re Observation, The parts of the corolla are. ence ae in both varieties. C, lutea of Roscoe, must therefore be differ- _ent, as in that, the inner limb of the corolla is bifid. : : I i = bn oe . ae a Styl le _ growing to the t fake of the corolla. Stigma infundibuliform. [onl . - ee 2 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Phrynium, Capsule three-celled, three-valved. Seeds solitary, arilled at the base. puget a8 uncinate, and furnished with a peri- —_ | ei BeNotomen. aus Shrubby, dichotomous.. Leaves cordate. Thalia cannaformis. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 16. Arandastrant. Tonchat seytam. Rumph, Amb, 4. P. 22, ee et - Donax Arindastrum. Lourier. Cochin Ch. 15. - Sans. Vula, Godunika, Bhudra, Bhudroudunee, Shura- kasthika, Kulyaninee, Bhudra-bula, Ghata, Patee, Vulahwa. Beng. Moocta-patee, Pattee-patee,* or Madar-patee. - This elegant shrub, is a native of Bengal, as well as of various other parts of India, &c. Flowering time he hot season ; seeds ripen in the rains. — Root ramous, woody, perennial. Stems straight, taper and sunple to the branches, about as thick as a man’s thumb, and from three to five, or six feet high, of a beautiful, high- ly polished green colour. Branches numerous, dichotomous, spreading in every direction, smooth like the stem, but joint- ed at every division,» Leaves alternate, petioled, ovate-cor- date, smooth, entire, acute, from four to — inches Tongs veins numerous, very fine and parallel. except a small portion, one-tenth, or less; at th s¢ is round, ‘and may be calindre hieigaaeyeieder™ ich: nal, generally solitary, jointed, a little flexuous, Bractes a in pairs on the joints of the raceme, each put: ve “ “Mats made of the split stems of this plant, being smooth, z « and particularly cool, and refreshing, are termed in Hindi Sital- é ‘pati, which signifies a cool mat, whence the plant itself is said to “bear the same name. Suspecting, however, this to be a misap= » * propriation of the term, I have enquired of natives of theeastern _ * parts of Bengal, who assure me, that the plant is named Mucta~ “pata, Nps ae om re iat te is — oor sae —| 2 brooke. — Phrynium, MONANDRIA. MONOGYNIA, 3 embracing between them a two-flowered. pedicel. Flowers. paired, on a common pedicel, from the alternate joints of the rachis, large, pure white. Pedicels.clavate, thick, white, — and fleshy, near the apex two-parted; divisions unequal, with two glands at their ends like the rudiments of flowers. Calyx above, three-leaved; leaflets oblong-conic, tapering to an acute point, and much shorter than the tube of the corol. Corol one-petalled, irregular. Tube funnel-shaped. Border double; exterior of three, equal, linear-oblong, recurved segments. Inner elevated far above the exterior on a con- tinuation of the tube, and consists of five very unequal por- tions: the exterior two are larger, obcordate, with waved, panding margins; the third or middle one stands opposite to the first two, is broad, obcordate, deeply emarginate, and of a middling size between the two exterior, and two interior segments; on the inside near the base a semilunar body which projects inward between the anther and. stigma; the inner. two small, and crown the mouth of the tube, closely embracing, the stigma and anther.., Filament. short, attach- ed. to, the margin of the smallest segment of the interior bor- der of the corol. Anther erect, simple, ovate-oblong. In this species, as. well as in P. eapitatum, the pollen consists of remark ably. Jarge round grains.. Germ inferior, villous, three- celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the bottom of its cell. Style growing to, the. inside of the tube of the corol, and does not appear until above its mouth, when it enlarges into an infundibuliform, hooked, stigma; surrounded witha lobate, callous margin, and directed. in an oblique manner toward the face of the anther, as if in search of it, th separated by a callous projection from the base of the middle division of the inner border of the corol, Capsule broad, turbinate, size of a cherry, rugose, somewhat three-lobed, Shieecelle, three-valved, opening from bai ag Seed s0- : ae the net, hom, tinged ‘blues 4 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Phrynium. penetrates. from the base pretty far up, separating the two extremities of the embryo. —_ Vitellus ; none has been disco- vered in any of the simple-anthered scitaminez which have been examined by me. Embryo pure white, hooked, with the Convexity upward, which Soon with the ara of = wie : oP. virgatum. R. : ae - Stems simple. ‘Leaves a lanceolate. Sarees'or ter minal, filiform, compound, | A native of Malabar, ‘from thence-sent to the late Dr. Anderson of Madras for the Cardamom plant, and by him presented to the Botanic garden at ——— where it blossoms — the rainy season. cee oe 212 > Seidel oe ~ Root a stout, crooked, tough, Abies horizontal mai | dy, with numerous, thick, strong fibres therefrom } ave | ‘part void of odour. Stems numerous, erect, six to eight feet high, jointed, lower joint or two much swelled ; invested in the sheaths of the leaves, fistulous; the largest are about as thick as a slender walking cane near the base, and at the top as thick as acommon quill. Leaves bifarious, short-petioled on ‘their sheaths, lanceolate, polished; from six to eighteen inches long. . “Sheaths* and petioles smooth and even, except the inside of the petioles, where there Bw tew long, feed hairs, Spikes terminal, two'or three toget hey | very generally two, or three cleft, very’ slender: ‘td often near a foot long, jointed, with a two-flowered pedicel at each joint... Flowers pure white, inodorous. Bractes two or three at each division; and also embracing the two-flowered pedi- cels, size very various, but the shape ensiform, and channel- led. Calyx of three, small, distinct, acute, conic, leaflets. Corol with a very short tube ; exterior border of three, near- ly equal, oblong, reflexed segments; within are two which are: —— andl much at rt weir the a conspi Phryniun. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, & form yellow margined hoods for the anther and. stigma. Filament inserted between two of the inner segments. of the corol, erect, .Anther one-celled, ovate, Germ. inferior, hairy, base of three-celled, with. one ovyulum. in,each, attached to: the axis. Style growing to the short tube of the corol, above free, and uncinate. Stigma funnel-form: Capsule. oblong- obovate, size of a field bean, rugose, when ripe pale yellow, . three-celled, three-valved. . Partitions opposed... Seeds so- litary, oblong; a small Jobate aril round the umbilicus at the. base of the seed. Integuments two; exterior brownand glos- sy, «terior membranaceous. Rained conform. to the seed, and as in P, eapitatum, &c, a brown substance runs up from the base, into the arch of the embryo. Eonhrye: smoke hooked, with the convexity upwards. ‘ Obs, It is almost needless to observe that this oat ei no relation to that which furnished the Cardamom nat Mala- bity viz. my se Cardamomum, _ ee Hsiteioneaa i hits? sip cde kre e8t ths Pla pk ideals, were sent by, Mr. Felix aes Pit Pegu, to the Botanic garden at,Calcutta,, where they, blossom in April and May. Root perennial, flexuose, creeping horizontally deepi in the earth, thick as a ratan; fibres numerous from the main body, - and'spread in all directions, _. Stem none, the sheathing pe- tioles unite from six to twelve inches in extent, and resemble, one, as in the Curcumas, Leaves in. little radical. tufts, of - three or four each, sub-bifarious, petioled,— Linerrhlon base broad and rounded’; preter both sur athe. — or iss have no sent shes: eras : AB 6 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Phrynium,. are from apex to base round and smooth; general length of the whole from six to twelve inches, which is nearly the height. of the whole plant, the position of the leaves being nearly: horizontal. Spikes solitary in the centre of the petioles, or lateral from their base, short peduncled, sub-cylindric, acute,’ apex elevated but little above the soil, imbricated on oppo- — site sides, with four to eight, alternate, bifarious bractes, or sheaths; each embraces a small spikelet of four or five pairs’ of sessile, small, nearly white flowers on the back, or inte-. rior side of the spikelet, which expand in succession, begin-. ning with the lower pair. Rachis flexuose, smooth, Bractes 3: exterior, or common, one at each joint of the spike, sub-cy-: _ lindric, sheathing, smooth, and rather obtuse ; interior, or pro= per one to each pair of flowers, Calyx three-leaved ; leaflets. lanceolate, smooth. Corol with a long, very slendér, smooth tube. Border ; exterior of three reflexed, oblong, obtuse seg-: ments ; within these are two larger, round-obovate, erect, curl-. ed portions; interior, or nectarium small, and like the other species unequally three-lobed. .Anther one-celled, attached to the inner border of the corol, Germ inferior, three-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the bottom of the cell}. Style blended with the tube of the corol, as in the other spe- cies described by me. niaine Bpsindte; thick, and fleshy. Seed vessel (not s seen.) 4, P, imbricatum, Rio 8 bol ~ Stemless, Leaves radical. - esis eckson sanis _ tary, short-peduncled ; bractes = =— — toothed i ued oo3 _ Pittuli-pata, sha beriseaber’ name in’ thing ‘bees is common jin its ‘wild ‘state, Flowers in March ‘and sia and the seeds ripen in August. _ Root tuberous, &e. as in other scitamineous. sean Shi none, Leaves ‘radical, long-petioled, from oblong, to broad Janceolai : > tapering nearly as much at’the base as at the apex, ire, dae Precept Phrynium. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 7 . long, by four to eight broad. Petioles longer than the leaves, cylindric, smooth, the flowerbearing ones have a hairy joint near the middle, and frem the joint up, a slit of between two and. three inches in length opens on one side for the spike, its margins thin and hairy. Spike solitary, short-peduneled, simple, linear-oblong, three to four inches long, imbricated. Bractes ; exterior oval, truncate, with the transverse apex many-toothed, smooth, each embracing’ several small, pale, pink flowers, which expand in succession. Inner bractes small, and membranaceous, Calyx, corol, and stamen, as in P. parviflorum.. Germ. three-celled, with one ovyulum in each, attached to the bottom of its cell. Style, as in the other species, it grows to, and is blended with the tube of the corol, — its apex free, thick and hooked. Stigma gaping, obliquely toward the anther. Capsule. oblong, size of a large field _ bean, rugose, three-celled, three-valved, opening from the apex. Seeds solitary, sitting on a partial aril, and attached to the bottom of the cell; external tunic hard, brown, and polished. Perisperm lena to the seed. Embryo erect, simple, the apex hooked. | Radicle cates slo: ‘to the um- bilicus of the seed. _ Ae - Obs, bi: simple, short-peduncled, Neabeicsiied lise oblong spike, b AMMEN ly points it ot. 5. P. parviflorum. R. ‘ - Stemless.. Leaves radical. Heads of hice - psinay deine acute, — : A native of the iusto vee lak Deeb With P. emp sony tecbaiggnones ators: thee nearing oh hg raion 1 Root tuberous, drowicontsk; baixy, iets pect on in 8 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Phrynum. Bractes; the exterior two are broad-ovate, and common to the whole head; the rest within smaller; all are smooth, and end in a small, rigid, acute point. #Jowers in pairs, small, nearly inconspicuous, yellow. Calyzx, corol, and stamen, as in capitatum. Germ short-pedicelled, smooth, but hairy round the insertion of the calyx, three-celled, and in this species I have only found one of the cells fertile, im it is one ovulum, attached to the bottom of the cell. In capitatum all the three cells are fertile. Style as in the other species, it grows to the tube of the corol, its apex free and hooked. —_ infundibuliform, | | 6 P. ins acbiibes sp. ike pes Willd, AAT: ‘Stemless, Leaves radical, long-petioled, oblong. leas of flowers: petiolary and meomone ARREE, - Bractes tr Naru-killa. Rheed. Mal. il. p- 67. t. 34. Phyllodes Placentaria. Lour. Cochin Ch. 16, 17. Kudali. Beng. which also signifies a Plantain. . A native of Chittagong, and of various other parts of In- dia. From. the former place it was sent to the Botanic gar-_ den at Caleutta, by Dr. Buchanan in 1797. Flowering time the rainy season, the seeds ripen in the cool season. > _ Root perennial, tuberous like ginger, with long, a Rbics from the crown, and various other parts, _ Stem : Leaves radical, long-petioled, oblong, entire, smooth on both sides; from six to eighteen inches long, and broad in propor- tion. Veins numerous, fine and parallel. Petioles longer than the leaves, slender, round, smooth, taper a little from the base, and are there expanded into a sheath for those immediately — within; such as are destined to bear the flowers have a joint a little above the middle; immediately above this joimt there’ isa swelling, which in due time is forced. open on the inside by the peores flowers exactly as in our Indian species of — Pontederia, It however sometimes appears, and even inthe. Phrynium. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 9 further than the flowers. Flowers numerous, collected into a pretty large, sessile head, which bursts from the anterior margin of the jointed petioles, small, and nearly hid among the large bractes; when they first expand in the morning rose-coloured, gradually becoming purple by the evening. Bractes, calyx of Louriero’s Phyllodes, several, collecting the small sessile flowers into several fasciculi of two, three, or four pair, each of which expand in succession. The ex- terior one of each fascicle is large, subcylindric, of a firm texture, and reddish colour ; apices truncate, with scariose, incurved margin; the rest are smaller, and more or less - pointed, Calyx superior, three-leaved; leaflets ensiform, length of the tube of the corol, hairy about the points. Corol one-pétalled. Tube funnel-shaped, scarcely perforated. Border double; exterior of three, equal, purple, spatulate, recurvate segments ; interior more elevated on a continuation of the tube, and consists of five, very unequal segments; the exterior two larger, round, curled, and of a pale rose colour ; the innermost one small, and running down the side of the filament like a wing. | _ Filament solitary, short, nserted on the mouth of the tube close by the free, curved end of the styles: ie simple 5 grains of the pollen white, large, and: ical. Germ inferior, oblong, very short pedicelled, Iesibyseh ree- celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the bottom of its cell. Style growing to, or blended with the tube’ of the corol. Stigma large, funnel-shaped, obliquely-incurved | or hooked towards the anther. Capsule short, turbinate,’ three-sided, pretty smooth, size of a gooseberry, three- celled, three-valved, opening from the apex. Seed solitary,’ nearly round, smooth, dark grey, resting on a small, squami-’ form aril, which is attached to and surrounds the short um-" bilical cord which unites: the seed to the bottom of the par- hc: ' ee weber presstattha. ‘inmer € thin and: deaauiet repleoieih a soreen seine: penetrates: fom the’ eo . 10 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA., #$Hedychium, base to a considerable distance upwards... Embryo. pure white, hooked, with the convexity upwards, which corres- ee of the seed. : , HEDYCHIUM. Kon. | Corolla with a long, slender tube; both borders dense acted inner resupinate. -4nther double, naked, . Cap- _ sule three-celled, three-valved. Seeds numerous, arilled. Embryo simple, and furnished with both perisperm and vitellus, view ae i. coronarium, dine sp. ee ok Willd. i. p. 10, Kinig in Retz. Obs. 3.73. . : Leaves lanceolate. Spikes oneal coleman cdl ments of the cleft lip of the corol semi-lunar, . -Gandsulium. Rumph. Amb. 5. t. 69.3. _ Goruk-natha. of the Bengalees, also by them called. Doo- lala-champa. _ A native of various parts of Bengal and the nate provinces, Flowers during the rains; and the seada.xipem, - im the early part.of the cool season. i Root horizontal, perennial, round, fleshy, RSLS with, annular. cicatrices, about as thick as a man’s thumb, aa with fibrous ramifications issuing from the cic | simply herbaceous. Stems erect, from three je hot bet bch, round, every where covered. with the sheaths of the leaves,. Leaves sessile, alternate, bifarious, lanceolate, tapering _ to. » an-evanescent point; abeve, a deep smooth green; below, striated, pale, and. slightly covered. with depressed, soft, white hairs; from nine to twelve inches long, and. about two broad. Sheaths smooth on both sides, striated, ter ing in a ligulated process, (as in many ciecmnny sais | is often two-parted. Spike terminal, solitary, erect;linear- pe » about the size of the thumb, compactly imbricated - es Hedychium. | MONANDRIA MONOGYNIAY 11 bractes. Flowers large, pure: white,* very fragrant, from two to four to each common bracte, but seldom more»than one or two expand at the same time. Bractes; besides the common exterior ones, already mentioned, there are as many interior as there are flowers in the fascicle; the largest of which is about half the length of the common bracte, and envelopes not only the most forward (exterior) flower, but all those of the same fascicle, gradually diminishing in size ; all have a sheathing base, are membranous, and striated, _ Calyx superior, one-leafed, a little inflated, contracted at the mouth, a little hairy, striated, half the length of the tube of the corol. Corol one-petalled. Tube long and_ slender, from the apex of the exterior -bractes recurved. Border flat, double. Exterior three-parted ; divisions equal, lan- ceolate, acute, membranaceous, striated. Interior resupinate, three-parted ; lower two divisions obliquely oval, short- clawed ; upper division broad, obcordate, banner-like, with the amid deep, and the lobes roundish ; margins waved ;, towards the base tinged yellow. Dingle (of Kénig. and Retzius) two short, fleshy, subulate bodies embracing the base of the style. Filament from the lower margin of the mouth of the tube, between the insertions of the inner border of the corol, ascending ; upper side channelled for the’ tyle,“and inserted into the anther a little above its base. Anther linear, sub-erect, two-lobed. Germ obsoletely three- _ sided, three-celled, with many ovula in each, attached to the — axis, Sty/e slender, in length sufficient to elevate the large, hairy, perforated; glandular, green stigma just about the — apex of the anther. Capsule oblong, three-celled, three- , valved, opening from the apex; inside orange coloured. Seeds many in each cell, invested in their proper, multifid, crimson: seine ate two.- ibis’ and vee. * 12 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Hedychium, together conform to the seed; the former occupies the lower and exterior portion; and the latter the upper and interior - — portion, and is in immediate contact with the embryo. Em-) bryo simple, subcylindric, nearly as long as the seed. ito Obs. This, to me, is the most charming of all.the plants of this natural order that I have yet met with; the great length of time it continues to throw out a profusion of large, beautiful, pase: blossoms, makes it particularly desirable. = Sates heodiL-knicabtaks Seiko terminal, imbricated. pices about four-flowered: interior two segments of the corol linear ; lip obcordate, with apex deeply retuse. - A native of the vallies amongst the hills near Silhet, where it is called Kattia-rityam by the natives, Flowering ti the rainy season. Tt i - Root tuberous, like that of most sibes Ritomniaa,: calame erect, two or three feet high, and rather stout. Leaves lanceolar, very fine pointed, smooth on both sides, » Sheaths smooth, with a very large, smooth membranaceous stipula rising far above the mouth. Spike terminal, solitary, erect, oblong, imbricated ; from six to eight inches long. Flowers numerous, large, yellow, resembling those of H. coronarium, fragrant. Bractes ; exterior between oval, and oblong, : og obtuse, smooth, finely nerved, three: : pout two or two and half inches: long and nearly one and a half : broad. Interior, one to each flower, and much smaller. Calyx superior, nearly as long as the tube of the corol, mem-, * branaccous, inflated, obliquely two or three-toothed, Corol ; £ tube slender, length of the exterior bractes, all the five pro- per segments of the border linear, the inner two more deeply. éolcaked and obtuse. Lip or sixth segment, obcordate, deep: ayercivee, placed on the interior or upper side opposite t to a the ment, Filament linear, and together with the two- 3 anther about as long as the lip. Germ hairy, tl 3 celled, with ‘numerous ovals, seamen oa : 7) gous’ " mit & . <3) oe oe ¥ i ye Hedychium. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 13 aiigle. Style length of the corol. Stigma large, and villous Capsule tarbinate, size of an olive, smooth, when ripe yellow, three-celled, three-valved. Seeds a few, smooth, bright deep red, with a partial ragged aril of the same colour, “Embryo simple, ‘sub-lancéolate, Mariiliied ° bbs Eee perisperm and vitellus. - “3. H, angustifolium. R . Leaves spe bei ‘Spikes open ; fascicles of flowers subtern, segments of the cleft lip oblong ; the other five seg- ments of the corol linear. Beng. Bhoo-ada. ° Native ‘of Chittagong, silhet, and the eastern parts of engal, where it flowers about the beginning: of the a in +3 ut pote June. Root tuberous, horizontal, oi, &e. as in the other scitamineous plants. Stems erect, from three to six feet high, entirely invested in the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves bifarious, sessile on their smooth ‘sheaths, narrow-lancéolate; very fine, I may say filiform, pointed, smooth on both sides ; from ten to fourteen tiches long, by: one to two broad. Spike terminal, rigid, ix to eighteen inches long, smooth. Fas- cles Uf flowers generally three-fold, and spreading out con?’ pea from the ‘rachis. Bractes ; exterior of the — G cylindrical, linear ; interior, one to each flower, and smaller, Flowers rather csivalh: dull red (lateritius,) generally about In January 1816 I received roots of this most charming species. from ‘Mr. Smith at Silhet, which produced blossoms in the Bo- Ae tanic garden in October the following } year. It differs from H coronarium, in regard to its flowers, which are about one third smaller, having the inner segments of the corol linear clavate, the ; et the t depre lei straight: sides, and its base contract | wa e latter Maya apcrar i ond therefore more! : grateful degree. In stature and leaves both species are alike. silts 14 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA,. Hedychium. four in the fascicle, and expanding in succession, Calyx superior, cylindric, length of the tube of the corol; mouth equally three-toothed. Corol ; tube slender, cylindric, about an inch long; five segments of the border linear (sub-fili- form,) variously revolute. Lip. lateral, with linear, chan- q nelled and two-parted lamina; the segments thereof semi- oval. Filament opposite to the lip, and twice its length, — nearly straight, filiform, grooved for the style. Anther two- lobed, naked. Germ oval, a little hairy, three-celled, with many ovula in each, attached to the axis. Style filiform, its . base embraced by the usual two subulate bodies, Stigma fumnel-form, projecting from the apex of the anther, |” Notwithstanding the opinion which the distinguished Bo- _ tanist Edwards (in bis Bot. Regist.) has expressed, Lam led — to suspect that H. coccinewm: of Sir J. Smith (Rees’s new Cyclopedia, in loco) is a distinct species, of which I have — examined the original drawing, left by my inestimable friend _ and predecessor, Dr, F. Buchanan at the Botanic ac deasaa at j ee de % it H. gracile. R : : ~ Leaves Julieta: Spikes terminal, open ; fetes eis / sonttendil ‘segments of. the bifid, sessile hp, ean eases : the other five Rosai of the corol linear. - Obs. This is a edibenpiana about three fort in height, a ‘native of the mountains on the North-East border of — Bengal. Like the preceding two species it flowers in the rainy season, Its solitary-flowered spike of white corols — with their scarlet filament, and its lanceolar leaves, distinguish ; it from-H. icici hoes | Kempferia. |= MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 15 BAS ad KZMPFERLA. Line, gen. pl. od. Sohreb. ne 9. Corolla with a long, slender tube, and both hovdors pre parted, Anther double, with a two-lobed crest. Capes thaae;selled, many-seeded, ee “1.K; Galanga. Linn. ap. pled. Willd. 1. 15. . avs Leaves sessile, round-ovate-cordate. Spikes central,. Upper segments of thg inner border of the corol oval. Katsjula Kelengu, Rheed. Mal. 11. p. 81. t. 41. _ Alpinia sessilis. Kon. in Retz. Obs, 3. p. 62. Soncorus. Rumph. Amb. 5. p. secede ea _ Sans, Chundra-moolika. f A native of various parts of India, and common in gar- dens also. Flowering time the rainy season, Root biennial, tuberous, with fleshy fibres from. the jokes Stem none. Leaves radical, petioled, spreading flat on the surface of the earth, samulecemnainialides between acute and obtuse ; margins membranaceous, and waved ; upper surface smooth, deep green; below taper and: snininniland: woolly ; streaked lengthways with ten or twelve slender lines, Pe- tioles hid: in the earth; in. short they are only cylindric embracin - those. within, and the fascicle of flowers, their months being crowned with a membranaceous process, Flowers collected in small fascicles, from six to twelve, with- in the sheaths of the leaves, expanding in succession; pure, pellucid white, except a purple spot on the centre of each of the divisions of the inner border, or lip. Bractes three to _ each flower; a larger exterior ; and two within at the sides; all are linear, acute, membranaceous, and half the length of the tube of the corol. Calyx length of the bractes, Corol ; tube long, filiform; border double, both shee oat Ex- rig firmion liom: acute ; interior, upper two ¢ 2% ther replete earner 0 nia with a bidentate 16 VX" MONOGYNIA. Kempferia, teat, or continuation of the filament above the anther. Stig- j ma funnel-shaped. Nectarial filaments of Konig two, fili- | form, erect, pretty long, embracing the lower part of the — — Pericarp ; \never saw it ripen. Obs. The roots possess an agreeable, fragrant smell, on somewhat warm, bitterish, aromatic taste; the Hindoos use — them not only as a perfume, but also enbdichnl dy: a are 7 unknown to our -_ cil in —— "Oo 3 sb? Tit sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 1b. | ~ Leaves oblong, coloured, Spike radical, appearing before ‘the leaves, Upper segment — — = ese oa lanceolar, and acute. ce M Malan-Kua. Rheed. Mal. 11. p. 17. t. a ISL 1. Sans. Bhoo-chumpuca. See Asiat. Res. iv. 242. ~~ Beng. and Hind. Bhooi-champa or Bhoo-champa, “This elegant plant is very generally foynd cultivated in — gardens on account of the beauty and fragrance of its flowers, and though no doubt a native of various parts of India, yet I cannot say where it is indigenous, Flowering time in our — March and April, at which — the — veal o | ties a foot apa eeeae from four to six 2 broad. Petioles sheathing; united: into a pre eager ~Curcuma. Scapes just sufficient to elevate the flowers above the eatehs eniiced by a few common sheaths, of a greenish purple colour. Flowers sessile, from four to six to the ’— scape, or spike, very large, fragrant; colour of various — shades of purple, and white. Bractes two to each flower, ; surrounding the base of the germ ; the inner one has itsapex -two-parted ; the exterior, or longest is here only abouthalf — _ the length of the calyx, Calyx above, snpeesitee ae c as the tube ofthe’ coro, ‘seen - a Kempferia, | MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, VW long, slender, cylindric, nearly erect, obliquely funnel-shap- -ed towards the mouth; border double, both: three-parted. Exterior divisions drooping, linear, with margins involute, pure white, Interior border, the two uppermost divisions — -erect, lanceolar, acute; colour also white, with the margins slightly tinged with purple; the remaining inferior one is © divided into two broad, obcordate, deflected lobes, of a deep purple colour, particularly towards the centre, and base, Nectarial filaments of Konig asin K. Galanga, Filament short, erect, broad, inserted on the base of the uppermost ‘two’ interior divisions of the corol. Anther linear, and ‘enlarged with an ovate, two-forked, coloured, somewhat ‘Teeurved: ‘crest. Germ ovate. mgt filiform. Stigma fumel- Obs. Woodville observes) at page 362 of his ‘Medical Botany, that the roots of Zedoaria longa, and rotunda are | both’ produced by the same species of plant, and are indis- criminately used in the shops: the former, he says, are brought to us in oblong pieces, about the thickness of the little finger; two or three inches in length, bent, rough, and -angular; the latter are roundish, about an inch i in diameter, of an ash colour on the outside, and white within. I have never met with any of the roots of this plant that agree with ‘liis description of the long sort, and they are too:small for the round; so that I must conclude they are the produce of some other gine at the same time Dr. Woodville’s observa- _ tions on the same page, give me reason to think my Curcuma Zedoaria may be the paar which site this round sort of meee: ‘ i nasa th ea: uate oblige Flowering tine he iy mon VOL. 1 18 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. _Kempfer'ia. -«» Root -biennial, tuberous, -with, numerous ramous fibres — from every) part. Stems none. ‘ Leaves radical, numerous, — ’ sessile, linear-lanceolate, keeled.;' margins entire, and much waved ; striated lengthways, with darker and lighter colour- _ ed. green, smooth in every part; from six to eight inches long, and about one broad. Spikes hid in the centre of the leaves, -bearing, from four to six large, beautiful flowers: in succes-— sion. Bractes two or three to each flower; one or, two inte- rior embracethe germ laterally, the exterior. one is larger, all much. pointed,,and of nearly the same length, Calyx supe- rior, one-leayed, half the length of the tube of the: corol, opening. obliquely,, (spathe-like,) near the apex, which is a single acute-point, Corol; tube. very. Jong, and, slender, elevating the border about two inches. above the penrths border double, &¢,:as in. K. rotunda,: Neetarial filaments of Konig, stamens, and pistil as in the last quoted, species. . mt _ Obs. . The root is used as a medicine for, eases hv the people of Bengal, owe » 4, K. pandurata. .R. ag) Leaves petioled, broad-lanceclate, seek “Spike seatek Corol, with the upper segments of the, inner border —. ‘the inferior one much larger, and panduriform. si - Zerumbet claviculatum. Reenphe Arb, he me 172. ¢..69. £1 1; aks I could almost wish to quote Manja. a, Rheed..Mal. — 11. p..19. t. ii, although referred to already, By Linneousfor Curcuma — tT ew I have never met with, if this be notit. Bs oe _ From i ‘thie beautiful pias was sent by Dr. Charles Campbell to the Botanic garden at ny where it seo soms during the rains, chiefly in August.» ey, Root perennial, tuberous: like! ginger, iecedianshinty sesh yellow colour; from this, straight, slender, fusiform, _ paler coloured portions descend deep into the soil Stems vada ewe ahs the lan. about« footanda hale Kempferia. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, — ety green on the upper surface; veins parallel, and;pretty. con- spicuous, from six to. twelve inches long. Petioles above the bifid ligula, deeply. channelled, and from two to six or eight inches long ; the lower portion sheathing, and forming some- thing like a stem. Spike hid in the centre of the sheaths of the leaves, unilateral, being imbricated.on one side, (say the an- terior,) with many, sessile, slender, lanceolate, colourless, one- flowered pairs of (exterior, and interior ) scales or bractes, Flowers pretty large, expanding in succession, and rarely more than one atatime, Calyx superior, membranaceous, irregularly three-toothed. Corol; tube long, and slender. . Border double; exterior of three, slender, lanceolate, nearly equal, straight, pale pink-coloured segments ; inner of three unequal portions ; the two superior, or lateral, obovate, the colour and length of. the exterior three: the lower, or lip, somewhat panduriform, much broader ‘and longer than the former, and of a much deeper colour. Filament very slen- der. Anther two-lobed, and crowned with an emarginate, recurved helmet. | Germ three-celled, each cell containing many ovula, attached to the axis. » Stigme —" a se- anne pening? which hon thes straight portion of its margin Nectarial +B K. vali fold. Rails ee hype it _ Leaves oval. Spikes central, cninanck site Jatiniaté, | . A native of the peninsula of Malacca, and from thence sent, by Major Farquhar, to the Botanic garden at Calecut- ta, where it blossoms in July, _ It is an intermediate species, both with respect to size and habit, between K, Galangaand - rotunda, and ought to be placed between them in the system. - Root tuberous, as in the other species, and about biennial. Stems. very short ; ok mem ed sooo san Leaves few, 20 MONANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Curcuma. &® expand in succéssion, all pure white except the purple lip. Corol nearly as in rotunda and angustifolia, the upper two segments of the inner border are obtusely lanceolate, as in the latter: the lip or nectarium of a deep variegated pur- ‘Ple ‘colour, the shape cuneate-obcordate, and divided from the apex nearly half the length into two long emarginate lobes, Filament short. Anther two-lobed, and crowned with a large, laciniate, erect, white crest. — three-celled, &e. ——— coma i rctETS ect, cer ate ae x sateen, oi Pye | igi F OG See i Lg meer i aieneied Linn. gen. plied. Schreb. No. 8. » Corolla with both borders threé-parted. Anther sue . base bicalearate. Capsiile thiee-celled } eed mitiierous, aril. ted. Embryo a and furnished ‘with Botti” eris ‘tea vacate | ait Pet ; " SECT. I. Spikes lateral. ~1.C. Zerumbet. Roxb. Ind. pl. 3. N. 201. ack Bulbs and palmate tubers pale straw-colouret — oat Eecaves green, “petioled, broad-lanceolar, a dark purple cloud down the middle, Flowers shorter than their bractes, ‘Sans, Shutee, Gandha-moolee, Sha ra, Kurchoora, and Pulasha, 9 - Hind,and Teling. Kuchoora, — — — ein aameeuae | oe os tL Ko. Reet, Mal, vol. V1. ph 138. #72 ~Zerambetl. Rumph. Amb. 5. p. 168, t. 68." 7 --Amomum Zerwmbeth, Kon: in Retz. Ob 3.58 ais ‘Zerumbet, or Cachora of Garcias, © eau The ser from which the followin pdeschpition W -Cureuma, MONARDRIA MONOGYN] Ay 21 Others have since been procured from thence under the Ben- galee name Kuchoora, From that place the native. drug: _ gists in Calcutta, are chiefly supplied with the root or drug, Root consists, as. in all the other species of this genus, of ovate bulbs, giying support to the parts above ground ; from their opposite sides spring the palmate tubers ; these two sorts are inwardly of a pale yellow, or straw colour, and pos; sess an agreeable camphoraceous smell, and warm bitterish, spicy taste. From the bulbs chiefly, the proper fibrous roots _ issue: some of these are thicker than others, penetrate deeper into the soil, and end in an oblong, pearl-coloured, solid tuber; which is more spongy and less fragrant when cut, than. the bulbs and palmate tubers., Stems no other than. the | united sheaths of the leaves, surrounded by t two or three obtuse, smooth, green, faintly striated, appressed scales, Height of the whole plant about three feet, or three and a half. Leaves from four to six together, sub-bifarious ; 3; in * general a pretty long, somewhat winged petiole intervenes. between each and:its. stem-forming base. The leaf itself is broad-lanceolar, fine-pointed, and smooth on both sides; constantly a dark purple cloud rans down the centre; veins wmerou: fine, and. parallel; from one to two feet long. Scape rises distinct from the leafy stems, and rather before or with them, stout, from five to six inches long, and sur- rounded with a few, obtuse, lax, green sheaths, of various length. Spike tufted, from four to five inches long, (so that its apex is elevated nearly a foot above the surface of the: earth;) covered with imbricated, oblong, concaye bractes, connected by the lower half of their inner margins to the. backs of those immediately above, forming as many sacks, or pouches as there are bractes ; the lower half of these are, broad, shorter ; scarcely tinged ‘with red,. containing each three or four beautify seers flowers, which braced laterally by their hal eos owl coloured one, sahich form Ake sate are Be ae. = -. MONANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Circuma, nérally sterile, and of a deeper crimson, or purple'colour, than those which contain flowers. Calyx superior ; scarcely _ one-third the length of the corol, irregularly three-toothed, pellucid.. Corol funnel-shaped. Tube a little curved. Border double; exterior three-parted, the two lateral seg-" ments equal; the third or upper one vaulted and trowniell? With a subulate point ; colowr'a very faint yellow. Interior three-parted ; lower segment, or lip, broad, deep yellow, projecting, recurved, bifid; upper or lateral segments obo-- vate, equal, pale yellow, iibsily as long as the lip. Fila- ment short. Anther double, the lower end of each lobe ter-' minating in a long, sharp, subulate spur. Germ beneath, hairy, three-celled, with many ovula in’each, attached tothe inner erase of _ ‘cell — uel the base, ebavicot the anther. Capnite oval, stb of a pit adtaw cooing thin’ and‘ nearly pellucid ; three-celled, but without é any re- gular division into valves: when the seeds are ripe the elas-’ ticity of the segments of the arils bursts the vertex into vari- ous portions, from whence the seeds are soon’ ‘expelled. Seeds soothe in each ‘cell, arilled; shape various, but the’ i. ng is Eeblong. Aril cut to the very base into® r, unequal, white, fleshy segments, which are united to the Bere the umbilicus, Integuments twos) exterior spongy, with highly polished slippery; light brown’ surface ; interior membranaceous.. ‘Perisperm pure’ white,’ hard ‘but friable, and ‘occupies the lower half ‘of the seed: Vitellus clearer, but less white and of a tougher’ consistence’ than the albumen ; it forms or occupies the upper half - we — sarees ae early as — as ies = — ding ved and — a in em albumen, o or | ; al wood of the esac ‘ies Cureuma. -MONANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 93 or Hindoo holidays in the month’ of \Mareh. ° ae root ‘is _ also used medicinally amongst the natives,’ 600 0) 6 «1 In 1805, I gave some of the sliced :and dried valtinalal plehite tuberous roots of this plant’ to Sir Joseph Banks, - which he: gaye to Dr. Comb, who found that it was the real Zedoaria of our Materia Medica, “and -by the same means ascertained ‘that the root of my: ee doaria seins of the — » ene we HD tg 2, 0. Zédoaria: Rays HE Bulbs ‘small; and, with the long waite tubers, iaiesivlhy vallinag | Leaves broad-lanceolar, eee sheaths, ce- ticeous underneath ; the whole plant of a uniform greens ey — Zedoaria, Linn, sp. plant. ed. .Willd. i, at me ‘Sans. Vuna-huridra, Sholee, Vamarista, Sholika; 9 © *© Beng. Junglee, or Bun at —_ turmeric. si at Arab, Jedwar, or Zadwars > © © Bad Qi - This beautiful species is a native, not sect of Bengal; cont common in gardens about Calcutta,) but is alsova ative of China, ‘and various other parts of Asia, and the Asiatic is- lands. - Flowering: time the: hot season, thé leaves ‘appear about the same’ eT IOC ponents alter : Merit ts not inched to fin autifu large,r , rosy, tufted spikes rising stig ae ked earth betore a single leaf'is to be seen, 9° ' Root biennial, tuberous, &c.:as‘in the last; andi of, a pretty deep yellow colour, approaching to that of tur-. meric, Stem no other than the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves petioled, broad-lanceolar, entire, underneath covered: with soft cericeous down, which is particularly conspicuous‘when the ‘leaves are dry, The scape rises distinct from the leaves — during the dry season, andjoften not only at some distance; but also sometinie before them; bhinaieremehyee eaa and only Bee Bi balck meditionsst epeiics, Conakes ob ag B4 ae, 24 _MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Curcuma, petalled ; at the base tubular, ‘Tube short, widening a litle; its mouth shut with fine yellow, pubescent glands;.throat ample, Border double; exterior of three pale pink-coloured, erect, oblong: divisions; the upper one more pointed, and in- cumbent over the anther and part of the two upper divisions = of the imer border. Interior somewhat ringent, three-parted, --fleshy, yellow ; the lower lobe or lip.longest, obovate, entire; projecting with a crown and erect margin, while.a broad.ele- + — : vation of a deep yellow colour runs along its middle; upper = two divisions cbovate, and with the upper segment of the ex- _ terior border, forming a complete covering or dome over the - anther, Filament short, inserted between the two upper divi- sions of the inner border of the corol. Auther two-lobed, each ending in a long, sharp spur at the base... Gern wil &e. as dn che lnanNe ne — 2€-lobed, with a p foration in the centre, ) > ‘ p Tevet: ce the _ Obs, The plant when in danens is highly ieneatnnl; few surpassing it in beauty; at the same time it possesses accon- siderable degree of delicate aromatic fragrance, Dr. Woodville’s observation and. quotations, at page 362 of his..Medical Bctany, induce me to think that the roots of this. plant are not only the longer species of the Zedoaria found in the shops; but also the shorter or roundish, their form and size depending on the manner in which they may have been cut. for drying: and E have lately learned from Sir J, Banks, that ANN NO ati with Zedoaria rotunda, seu slcllattancns Niesscettean sa ciechasi) subinliieiaeddis saaiions they. are sold in their shops, under the Arabic name Judwar, or the Bengalee one of Bun Huldi,. When scout _ well.as when dry, they are of a:pale yellow colour; and: 4 sess at all times an agreeable fragrant smell, and warm, bit. 2 terish, aromatic taste; whereas the roots of Kempf 2 da possess little or nothing of these sensible snide, sandare a withal | Beng. Butch, or mahaburee-butch, 6) Found wild in the woods about Calcutta. Flowering ti time Sony season, the seeds ripen in November and December, , nial, tuberous, as in ginger, externally which “pale yellow, and of a. Ditter, aromatic: taste. BT ZLingiber. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 49 Stems annual, oblique, about three or four feet high, com- pletely invested in the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves bifa- rious, sessile, broad-lanceolate, entire, smooth, waved ; veins numerous, slender, parallel ; deep-green above, pale under- neath. Sheaths crowned with a large, broad, membranaceous, emarginate ligula. Peduncle solitary, a little removed from the stems, erect, from twelve to twenty-four inches long, en- veloped in imbricated sheaths. Spikes oval, obtuse, or with a round excavation on their apex, about the size of a goose- egg. Bractes (or scales of the spike) the exterior one-flower- ed, imbricated, broad-obovate, obtuse, with a broad mem- branaceous border ; interior (or proper) solitary, one-flower- ed, enveloping the germ, perianth, and most of the tube of the corol. Flowers large, pale, of a sulphur colour, Calyx superior, one-leaved, sheathing the lower half of the tube of the corol. Corol; exterior border three-parted, &c. as in the genus; interior, or lip broad, with the lateral lobes _ thereof particularly large ; middle division two-parted; they are all beautifully curled, and of a pale yellow colour. Nectarial filaments of Kénig as in the order. Filament scarcely any. Anther large, double, with its long, curved chorn projecting over the lip. Stigma funnel-shaped, fringed =p done distinct hairs. 3. 7. ait R. ok « ie: teamed Straight. Leaves sessile, linear-lanceolate. Spikes radi- Br strobiliform, oblong, acute, Bractes obovate, acumi- . Lip three-lobed. : aa Vuna Ardrukum. sigs Hind, and Beng. Bun Ada, (wild ial Teling. Karpushpoo, (small turmeric.) = A native of Coromandel, Bevan and Bahar. "Flowering fleshy Feat and rant like g ginger, but wai larger “VOL, I. D 4 50 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. = = Zingiber. fresh of a deep yellow ; possessing a strong, not very agree- able, camphoraceous smell, and warm, spicy, bitterish taste. Stems annual, erect, round, from three to five feet high, en- tirely enveloped in the imbricated sheaths of the leaves. Leaves bifarious, approximate, sessile on their sheaths, linear- lanceolate, deep green above ; villous, and paler underneath, where the nerve also is hairy like the sheaths ; from one to two feet long, and about three inches broad, Sheaths clothed with exceedingly pungent hairs on the outside; their mouths ending in a stipulary process on each side of the insertion of the leaf. Scapes radical, from six to twelve inches long, invested in several oblong, downy sheaths. Spikes oblong, strobiliform, compact, sharp-pointed, closely imbricated with numerous obovate, acuminate, greenish ferruginous (where exposed), villous bractes. _ Flowers so- itary, (that is, one to each bracte of the spike, and blossom- ing in succession,) large, every part ofa pale, uniform, sul- phur colour, Calyx double; the exterior smooth, spathi- form, three-dentate one, may be considered a bracte; it is inserted round the base of the germ, which, as well as the inner, or proper perianth, it entirely envelopes; when forei- bly expanded, oval, Inner or proper perianth, superior, one- leaved, somewhat gibbous, membranaceous, three-toothed, on the outside divided nearly half way down. Corgh s tube slender, as long as the scale of the spike; upper division of ‘the exterior border boat-shaped, projecting over the stamen; under, two narrower and reflexed under the lip. Lip three- lobed ; lateral lobes obliquely obovate, erect; middle lobe meaty: round, with the apex emarginate, and the. border — slightly curled, Stam, tdaithet ending ina a papesios'g recurved beak. ; _4. Z. rosenm. Boece : in Tank of Kites Sics 8, 34s, eit Leaves short-petioled, lanceolate. Spikes lax, half ims in the earth. Bractes SP ae ealdureds asa Zingiber. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 51 ‘Teling. Bumacatchicay. Is a native of the northern Circars, where it flowers i in the rainy season. ~ Root biennial, horizontal, jointed, and white; with many — large fibres, Stems several, invested in the sheaths of the leaves, &c, as in the other scitamineous plants, about two or three feet high, leaves included, Leaves somewhat petioled, bifarious, lanceolate, acute, tending to one side, smooth, fine- ly veined, about twelve inches long, and from three to four broad. Spikes remote from the stems, just appearing above the ground when in flower, imbricated with lax, lanceolate, _ reddish, one-flowered bractes, _ Flowers solitary, colour a mixture of red and yellow. Bractes, besides the exterior one already mentioned, there is an interior one for each flower between it and the rachis, which is linear, with an obtuse, notched apex. Calyx one-leaved, tubular, above, mem- brahaceous; mouth toothed. Corol ; tube cylindric, erect, Sidersbiy longer than the bractes, Border.double; ex- terior three-parted ; ; in this plant the two approximiated di- visions are above, linear, pointed, and recurved, sometimes revolute ; the lower division stands single, and is like the su- perior two, linear and revolute; all are of a bright red colour. Interior, or lip: single, broad, obtuse, reflexed over the su- perior ‘two divisions of the exterior border. Filament, and anthers as in the other species. Style rather longer than the horn of the anther. Stigma perforated, and ciliate. Two similar awl-shaped nectarial bodies at the base of the style, are also present here. : Obs, I have not found that the natives” make oy use ce of this plant, ae 5. ZL. ligulatum, R. Leaves approximate, ; sessile lanceolate. Spikes lax, m more. “A native of finilooaban eeeick time in the Botanic ae D2 fae 52 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, LEG garden the rainy season; . the seeds ripen in Sicebe: and December. Root jointed, running horizontally at some depth under the surface of the earth, and furnished with long fleshy fibres from the joints; from these joints shoots rise, and by them the plant is readily propagated, Stems about two feet high, bending considerably to one side. Leaves alternate, approxi- mate, bifarious, sessile on their sheaths, from cordate below to lanceolate toward the top of the plant, both sides smooth, and marked with paralleled veins, the under side paler green, length from three to twelve inches, and breadth about four, Sheaths smooth, from the mouth of each rises a remarkably large long strap, or ligula, which by the growth of the plant — becomes bifid, and. by age scariose. Spikes radical, half hid in the earth, oblong, loosely imbricated with cuneiform, pink-coloured, one-flowered, exterior scales or bractes; 3; and _ the same number of inner colourless, tridentate shorts bractes; or, as they may be called, inferior perianths. Calyx superior, one-leaved, spathiform, about half the length of the tube of the corol, irregularly tridentate. _ Corol ; tube slender, the length of the exterior scales of the spike, incurv- ed. Exterior border of three, nearly equal, linear, acute, smooth, reddish divisions. Lip oblong, obtuse ; margins much curled, with two expanding, more or less acute lobes at the very base; colour a pale yellow. Filament short ; below the two-lobed anther, linear, ending above in the fia long, ta- per, curved, grooved beak. Germ oval, villous, three-celled, each containing many ovula attached to a central receptacle, Style very slender, and so long as to elevate the funnel-shap- ed, ciliate stigma to an equal height with the apex of the fi- lament. Nectarial scales long and slender, embracing the base of the style within the bottom of the tube of the corol. Capsule ovate, size of a large olive, three-sided, three-celled, three-valved, opening from the apex down the angles; inside | of ‘the cells crimson, Calyx leathery, striated, pale, dull yellowish sea. colour. Seeds many, Chas biecki b Us wn 5 Zingiber. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 53 a little rugose, arilled. 4ril white, nearly complete, and ragged at the upper end. Perisperm conform to the seed, cinereous. Embryo apni, central, nearly as long as the perisperm. 6. Z. rubens. R. : ) Leaves \anceolar. Spikes lax, half immersed in the earth, Bractes linear-lanceolate, straight. Zip narrow-ovate, en- tire, A native of the interior of Bengal; from the district of Rungpore Dr. Buchanan sent the plants to the Botanic gar- den, where they blossom in August. ~ Root tuberous, &c. as in the other species. Stems herbace- ous, somewhat declinate, from two to four feet high. Leaves alternate, bifarious, sessile on their sheaths, smooth on both _ sides; general length about twelve inches, and from four to five broad. Sheaths with a large, membranaceous, stipula- ry process at the mouth. Spikes several from the base of the stems, where they join the root, half immersed in the earth, sub-obovate, fastigiate, laxly imbricated with numerous’ straight, erect, linear-lanceolate, acute, involute, red, slightly ous, exterior bractes. Inner bractes, or inferior perianth, the length of the tube, but shorter than the exterior bractes, and irregularly tri-dentate. Calyx superior, sub-cylindric, membranaceous, pellucid, most slightly villous; mouth three- toothed. Corol with a long, slender, cylindric tube; seg- ments of the exterior border linear-lanceolate, acute, red. Lip ovate-oblong, entire, speckled with red and yellow. Filament scarcely any. Anther of two long lobes, crowned — with the long, characteristic, curved horn, which is incum- bent on and meaches to the apex os the lip. Nectarial, fila 54 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Zingiber.. | ' 7. Z. squarrosum. R. | ) =e Leaves lanceolar. , Spikes squarrose, half immersed in ‘the earth. Bractes linear, with long, taper, waved, recurved * ~ apices. Jip three-lobed, apex bifid. A native of Burma, where it ripens its seeds in December. From Rangoon Mr. F. Carey sent the fresh roots, entire capsules, and ripe seeds to this garden, where the plants from both the seeds and roots grew freely, and the latter oom’ edin August. ee Root tuberous, as in ginger, &c. Stems hocbatsouanis con-— siderably recurvate, from two to three feet high, entirely hid in the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves bifarious, sessile, lan- ceolar, smooth above, slightly villous underneath, cuspidate. . Sheaths with two large conical ‘processes’ rising from their mouths, one on each side. Spikes from the base of the stems, . three-fourths hid in the earth, ovate, laxly imbricated, size. of a goose-egg. Bractes green; the exterior solitary, one-. flowered, linear, concave, long, taper, waved, recurved.: In-. ner, one or two, (generally one), as long as the tube of the corol, with a three-toothed apex. Flowers pretty large, imodorous. Ca/yx superior, &c. as in the other species, Corol. with a slender tube. Exterior border of three, pink-colour-. ed, lanceolate, acute segments... Inner, or lip two-lobed at. the base ; apex bifid, colour a speckled mixture of purple, red, and celia: Filament short, anther and beak: dogetinn. nearly as long asthe lip. Germ villous, three- with, many oyula in each. Style and stigma as in 5 the genus. Capsule short-pedicelled, ovate, conic, three-celled, three- valved, opening from the apex, inside of the valves bright scarlet while fresh, (Those sent from Rangoon by Mr. F._ Carey, were, when they reached me, perfectly dry, and then: measured three inches in length, and one in diameter.) Seeds many in each cell, arilled, arranged in two rows, and attach- edie, the inner edge of the partitions. Aril complete, fleshy, White Parispern conten: § to 2 the: gad snd Helles Zingiber. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, =+——(si(itséi every part of the embryo, which is clavate, and nearly antong as the seed, ot 8. Z. panduratum. R. Leaves petioled above heir cent broad-lanceolar, smooth ; ligula large and scariose. Spikes radical, half im- mersed in the earth, lax, Bractes lanceolate, Lip ee form, with oval, emarginate lamina,” : This middling sized species is a native of the country about Rangoon. From thence Mr. F, Carey sent seeds to the Botanic garden in 1808, and in July,“1810, the plants raised from them blossomed abundantly. _ Root; numerous, long, fleshy, fibrous fibres, some of which swell into lanceolar tubers, as in Curcuma ; no palmate tubers, as in that genus. It possesses but little taste and no’ fragrance. Stalks erect, herbaceous, about three feet high. Leaves bifarious, petioled above their sheaths, broad-lanceo- _ lar, acute, smooth on both sides; from six to twelve inches long, from three to four broad. Sheaths smooth above their respective leaves; each ends in a very long, scariose, smooth: ligula. Spikes vais the. lower half immersed in the soil, oblong, and rather loosely imbricated with lanceolate, colour- ed,» concave, one-flowered, interior and exterior bractes, Flowers rather small ; exterior border of three, nearly equal, lanceolate, acuminate, pale red segments ; inner or lip very pale yellow, panduriform, that is with two, pretty large, rounded lobes at the base, and the /amina nearly oval, retuse, truncate, or emarginate, Filament broad, and short. An- ther double, and crowned with the usual beak. Germthree- _ celled, with many ovula in each, attached to the inner — | of the cell. oe — 2 es SECT. il. Spike ermindh , aise, ert: sixcbiliform ; benctes Stein D4 56 _ _MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Zingiber. A native of the forests of Rohilcund, from thence Colonel * Thomas Hardwicke sent plants to the Botanic garden, under the vernacular name Junglee Adruk. Here it flowers during the rains and the seeds ripen in September and October. Root composed of many, long-peduncled, oval, smooth, pale-coloured, insipid, watery tubers, issuing from the base and sides of the bulb, and palmate tubers, which are of a pale yellow colour, and somewhat spicy taste. Stems erect, round, enveloped in the sheaths of the leaves, which are of- ten a little hairy ; height of the whole plant whenin blossom, = from two to three feet.” Leaves sub-bifarious, alternate, ses- sile on their sheaths, narrow-lanceolate, acute, smooth above, a little hairy underneath, about twelve inches long, and about two broad, Spike terminal, sessile on the mouth of the - sheaths of the superior leaves, linear-oblong, somewhat stro- biliform, many-flowered. Flowers sessile, large, pure yellow in very part. Bractes in pairs, one-flowered, permanent ; exterior lanceolate, concave, erect, longer than the tube of the corol. Inner ovate, shorter, immediately enveloping the germ, calyx, and nearly the whole of the tube of the corol. Perianth superior, one-leaved, about half the length of the tube of the corol, membranaceous, white, two or three-tooth- ed, Corol ; tube cylindric, narrow. Lip with two, oblong, very distinct, expanding, lateral lobes; middle lobe very large, and nearly round. Anther with a very long curved beak. Stigma (as in most plants of the order), fumnel-shap- ed,’ ‘with, ciliate margins. Nectarial scales (of Konig), or hornlet conical. Capsule oval, three-sided, with the angles rounded, pretty smooth, size of a_ small olive, three-celled, three-valved ;- each cell containing several, black, shining seeds, eivelapel in a deeply jagged, white aril. Perisperm conform to the lower half of the seed which it occupies, pure white, cartilaginous. Vitellus above the perisperm, occupy- : Seely the upper half of the seed. Embryo vertical, fond ‘ . ; Zingiber, MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA. - 57 like Z. Cassumunar, that the same —s and. ae — well serve for both. . ‘ 10. Z. marginatum. R. Leaves sessile, lanceolate; ligula large and membrana- ceous. Spikes terminal, Bractes obovate, with transparent, membranaceous margin. Vectary three-lobed. ‘ , 11. Z, elatum. R. . Leaves bifarious, linear, recurved. Spikes terminal, lan- ceolar, compactly imbricated with lanceolate, one-flowered bractes, > . A native of the interior of Bengal; in the Botanic garden it blossoms in July and August, and the seeds ripen in Sep- - tember and October. Root tuberous, as in common ginger, but inwardly yellow ; from the tubers proceed the proper roots, many of which end in oblong, paler coloured tubers as in Curcuma. Stems her- baceous, straight, from four to five feet high, including the spike. Leaves bifarious, linear, recurved, smooth above ; with many adpressed, short, soft, white hairs underneath ; from twelve to eighteen inches long, and only one stele broad, Sheaths a little hairy ; mouth crowned with a very narrow, membranaceous process. Spikes terminal, solitary, of a narrow lanceolar shape, six. inches long, and three in cir- » cumference, every part compactly imbricated with lanceolate, one-flowered bractes, which are an inch and a half Jong, and a little hairy on the outside. Bractes ; interior, or inferior — perianth shorter and broader than the exterior, but like them _ stiff, and a little hairy. Calyx superior, white, smooth; mouth unequally toothed, little more than half the length of the bractes. Corod exactly as in the other species, only con- poe ol ; the plots mech Dis ct he cal so Sabate: a jek 1 ay, hscpeatied: gaping ; lobes. _ ie = ae SECT. I. Infrae adieal _ 9. A. cardamomum. R. CSE ot | _wScapes from the base of the stem, te adifsouiy fexune, y % Procumbent. — Lip three-lobed, with calcarate base. n eens, seu Corcinbreest ced, v, spe P t. 131. Alpinias ' MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 7h Amomum repens. Roscoe, Willd. and Sonnerat.. Elettaria. Rheed, Mal. 11. p. 9. t. 4 aad bbs: cones ed Cardamomum minus, Pharm. Lond. and Edinburgh. ai _ Sans, Prithweeka, Chundruvala, Ela, Nishkooti, Buhoola. _ Beng. Elachi, Elaich. _ Ailum chedy of the Malabars, of the Malabar Coast. _ Hil of the Persians. De me Kakulah, also Hal, of the Arabs. ae oaks Teling. Sana-yallacci, _ Cardomum, Buch, Journey, 2. 336—510,538, and 3. 995, . A native of the mountainous part of the Coast of Malabar. Root tuberous, with numerous fleshy. fibres. Stems peren- . nial, erect, smooth, joined, enveloped in the spongy sheaths of the leaves; from six to nine feet high, Leaves bifarious, sub-. sessile on their sheaths, lanceolate, fine-pointed, somewhat vil-- lous above, and sericeous underneath, entire; length from one to two feet. Sheaths slightly villous, with a rounded stipu- lary process rising above the mouth. Scapes several (three or _ four) from the base of the stems, resting on the gr , flex- uose, jointed, ramous, from one to two feet long. . Branches or racemes alternate, one from each joint of the scape, sub-- erect, two. or, three inches Jong. Bractes solitary, oblong, .00tl , membranaceous, nerved, sheathing, one to each joint _ of ‘the. scape, which embrace the insertion of the raceme, or branch; and one at each of their joints, . Flowers alternate; short-pedicelled, solitary at each joint of the racemes, open- ing in succession for a length of time, as the racemes lengthen, _ Calyx above, widening to the three-toothed mouth, about. . three quarters of an inch long, striated with fine nerves, per- - ‘manent, Corod withering, Tubes slender, as long as the calyx. . " Border double, exterior of three, oblong, concave, nearly - equal, pale greenish white divisions. Inner lip or nectaryy_ ' obovate, much Jonger, than the divisions of the exterior bor- | lobed ma folet stripes: fly i pecs at t each ‘side mg its insertion and close by the base otathe — E4, 72 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Alpinia, - " filament is.a small acute hornlet, as in most of the plants of this genus, and in several of the other genera of our other Indian Scitaminee. Filament short, erect. Anther double, emarginate. Germ beneath, oval, smooth. Style slender, | Stigma fumnel-shaped. Nectarial scales of Konig, subulate, almost: half the length of the tube of the corol. Capsule oval, somewhat three-sided, size of a small nutmeg ; thrsoroctied, three-valved, Seeds many, angular. Obs. The following account of this interesting plant has lately been transmitted to me by Captain Dickson, the Com- manding Officer of the district of pee where the Cardo- mum is cultivated, viz. “The Cardomum shrub is found in great andeiin among the western mountains of Wynaad, and is called by the na- tives of Malabar Ailum chedy (the Ailum shrub). 1 cannot ob- tain any satisfactory derivation of the true import of the word Ailum, unless, as is alleged, it implies in the Sanskrit - language, celebrity, and eminence. “ The shrub is said to be produced as follows. ‘Before the commencement of the periodical rains, in June, the cultiva- tors of the Cardomum ascend the coldest, and most shady sides : of a woody mountain; a tree of uncommon size and weight is then sought after, ‘the adjacent spot is cleared of weeds, and the tree felled close at its root, The earth shaken, and loosened by the force of the fallen tree, shoots forth | young Cardomum plants in about a month’s time. I have repeatedly — enquired of the natives the méans by which the Cardomum plants are first produced, and have invariably been told as already stated. They attribute no other effects to the falling tree, which may be selected from any spécies, than such as are derived from its weight and strength, added to the shade and shelter which its branches afford to the young plants, » I have heard it by some asserted that the Cardomum,like the pc aaa would emerge from the ashes of any large _ bat these stories were uttered only ax the ° enomna Alpinia.. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIAS 73 ~The stirub continues to grow in this manner until after- the early rains of the fourth year, in February, when it has reached its utmost height, which varies from six to nine feet ;_ four or five tendrils are now seen’to spring from its stem near the root, and afterwards the fruit is produced, which is gathered the following November; and requires no other preparation, than drying in the sun, The fruit is annually collected in this way, until the seventh year, when it is usual to cut it down, and from the trunk other sprouts arise, ia course of the next monsoon; which grow, flourish, and are cultivated as before. The husk with tHe seed I have called the fruit, as it corresponds with the native name. The seeds are termed the rice, and the tendrils the threads of the plant. “Ido not hear of any varieties in the species, and now enclose you a specimen of some just given to me by the person who farms the collection, and accounted of an inferior growth. It may not be unnecessary to mention, that this commodity yields to Government from 25 to 30,000 rupees per annum. The inhabitants use it as a general condiment to their food, and it is likewise held in sacred estimation for the purposes of sacrifice. It is constantly chewed with betle, and some medicinal properties are ascribed to it when used in decoction for complaints of the bowels. I am assured, by all, that the seeds of the Cardomum will never produce plants, and that it is only to be propagated as already stated, ie or i pees & : 40. A, punicea. R. | rae Leaves lanceolate. Spikes radical, compact, grep Lip entire, sub-parabolic ; base spurless. ‘sg A stately species, a native of Sumatra, frst . the late Dr. C. Campbell, to od Botanic cullen See : or ctor sdk. willl: near the base; general heights ae 74 MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Alpinia,. about six or seven feet, and as thick as a slendér walking cane. Leaves sub-bifarious, short-petioled on their sheaths, lanceolate, rounded at the base, both sides smooth ; from six ; to twenty inches long, by from three to six broad. Sheaths smooth on both sides, rising into a short, ciliate ligula, above. the insertion of the short, semi-cylindric, proper petioles.. Spikes radical, half immersed in the earth, sub-cylindric, . pretty compactly imbricated with from oblong to lanceolate, . coloured, smooth, one-flowered bractes. Flowers large, colour | a bright ‘red, like the finest carmine. Bractes interior, or. inferior perianth, tubular, length of the tube of the corol ; with an unequally two, or three-toothed mouth. Peridesthi proper superior, tubular, length of the tube of the corol ;. mouth generally bifid. Corot with long, slender tube hid within the bractes, and perianths. -Axterior border of three, . small, paler coloured, lanceolate segments. Lip highly | coloured, large, entire, horizontal, sub-parabolic, the lower part broad, and incurved round the stamina ; /amina linear, with entirely rounded, or slightly marginate apex. Filament. short, base spurless. .Anther double, apex bifid, and naked. - Germ three-celled, with numerous ovula in each, attached . to their respective receptacles, a little removed from the axis... Base of the style embraced = two subulate nectaries, sere a — ciliated gape. iy Si cata Faas sg Ln. A. Cardamomum siclkang Rs hitn Leaves lanceolar, villous underneath. Spikes aerate Lip ovate-lanceolate. Capsules pedicelled, of an ovate ob- Jong, conical shape, and nine-winged. A native of the hilly countries in the vicinity of Silhet, where the plant is called Do-Keswa. It blossoms about the beginning of the rains, in June, and the fruits ripen in Sep- oa when they are amine and sold to the dealers in - pa aes P ein above: their ee linear ulna 4 ~ Alpinia, MONANDRIA MONOGYNIAL © = is 7H four inches broad, Sheaths villous, rising in an obtuse ligu- la above the insersion of the leaf. Spikes radical, oblong, laxly imbricated, rising but little above the earth ; lower part, or scape hid in the soil, and clothed with shorter scariose bractes, Flowers numerous, large, red, fragrant. Bractes ; exterior, one under each flower, lanceolate, ribbed, smooth, yellowish pink; interior, or inferior perianth tubular, length of the proper perianth. Calya superior, length of the tube. of the corol, tubular, with three-toothed, coloured apex. Corol; tube cylindric, long and slender; segments of the border linear-oblong, obtuse. Lip with pretty broad cor- date base, from thence tapering to its entire obtuse point, much longer than the segment of the exterior border ; mar-. gins curled. Filament, anther, germ, style, stigma, and nec~ tarial bodies, as in the genus. Capsules pretty long-pedi-. celled, ovate-oblong, while fresh above an inch and a half. long, and nearly one in diameter, somewhat three-lobed, each» angle marked with a larger vertical wing, and two smaller. on the flatter sides, between the large ones, three-celled.. Seeds numerous, obovate, with a groove on one side, In- teguments two; exterior soft, while fresh it may be called the succulent aril; interior white and rugose. Perisperm con- form to the seed, white, and friable, perforated by a spongy,’ brown substance above the embryo. Vitellus somewhat hy- aline, rising on each side of the perforation like two horns, Embryo sub-clavate, its small end lodged at the umbilicus. — Obs. The form of the capsule, which resembles that of Geertner’s Zinziber Ensal, and the acrid, aromatic taste of the seeds, induce to conclude that this is the plant which pro- duces the en medium of the writers on ‘Materia ——— < pager ‘Vestn 76 _ MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Globba:, . A native of the interior parts of Bengal, where it blossoms during the rains. Root perennial, throwing off numerous | auckers, bid run both above and under the surface of the earth, by which this species is soon multiplied. Stems many, erect, or near- ly so, as thick as a man’s forefinger, smooth, from four to six. feet high. Leaves bifarious, sessile on their sheaths, lanceo- late, smooth on both sides ; from twelve to twenty inches long, |” by from four to five broad. Sheaths smooth, rising little above the insertion of the leaf. Spikes radical, solitary, the apex onlyrising above the soil, laxly imbricated with oblong, obtuse, smooth, exterior, and interior, one-flowered, green bractes ; besides the interiof, proper, tubular, thin, colourless bractes or inferior calyx. Calyx superior, tabular, length of . the tube of the corol; mouth three-toothed, split quite down on one side; colour from the middle upwards deep red. Corol; exterior border of three, sub-lanceolate, obtuse, red segments, Lip sub-linguiform, the base broad, and axis in- curved, forming an envelope for the stamen, from thence pro- jecting almost horizontally, into a long linear, bifid lamina, with curled margins; colour yellow, witha little red down the centre. Siamen as in the genus. Germ hairy, three~ celled ; ovula many, attached to one fleshy receptacle in the — inner iin Style embraced at the base by the nectarial hodies, which are in this species bidentate. - Beas ete es ae acne GLOBBA. eens ete .54. Corolla with the interior border two-lobed, or none. Fila: ment very long, base tubular, and winged with a cruciform. lip. Anther double, with an appendix, or naked. Capsule one-celled, three-valved. Seeds many, attached to three pari- : etal, ‘Teceptacles, Embryo ae and furnished with bot erisp ped pelts : .Globba. MONANDRIA MONOGYNIA, vir’ 1. G. marantina, Willd. spec. plant, 1,153. ~ ws! Leaves \anceolar. Spike terminal,,sub-sessile, strobiliform, _bulbiferous. Anther four-horned. G, marantina, Smith’s Exot, Bot. 2. pe 85. t. 103. Roscoe in Trans, of Linn. Soe. 8. 356. Lompujum silvestre minus, Rumph, Amb. 5. 150.¢. 64. f2 2. A native of the Moluccas, and from thence introduced into the Botanic garden near Calcutta by bits of the root found © amongst the earth in which nutmeg and other plants were 91 with fine down in both sides; length from one to five inches. Flowers terminal, from simply tern to a large compound corymb, pretty large, pure white, fragrant, Pedicels clavate, villous. Bractes short, subulate, villous. Calyx. villous, five or six-cleft ; divisions short, and subulate. Corol ; tube swelling towards the mouth, much more than the calyx. Border of from six to twelve, linear, spreading divisions with margins revolute. Filaments short. Anthers lodged just within the mouth of the tube of the corol. Germ turbinate. Style so long as to elevate the two-lobed stigma so as to make it level ii the anthers. Obs. The species differs from my arborescens in being scandent, and in the shape of the leaves, as well as in the pubescence ; here they are lanceolate, and very villous ; there, cordate and smooth, 4. J. pubescens. Linn. sp. pl. ed, Willd. 1.37. iy Leaves cordate, downy. Umbels scone bie may flowered, hes Katu-Tsjiregam-Mulla. Rheed. Mal. fis, 95. 1, ee Nyctanthes multiflora. Burm. Flor. Ind. p.5.t.3. J - Nyctanthes pubescens. Retz, Obs. 5. 9. Sans, Maghyum, Koondum, See Asiat. Res. A, 244, ' Beng. Koonda. _ A very ramous shrub, brought originally from. China. into the Company’s Botanic garden. It is also indigenous in Bengal. Is in flower during the rains chiefly. Stem scarcely any ; branches numerous, covered with ash- coloured bark; the young parts very downy. . Leaves Oppo: lin the spinal ones phos Pieces a: siti the umbels, Umbels tetminal, seosiiey tending to be tricho- six.to sagen divisions lanceolate, Stamens within th " reir six-cleft ; md of 89 from, a 92 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA,, Jasminum, tube. Anthers beaked. Germ two-lobed, two-celled, with one ovulum i in each, attached ¢o the ——— = of the — tion. 325s » Stigma entire, clubbed. di Obs. This is.a goodly looking plant, its oniaoonsflatged pure white, fragrant flowers, opening in succession make it very desirable. ~~ 5. J. laurifolium, R. Scandent, polished. Leaves opposite, aid daiiaad lucid, three-nerved. Flowers axillary, and terminal; from one to five, long-peduncled. Calyeine segments six or seven, filiform ; these of the corol from nine to =. ane length of the tube. A very elegant, climbing es tinal highly Epllalias; 3 shrubby species; a native of the mountainous countries east of Bengal, where it flowers.during the cool season. ~ Leaves opposite ; sub-sessile, lanceolate, firm and glossy ; ; margins entire, somewhat thick, faintly three-nerved, from’ two to four inches long, and from one to two broad. Pedun- cles terminal: and axillary, sometimes. single, sometimes se- veral together, and sometimes, when terminal, sub-racemed 5 ; long and slender. Bractes opposite, subulate. Calyatxe m five to seven-cleft; segments long, slender, subulate, an smooth, Corol ; tube twice the length of the calyx, st vate; border of from nine to twelve, ensiform, spreat : ments, which are as” long as the tube. - Senin rit Ch. ae tube, Germ two-celled, with one ovulum in each, attachedto the middle of the partition. Style seis omar bag scarce-’ oe - camp. immer mice ee ig 6. J. coarctatum. R. prot: beehdees cde. Shrubby. Leaves oblong, ei acute, sabia ter minal, peduncled, crowded with ternate, sub-sessile toi aS and amply bracted. Calyz five-cleft, i Bs - very ramous Shrub, without any —— segmnablo-ots oe ‘ Jasminum. — DIANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 93 climb. It is the first simple-leaved Indian Jasmine I have found which has not that habit. Is a native of the hills near Chittagong, where it flowers in April and May; may be readily known, without any other mark, by the great number of flo#ers which form the little dense corymbs: 7. J. trinerve, Vahl. Symb. 3. p. 2. Scandent, polished. » Leaves ovate-lanceolate, long-acu- ‘minate, three-nerved, polished. Flowers axillary and ter-. minal, solitary. _Calyeine segments six or seven, subulate ; those of - corol six or a es and longer dent the long tube. _ Avnative of f the forests near Sitht; where it blossoms i in March and April, and the berries ripen in June. : » Stem and» branches together, some fathoms in extent, running up, and over large shrubs and trees. Bark of the old woody parts ash-coloured and rather rough ; tender shoots polished, deep green, Leaves opposite, petioled, ovate-lan- ceolate, long, fine-pointed, firm and glossy, three-nerved, three or four inches long; and one or one and a half broad. -Petioles short, with a remiarkable joint near the middle, _ Flowers’ terminal and: axillary, solitary, sub-sessile, very large, white ond sweetly fragrant. Calyx with a short, ‘smooth tube, border of about six subulate segments which are nearly half the length of the tube of the corol. Cordl; tube long, widening above the middle for the stamina ; border of six to eight slender, spreading segments, which are an inch and a half in length. Filament short, Anthers linear, — lodged about the middle of the tube of the corol. Germ ‘oval, two-lobed, two-celled, with one ovulum in each, attach- ed to othe — bso a of the tube of - 6 corel. dariic the mys season n of : ae : : Sete yee he ly Corse A _- DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Jasminum. - &. J. bracteatum. R. | fet Twining. Leaves. opposite, ovaeadinn era ili Flowers in terminal bracted fascicles of three, five, or eleven flowers. Calycine segments. from five to seven, subulate; those of the corol from five to eight, oblong, with réunded acuminate apices. Style longer than the tube. Stigma en- tire. : A native of the island of Sumatra: From Bencoolen: Dr. C. Campbell sent plants to the Botanic garden, under the name Coast Jasmine. In Bengal they blossom during the cool, and the beginning of the hot season; the seed ripens in April. Stem scarcely any ; branches numerous, ligneous, climbing and twining, extending up and over trees of considerable size; tender parts rourdi, and clothed with much, very soft, short, pale green down. Leaves simple, opposite, short-petiol- ed, ovate-oblong, acute, entire, downy, two or three inches Jong, and one or two broad, Flowers numerous, pretty large, white, fragrant, in terminal fascicles of generally three, or five, sub-sessile ones, or growing on short, axillary branchlets; em- braced by one, or two pair of large: bractes, and by a greater number, when the fascicle termmates a primary branchlet; the addition in this, as in most of the other Indian species, proceed in opposite pairs of three-flowered peduncles. Brae- tes opposite, always two, generally unequal pairs, of an ovate- cordate shape, under. each fascicle, and some small subulate oes within them, all villous, like every other. tender. part of 3 the plant. Calyx downy. Tube short. Segments five, six, or — seven, subulate. Corol smooth, Tube twice the length of the e calyx, sub-eylindric. Border’ of from five to eight, oblong segments, rounded at the apex, with a small point in the mid-— dle. Germ two-celled, one ovulum in each. Style longer than the tube of the corol, Stigma entire, linear, with a groove on. each side. Berries one or two, united from the middle down- wards, size of a large pea, oval, smooth, succulent, and of a a ~ sha sini ; black colour when ripe, one-celled. Seed single,. - oval. Integuments two ; exterior composed of: moaligabren; Jasminum, - DIANDRIA;MONOGYNIA, ~ 95 immer thinner and. more tender, both dark, brownish black. Perisperm none, Embryo erect. Cotyledons conform to the seed, green, Plumyla two-lobed. Radicle patelliform, in- ferior. , i 9. J. Kiskenssataest = Si ? Shrubby, twining. Leaves opposite, petioled, condatas Corymbs terminal; calycine segments from five to seven, su- bulate ; those of ia corol from ten to twelve, linear, and cus- pidate. Berries kidney-shaped. . Teling. Adivi-mulli. To the. best of my knowledge, this species is a native of the mountainous parts of the Circars only. It is much larger than the other species, though like them it has a woody, twin- - Ing, or climbing stem, but its branches are in general straight and spread. Branchlets opposite, smooth, . Leaves opposite, _petioled, varying from oblong to broad-cordate, pointed, entire, smooth; size various. Corymbs terminal, divided by threes, diffuse, Flowers large, white, fragrant. Calyx with a short tube, and seldom more than five-cleft border. —Corol tubular ; border from eight to twelve-cleft ; segments slender, and patent. Berries one or two; when single oblong ; when i pita 10. J. arborescens. R. Arborescent. Leaves opposite, and three-fold, hlace. downy. Flowers terminal, numerous, corymbiform, border. from ten to twelve-cleft. Stigma two-lobed. Sans. Suptula, Nuva-mullika. _ Beng. Bura-Koonda, Nuva-mullika. e _ .Nyctanthes grandi iflora, Loureir. Cochin Ch, 26. eee A native of the more elevated parts of i i where it 5 eae pint ad tai Dark ; young shoots — enon, and somewhat villous, aan of the whole tree . ame roe 96 DIANDRIA MONOGYNTA. Jasminum. or twelve feet. “Leaves opposite, rarely three-fold, or alter- nate, short-petioled, dvaredordutel ‘acuminate ; margins en- tire, and often waved, smooth on both sides; toni two to four inches long, and from one to three broad. Petioles chan- nelled, jointed near the middle. /owers on terminal, tri- chotomous, three-flowered peduncles, often forming large, — corymbiform panicles; they are large, white, and very fra- grant. Bractes subulate, villous. Calyx crowned with five or six subulate, meurved, villous divisions. Corol; tube longer than the calyx. Border of ten or twelve, somewhat _ acute, linear divisions. Anthers ovate, within the tube. Germ turbinate, two-lobed, two-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the upper part of the partition. Stigma two-lobed, about half way up the tube of the corol. , Obs. This species is nearly allied to my J. latifolium, and indeed the only specific difference I have yet been able to ob- serve, is, that this species has no einstein to twine or = 4 that is twining. TJ. angustifolium. Vahl. en. pl. 1. 29. Linn, sp. wie ed. Willd. 1.36. Shrubby, twining; polished. Leaves opposite, vest ovate, smooth, of a shming dee oreen. Flowers hesanenior ovate, i ag Nyctanthes triflora, Burm. =. 4. t 2: J: vimineam. Willd. toe. eit. Mu ot, Mal 8: p98. 1.59, e's is much like Burman’s figure quoted above, but docs _ ‘not accord with his character of alternate leaves ; it is very common, and at the same time one of the most beautiful spe- cies of Jasmine T know. It abounds in every forest on the coast of Coromandel. Blossoms during the hot season ; but best a State of cultivation o— are “ati the greatest = 2 ereree twining, smooth. Jasminum. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, | 97 on every part of the shrub, short-petioled, ovate-oblong, or oblong, sometimes nearly cordate, finely-pointed, smooth, shining, firm, very deep green, veinless, Flowers terminal, generally three-fold, peduncled, large, white, with a faint tinge of red, star-shaped, having a peculiar but very pleasant fragrance. Peduncles clubbed, smooth. Calyx ; tube short ; segments acute, Corol ; border generally eight or nine-parted ; divisions lanceolate. sees eye Stigma lanceolate. Berries oblong. Obs. I have for many years cultivated this species. It grows easily in every soil and situation, is constantly covered with leaves, and their bright, shining deep green colour, ren- ders it always beautiful, and particularly well adapted for screening windows, covering arbours, &c, 12. J. tubiflorum. R. Scandent. Leaves sub-sessile, ovate-oblong, smooth, — Flowers terminal, from three to five, short-peduncled, Caly- cine segments from seven to eight, subulate, one-sixth the length of the aa long slender tube of the corol. Berries ovate, A native of the Malay Redaipalags: differs from all the © other Indian species hitherto examined by me in the great length of itsslender tube, which is three times longer than the seven or eight, oe peortee segments of its border. 4 13. J. simplicifolium. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 38. _ . Shrubby, spreading. Leaves oblong, polished. Flowers from three to many terminal. Border of the corol of from six to eight, linear, acute segments, equalling the tube in length. . Native place, the Friendly Islands, and the Eastern. a oa &e. Pio ine ia to Desai eter the hot "smooth ; a COB spreading in all aidisinen: Leaves sitn-” i = VOL, I. G eee 98 DIANDRIA, MONOGYNIS, Jasminum, ple, opposite, short-petioled, oblong, entire; highly polished on both sides; about two inches long, and about one broad. _ Flowers terminal, from three to a decussate panicle, with its Nate ramification trifid, Pedicels clavate, round, smooth. Bractes minute, subulate. Calyx campanulate, with a five-toothed border. Corol; tube, many times longer than the calyx. Border from six to eight-parted; divisions linear, acute, about as long as the tube. Anthers halferect. Style shorter by half than the tube of the corol, Stigma two-cleft. iu. J auriculatum, jp sp. pl. ed. Willd, 1. 38. ‘Shrubby, twining. Leaves sub-ternate, leaflets ovate, the pair minute or wanting. Border of the calyx with five, ob- scure, glandular teeth. Corol seven-cleft. Berries globular. Sans. Magudhee, Gunika, Yoot’heka, ‘Umbustha, See Asiat. Res, iv. 246, Beng. Jut’hi, or Jui. This species is a native of various parts of India, but not common, Its habit is twining, with a woody stem, and branches. — : = Leaves opposite, ternate. Leaflets, the pair very small, standing opposite, sometimes wanting; the terminal one at least ten or fifteen times larger ; all ovate, entire, with a mi- nute point, smooth, except when young, when they are dow- ny. Corymbs terminal, always three-forked, dense. _ _ Flowers small, white, sweet-smelling, though less fragrant than those of the former species. Calyx five-notched, with a round firm glandular process on the outside of each, Corol ; bor- der. from five to eight-cleft, divisions oblique, obtuse, Stig- ma clavate. Berry exactly as in Sambac, 415. J. Pl R, Shrubby, erect, Leaves ternate ; sleaflets lanceolar, Cory A native of the jungles or copses of Silhet, where it blos- ° ee art gh cu 5 ae Jasminum. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 99 16. J, paniculatum. R. ! Shrubby, erect, every part polished, Leaves temiate leaflets oval, obtusely acuminate, Panicles terminal. Sam-yeip-son-hing of the Chinese. = * From Canton in China this fine erect, shrubby, highly po- lished species was received into the Botanic garden, where it blossoms during the rains, The leaflets are from oval to oblong, with an obtuse point, polished, of a hard texture, The flowers are small and white, but numerous, on terminal pretty large open, brachiate panicies, 17. J. chrysanthemum, R. Shrubby, erect. Leaves alternate, pinnate ; leaflets three, five, or seven, lanceolate. Corymbs sub-terminal. a segments attenuate. =! ; Hemapushpica, or yellow yuthica, Asiat. Res, iv. 246. Sans, Hema-psoohpika, A native of the mountainous countries north of Hindoostan. Colonel Hardwicke found it on his journey to Sirinagur, (see Asiat, Res, vi, 349. Jasminum, No, 3.) and Dr. Buchanan in Nepal. In the ‘Botanic garden it grows freely from cuttings, and becomes a stout, erect ramous shrub, even a small tree, without the smallest tendency to lean, or twine, Flowers more or less the whole year; but, like the other species, the proper season is April and May, at which time it is the most desirable Jasmine I have yet seen, Stem stout and woody, in plants seven or eight years old as thick as a man’s leg. Bark smooth, ash-coloured. Young . shoots erect, flexuose, angular, smooth ; height of the shrub from eight to twelve feet. Leaves sdbershaib} unequally pin- nate; at the base of the young shoots ternate or even some- times- solitary. Leaflets two, or more generally three pair, and a terminal one ; opposite, lanceolate, smooth, dark green, be ‘not glomy; from one and a half to. three inches long. y ymbs generally terminal, from ten to twenty-flowered, as in ong figure of Jasminum odoratissimum, in Curtis's Bot, G2 a 100 — DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Phillyrea,. Mag. No. 285. Flowers large, bright yellow, delightfully fragrant. Bractes ensiform. .Calycine segments five, alter- nate, nearly as the tube of the calyx. Segments of the corol five, oval, obtuse, length of the tube. Filament short. Anihers linear, with their apices rather above the mouth of the tube of the corol. Germ two-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the middle of the partition. Style half the length of the tube. Stigma clavate. a _ 18. J. grandiflorum, Linn, sp. pl. ed, Willd. 1. 41, * Shrubby, scandent (in India), Leaves opposite, pinnate ; exterior three or five leaflets confluent. Peduncles terminal. _Catalonian, or Spanish Jasmine. Pitsjigam mullo. Rheed, Mal,6.t.52. Sans, Soomuna, Malatee, Jati. Beng. Jatee. __ ee This plant I have only found in gardens, where it flowers the greater part of the year. “19. J. heterophyllum. R. Shrubby. Leaves alternate, petioled, simple, sometimes. ternate, ovate-lanceolate, waved, lucid, finely acuminate. A stout shrabby species, a native of Nepal. In the — Botanic garden its branches are weak and variously bent the bark roughened with little elevated gray spots, While 2 the plants are young the leaves are for the most aie ernate, afterwards they are simple, — sie. PHILLYREA. ‘Bokeh gen. ciate’. 24. : Calyz four-toothed. Corol one-petalled, four-cleft. Germ- two-celled, two-seeded.. .Drupe or berry superior, one or two- seeded. Embryo sain and furnished with a perisperm. AP. , paniculata, R. eater epponttes eam shlong. entire, oot, | y Medtivant te yreopteds Phillyrea. DIANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 101 A native of China and from thence introduced into the Bo- tanic garden near Calcutta, before 1793. Now, 1802, they have grown to be beautiful small trees, of from fifteen to twenty feet in height, clothed almost to the ground, with nu- merous, opposite, spreading, and drooping branches, covered with smooth, ash-coloured bark. ~ Leaves opposite, petioled, drooping, ovate-oblong, sides incurved, entire, leathery, smooth on both sides, above a shin- ing deep green, underneath glaucous, with two or more ob- scure glands near their base : from four to five inches long, and from two to three bread. Petioles short, recurved, chan- nelled, Stipulesnone. Panicles terminal from the exterior axills, ramifications thereof opposite, and smooth, Flowers very numerous, rather small, pure white, somewhat fragrant. Bractes minute, caducous,. Calyx obscurely four-toothed. Corol one-petalled; tube short; segments linear, revolute, smooth. Filaments opposite, inserted into the bottom of the tube of the corol, and about as long as the seg- ments of its border. Anthers incumbent, Germ above, but lodged deep in the bottom of the calyx, two-celled, with two ovula in each. Style short, Stigma clavate, entire. Drupe size of a —_ French bean, obliquely obovate, smooth, ge- nerally o1 Nut solitary, with the rudiment of a‘se- cond, but I never saw more than one come to maturity; pointed at the base, furrowed on the outside, covered with a thick, somewhat indurated envelope, though scarcely hard enough to be called a nut.- Embryo inverse, lodged ina — pearl-coloured amygdaline perisperm. Obs. Ligustrum japonicum. ‘Thunb, Flor. Japan. p. 17. J. 1. is a tolerably good representatien of this tree ; but the one-seeded nut, short style, and clavate stigma of pat — will not allow me to think-they ‘ean: be:the same: ta sds s-oblong, entire, acuminate. — Ponioles tere nal, tales i speed 2" giant sdommpaaee ee 102 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. —Millingtonia. _ Bhooeemoora, the vernacular name in Silhet, where it grows to be a very large tree, and furnishes the natives, &c. with very hard durable wood. Flowering time June and July ; the seed ripens in January and February. Young shoots void of pubescence, but dotted with small whitish specks. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, ovate-lan- ceolate, acuminate, entire, smooth; three or four inches long, and one or one and a half broad. Panicles terminal, large, very ramous; ramifications four, round, and villous. Flowers oblong, acute, villous, Calyx bowl-shaped, four- toothed. Corol campanulate. Tube very short; border — four-parted, Filaments short, inserted on the little tube of the corol opposite to each other. Anthers oblong. Germ superior, depressed, two-celled, with two ovula in each, at- tached to the top of the partition. Style and stigma clavate, apex flat and emarginate. Berries (for they can scarce be called drupes) sub-cylindric, smooth, succulent, dark olive- purple,*size of a large berry, rarely more than one-celled, Seed solitary, conform to the berry. Integuments two ; exte- rior fibrous, and striated ; interior rather thick, brown, a ing to the perisperm. Recinert conform to the seed, oily. Embryo straight, nearly as long as the perisperm, inverse, Cotyledons lanceolate, _ Reels pit superior. 3 MILLINGTONUA. eo es. tee three-leaved, calycled, Corol duenscetellel, mace rial scale on the inside of each. Germ two-celled, two-seeded,. Drupe with one, or two-celled, two-valved nut ; seed solitary. Embryo curved and folded, with little or no sissies and with a curved inferior radicle, Having found it necessary to deprive our ounngaen the late Sir Thomas Millington of the genus assigned to his me- many lg, the penne ree Ca. 45 and 201) —- Millingtonia. DIANDRIA MONOGYNTA, — 103 cl therefore restored that respectable name to the system, under a different dress, by giving it to the two trees which at pre- sent constitute this strongly marked family, and which, I am inclined to think, have not, until now, been described. . 1. M. simplicifolid. R - Leaves alternate, — tinodidSaaielsblate A large tree, a native of Silhet, where it is called paths: gee by the natives; the timber is used for various purposes. Flowers in- February = March; seed ripens in July and August, ; ' Leaves alternate, petioled, broad-lanceolar, tapering most toward the base, entire, or very remotely sub-serrate, in very young plants completely serrate, rather acuminate, smooth ; veins simple and paralleled ; from six to twelve inches long, by three or four broad. Panicle terminal, large, oblong, patent, brown, villous branches, lowers numerous, sessile, very minute, yellow. - Bractes oblong, clothed with ferragi- -nous’pubescence. Calya three-leaved, independently of two or three minute, villous bractes, like a calycle ; leaflets ovate, smooth, permanent. “Petals three, broad-ovate, waved, twice the ‘length’ of the calyx, permanent. Nectary a rail? * lobed, smooth scale from the base of each petal on the inside, ~ they form a dome over the pistillum, and round the base of the germ is found a flat, triangular body, with its angles bidentate. Filaments two, opposite, incurved, inserted with- out the interior, three-angular nectary ; bifid, the inner lami- na’ supporting on its apex a patelliform receptacle, on which the two-lobed yellow anther rests. Exterior lamina bifid, ' segments subulate, rising rather higher than the anther. _ Germ superior, two-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the thickened middle of the partition. Style single, short. ee pase pit oops a ‘size of a pea, nearly ? smoot ingus one-cellec . Nut conform to angular ; the so or abortive eh abvreylrraesabha’ Seed’ Pee G4 104 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, . Millingtoma, ’ solitary, concave on the side next the abortive cell ofthe nut, hemispheric on the other. Integument single, membranace- - ous. Perisperm none. Embryo curved, and doubled, asin , the Convolvulacee, with a curved inferior radicle, 2. M. pinnata. R, Leaves alternate, abruptly pinnate ; leaflets. from six to twelve pair, sub-opposite, lanceolate, , sc Batiwa, the vernacular, name in Silhet, Bet it is Sadia: nous, growing to be a middling o sized tree, the wood of which is employed by the natives in constructing their houses, . Flowers in April and May. The seeds ripen in September. Branchlets smooth, . Leaves alternate, abruptly-pinnate ; from six to eighteen inches long. Leaflets from six to twelve pair, sub-opposite, short-petioled, lanceolate, remotely serrate, acuminate, smooth, three to six inches long, by, one or one and a half broad. Panieles terminal, very large and very ra- mous, a little hairy. Bractes minute. Flowers numerous, small, white. Calya three-leaved, with two smaller ones under them, which may be called bractes or a calycle ; or, the calyx may be called five-leaved. Nectary, from the inside of the base of each petal arises a variously lobed, ragged leaflet _ or scale, which is incurved over the germ; besides which . round the base of the germ is a small, three-sided cup with bidentate angles. Filaments two, opposite, length of the germ, short, broad, with enlarged apex ; from the. base on. the tside, rises a broad, tridentate scale, of about the length of - the filament, _Anthers twin, each lobe globular, opening transversely on the inside. Germ superior, cordate, two-celled, with two ovula in each cell, attached to the partition, Style short. Stigma small, bidentate. Drupe size of a pea, smooth, black, succulent, one-celled. Nut roundish, thick for its size. and very hard, rugose, one-celled, two-valved, with a projec- _ tion into the cell opposite to the remains of the style on one side near the base, which marks the abortive lobe. Seed so~ litary, conform tothe x nut. ategunent single, membannaseoms | Olea _DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 105 Perisperm none, or in small quantity, and blended with the integument. Embryo curved, and folded up nearly as:in the Convolvulacee. Cotyledons ovate-oblong, Radicle inferior, curved, ) OLEA. Schreb. gen. N. 25. Corol and calyx four-cleft. Germ two-celled, trovecedied: Drupe superior, one-seeded. Embryo inverse, and furnished with a + RereRa 1,.Q, agin Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. 1, 4, 6. . Shrubby. Leaves oblong-lanceolate, slightly serrate. Pe- duncles axillary. ba Olea fragrans, Thunb, Jap, 18, t. 2. good. A native of China, in the Botanic garden it blossoms dur- x spelen cathereean: 2. O. paniculata, R E Leaves opposite, ctilnk oblong, entire, eaain” Dani cles sie Bractes wesidpae Lobes of the stigma di- -Varicate, — — phi sees a wative sof the oe mountains, Flower during the hot season. Leaves opposite, petioled, oblong, waved, entire, running down the petiole, smooth on both sides, firm, about five inches long, and two broad. Petioles an inch and half long, smooth, flat above. Stipules none, Panicles below the leaves, and also from the axills, small, thin, brachiate. Bractes small, nearly sessile. Calyx four-cleft, small, Corol one-petalled; tube shorter; border four-cleft ; divisions oblong, spreading, — concave ; apices sharp and. sealer Filaments two, ony ; site, ahest. finthers hes ieee erect, Germ superior, yi sg ae —twe o-cl aah 3 divisions en- ‘ain éach 106 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Olea. 3. 0. dioica, R. Arboreous, dioicous. Leaves opposite, shake pichaly ob- long, serrate, Panicles axillary. Atta-jam, the vernacular name in Silhet, where it is indi- genous ; also on the hills of Chittagong. In both places it grows to be a pretty large tree, the timber of which is reck- oned excellent, and put to many uses by the natives. Flow- ering time the month of March and April ; fruit ripe in July. ‘Bark of the old ligneous parts ash-coloured ; of the young ‘shoots smooth and green. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, tapering equally at each end, remotely, and acutely serrate, acuminate, smooth, from four to eight inches long, by from two to four broad. — Stipules, the oval concave scales of the buds only. Panicles axillary, and opposite, below the leaves, thin and not above half their length. Male flowers moore numerous, small. Calya four-toothed. Corol one-pe- talled, tube very short; border four-parted. Filaments two, very short, inserted on the short tube of the corol. _Anthers oval, hid in the corol. Germ none, a small two-lobed gland supplies its place. #emale on a separate tree, (probably HERMAPHRODITE, and in that case all the corols with the sta- mina, must have fallen off at a very early period; which I have no reason to think was the case, as they were examined at what I consider a proper age, and no traces of the place where a corol grew could be found.) © Sone as in the male. Corol none. Germ superior, ovate, two-celled, wit ovu- , attached to the top of the iri ” Style short, Stigma two-lobed. -_Drupe nearly round, in size and colour much like the common sloe, Prunus Spinosa, one-celled. Nit’ conform to the seed, thin and rather brittle than hard, one- celled. Seed solitary, conform to the nut. Integument single, thin. Perisperm conform to the seed, firm, pearl-colour.’ Embryo inverse, shorter than the perisperm, and consider-— ably narrower. Cotyledons ovate-lanceolate, Radicle supe THE : Byer ak Chionanthus. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 107 CHIONANTHUS. Schreb. gen. N. 26. Calyx four-parted. Corol one-petalled ; segments long. Germ two-celled, two-seeded, Drupe superior, one or two- serra Embryo inverse, without perisperm. 1. C. ramiflora, R. Arboreous. Leaves opposite, Sead lanceolar, entire. Pa- nicle below the leaves. : A natiye of the Moluccas, Flowering time March and April, Seed ripe in September. Trunk erect, bark smooth, ash-coloured ; branches oppo- site ; young shoots smooth, and round, Leaves opposite, pe- tioled, broad-lancoalar, entire, acute, smooth on both sides ; length about six inches. Petioles channelled, smooth, about an inch. long. _Panieles opposite, from the naked. branches below the leaf- ~bearing shoots, ovate, brachiate, much longer than the leaves, smooth in every part. _/lowers numerous, small, yellow. Bractes opposite, lanceolate. Calyx four- parted, Corol to the base four-cleft, consequently there is lit- tle or no tube, segments, of the border lanceolate, with incury- a ed margins, — Filaments short and thick, inserted both on the base of the corol and the receptacle. Anthers a polleniferous groove on each side of the short, thick filaments. Style scarcely any, Stigma four-lobed. Drupe oblong, one-celled. Nut oblong, striped, one-celled, Perisperm none, sail inverse. Co niaedens conform to the seed. 2, ©. Sevlanica. Linn. sp. aE ‘a Willd. ¥. 47. vain Leaves opposite, short-petioled, obovate, entire, smooth, Racemes axillary, often ooo ; foves ena Brae- tes orate, biccanice ais , ie ‘ Said args ef Ben beh a | Pe eas : : 108 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Schrebera, 3. C. dichotoma. R. xainw Shrubby, dichotomous. Leaves cuneiform-lanceolar, re- curved, entire. Racemes axillary ; pedicels three-flowered. Native place Coromandel. The Asiatic synonima are un- certain. Flowering time in the Botanic garden the month of _ March. Trunk short; bark dark ash-coloured, with many, elevat- ed, lighter coloured specks. Branches dichotomous through- out, very numerous; height of the shrabs in the Botanic garden, about seven feet in seven years. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, broad-cuneiform, lanceclar, entire, rather ob- tuse; surfaces smooth, texture hard; three inches long by one broad, Racemes axillary, solitary, scarcely half the length of the leaves. Pedicels sub-opposite, diverging, three-flowered. Flowers small, white, inodorous, Calyx four- parted ; segments ovate, obtuse, villous. Corol, the segments can scarcely be said to be united at the base, except by the filaments, which are inserted on the bases of two, and in that” manner form two pair of segments; they are nearly exact, taper a litile, and have their margins mach incurved, Fila-— menis two, short, Anthers large, with bifid apex. Germ four-sided, ovate, two-celled, with two ovula in each attach- ed to the middle of the partition, Style short. Stigma ob- scurely two-lobed. Drupe superior, oval, or short obovate, size of a black currant, succulent, when ripe purple, one-cell- ed. Nut obovate, rather thin, and tender, marked with four *- ribs from the apex to the base, with four small, imperfect : ones between, one-celled. Seed solitary, conform to the nut... ' Integument single, thin, and tender. Perisperm none. Em- bryo inverse, Cotyledons conform to the seed, Radicle pa- : tellitorm, su ai peas SCHREBERA. R. | Calye bilabiate. Corol salver-shaped. Capsule superior, bmate, two-celled, two-valved, Seeds several, =e if ES Schrebera. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA., 109° S. swietenioides. R. Corom, pl. 2. N. 101.- Teling. Mucaadi. : Tam. Mogalinga marum, A large timber tree, a native of vallies over the mountain- _ ous parts of the Raja-mundri Circar, Balaghata mountains, &e. Flowering time the beginning of the hot season, Trunk erect. Bark scabrous, Branches numerous, spread- " ing in every direction, so as to form a large beautiful shady head. Leaves nearly opposite, petioled, pinnate with an odd one, about a foot long, Leaflets, three or four pair, oppo- site, short-petioled, the lowermost largest, and. obliquely- _ ovate, or cordate, while those towards the apex become nar- rower; all are entire, pointed, smooth on both sides, and about three or four inches long. Petioles round, smooth, Stipules none. Panicles terminal, thin, trichotomous, Bractes small, caducous. Flowers rather small, white and brown, variegated, very fragrant during the night. Calyx beneath, tubular, somewhat two-lipped ; lips nearly equal, emargi-_ nate, sometimes there are two lateral toothlets, one on each _ side in the fissures which separate the lips. g Corol one-pe- talled, salver-shaped. Tube cylindric, three times longer than the calyx. Border spreading, divided into five, six or seven cuneate, truncate segments. ilaments two, short, inserted below the middle of the tube. Anthers oblong, hid | within ‘the tube of the corol. Germ above, oval. Style a little longer than the tube, Stigma bifid. Capsule large, pear-shaped, size of a pullet’s egg, scabrous, very hard, two- celled, two-valved, opening from the apex, Seed four in each cell, they are irregularly oval, and ceneienne: with a long membranaceous wing. “e Obs. The wood of this tree is of a gray colour, very close- ze grained, heavy and durable. It is reckones! less subject to pppetaia ce er 3 on which ac * 110 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Eranthemum. I am inclined to think it would answer well for scales to - mathematical instruments; it does not look so well as box, but its not being subject to warp may render it fitter, though not so handsome. ERANTHEMUM. Linn. Flor. Zeyl. 15. ' Calyx five-cleft, Corol hypocrateriform ; border regular, or nearly so. Filaments four, two of them sterile, Capsule _ two-celledy two-valved, bursting with elasticity’ a to the — 1. E. montanum. R. Shrubby, diffuse. Leaves oblong, acute, — rides: Bractes linear, hairy. ~ Justica montana. R. Corom. pl. 2. N. 176. A small, straggling, jointed, under shrub ; a native of ee Circar mountains, flowers during the cool season. Stems many, striated, jointed, smooth, leaning on the ground, and rogting at the joints, young slits fetid ad: Leaves opposite, petioled, oval and oblong, pointed, ruming down the petioles, from three to four inches long, and about two broad, Spikes many, terminal, erect, slender. roo cles four-sided, Bractes exterior, opposite, decussate, linear, ; acute, hairy, one-flowered. Bracteoles two to eac flower, pressing laterally the calyx, and like the exterior, but much smaller, Flowers opposite, solitary, decussate, very pale blue, Calyx five-parted ; segments subulate, Corol with a very long, and very slender tube, border of five equal obo- e vate truncate, pale blue segments, Filaments short. Anthers single, oblong, within the tube of the corol, Style length of the tube of the corol, Stigma unequally bifid, appearing just without the tube. Capsule linear-oblong, compressed, Pointed, two-celled, two-valved, opening across the partition, wi han elastic jerk, _ Seeds two in each, compressed, bags Evranthemum. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ill ae: 5: sulehellnd. Andrew’s Repos. vol, ii, 88. Shrubby, erect. Leaves ventricose-oblong «: Spikes termi nal, imbricated. Bractes ovate-oblong. Justicia pulchella, Roxb. Corom., pl. 2. No. 177. Justicia nervosa, Vahl, En, pl. 1. 164, Beng. Kalla-Jati. - Hind, Gool-sham. | | A most beautiful, stout, flowering shrub ; a native of dry, — uncultivated, shady places, over various parts of India, flow- ; ering time the cold season. It is generally in its full beauty in February, Stems many, erect, and ascending or nearly so ; two or three feet high. | Branches many ; young shoots versgidéa, smooth, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, waved, pret- ty smooth ; from six to nine inches long, and from three to four broad ; ae are of a much deeper and brighter green than in E. montana, which this resembles most, Spikes terminal, Bractes disposed as in the former, but larger, broader, ciliate, and much nearer to each other. Flowers disposed as in the former but large, and of a deep bright blue purple colour. Capsule and seeds as in E. montana, Shrubby, erect. Leaves ovate-oblong, smooth. Spikes terminal ; bractes wedge-shaped, naked. Stamens within the tube. A native of the Andaman Islands, whence several plants were brought to the Botanic garden, by Colonel Kyd ; and are now (March 1797) in blossom, It is a small shrub, and of slow growth, _ Stem and branches sub-erect, stated the younger ‘some. what four-sided and a little Rest Leaves nes short- somewhat repand, smooth and naked {he intecior: soe Corol; tbe engi of 112 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Eranthemum. the exterior bractes. Border regularly five-parted, pale — blue. Stamens two, abortive filaments issuing from the base of the two fertile ones. Anthers half hid in the tube of the corol. 4. E. diantherum. R. Suffruticose, erect. Leaves broad-lanceolar, nia Ra- cemes terminal, in axillary, peduncled umbellets. Coro/ somewhat bilabiate. .Anthers twin. A small delicate, perennial plant, boongiii "ii the Motue: cas in 1800, blossomed in the Botanic garden in — 1801. Stem curved, simple ;. heanalies few in our niall joong plants. Leaves opposite, petioled, ovate-oblong, entire, ob- tuse, destitute of pubescence, somewhat bullate ; about two or three inches long, by one broad. Flowers numerous, collected on small, long-peduncled, axillary umbellets ; and in opposite fascicles, or solitary on a long terminal, slender, erect raceme; small, white, with a slight tinge of red, and some minute red spots on the base of the middle divisions of the under lips. Bractes, a single, ensiform one, at the base of each peduncle, with one or two, still smaller, about the middle of each pedicel. Calyx divided almost to the base into five slender , acute divisions, - -Corol ; tube long, slender, and curved. Border sub-bilabiate : upper lip erect, two- parted ; lower three-cleft ; all the five segments. equal. ‘Fila ments four, ier daw the ‘aheenthi bf thes bal: two of them very minute, and abortive. Anthers erect, twin. Capsule with — two, or four, somewhat scabrous flattened orbicular seeds, my Obs, Is nearly allied tomy E. racemosum, but differs from it in having long, slender-peduncled fascicles of flowers in the axills of the leaves, as well as in having from one to three _ _ or more flowers on each of the lower opposite peduncles of See. while i in that there in seid one ; a in Dowverainiy Mu Jebel aeheg: Seales sae: Eranthemum. «DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 113 5. E. racemosum, R. , Suffruticose. Leaves oblong, ventricose. acaba ter- minal ; coro/ somewhat bilabiate, both lips three-parted. A eli under shrub, of great beauty, brought into the Botanic garden from the Moluccas, in 1798 ; and blossomed in November, 1799. Stem small, with a few, slender Ssctuetbin's ; height of the whole plant about two feet. Leaves opposite, petioled, -ob- long, ventricose, and running down on the petiole, entire, and pretty smooth; from two to three inches long, and broad in proportion, Racemes terminal, some of them long, and slender ; others shorter. Flowers opposite, viddieddioks ap- proximate, pretty large, colour a pale pink, or white, tinged with red. Bractes subulate, one at the base of each pedicel, and two on it. Calyx ; divisions equal, and subulate, Corot infundibuliform ; border somgwhat bilabiate ; both lips three- parted, the under one considerably larger. Filaments four, short, inserted within the mouth of the tube, two of _ minute, and abortive. Anthers half erecta: wea 6. E. bipleriniilens Reale . . Shrubby, erect. | Leaves oeaacbliny, smooth. Spikes teraninbi _Bractes wedge-shaped, naked. Stamens within the long slender tube, adjoined to them are two abortive fila- ments, A native of the Andaman Islands, f from whence sovenil plants were brought to the Botanic garden, by Colonel Kyd, which blossom in March. It is a small shrub, and of ai growth, Stem and branches calcd jointed, the younger some- what four-sided, and a little hairy. Leaves opposite, short- petioled, oblong and ovate-oblong, somewhat re smooth on both sides. Spikes terminal; flowers opposite. Bractes : , one- , the exterior large. filedgevbaped, pthe interior deggeredi Corol ; tube length of. —— Border regularly five-parted, ee VOL. I, H * 114 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Justicia, Stamens, two abortive filaments issuing from the base of the two fertile ones. Anthers half hid in the tube of the corol. JUSTICIA. Schreb. gen. N. 35. - Corol one-petalled, irregular, Capsule mapesion, rasitlli ed, two-valved, bursting with elasticity contrary to the parti- tion, Z- EE ; 2 ‘SECT. iL Anthers single. . : ye J canes, Linn, sp. pl ed. Willd, 1. $5.) ae - Shrubby, erect. Spikes terminal, four-sided, Bragtes est ciliate, Corol bilabiate, tube filiform ; _upper lip linear, re- flexed, with bipartite apex. _Capsule-two-seeded. Carim curini. Rheed, Mal, 2, t. 20, _ Hind. Oodoo-jati. , ar i A native of our Indian forests, .. Flowers’ the cities. part of the year. ; Stems several, woody, straight, round, smooth, jeinteds ha swelled above the joints ; from two to four feet high. Leaves opposite, petioled, oval, tapering a little towards each. end, smooth, a little waved, Spikes terminal, four-sided, imbricat-. ed with four rows of large, oval, sharply serrated, waved, one-flowered bractes, Flowers a pale blue or azure re colour,. Corol ; ptube, very long and slender ; upper Tip ii linear, reflex ed, be ecoming. revolute, apex bifid ; under lip. very broa¢ 53 three-parted, Anthers simple, nee erect. Stigma perf, rated, ciliate, Capsule two-seeded, 1@ 2. J. thrysiflora, R. Shrubby, erect, smooth. Tannen lgumclansinameia sas cemes terminal, flowers verticelled, . Corel sub: hilaaing : Capsule clavate, ten or twelvergeeded, Justicia, DIANDRIA’ MONOGYNTA, Ab William Carey, into the Botanic garden, where if flowers in January and February, and the seeds are ripe in March and “April. Root ramous, Stem straight, woody. ° Branches «nearly straight, general height from four to eight feet ; woody parts round, and covered with smooth ash-coloured bark ; young shoots smooth, swelled at the insertion of the leaves, somewhat four-sided, and tinged with*dull purple. -Leaves opposite, short-petioled, drooping, lanceolar, entire, smooth on both | sides, of a firm texture, the upper side deep green, the under side pale; from four to eight inches long, and from one to two broad. Racemes terminal, often-solitary, though some- times two, or even three-fold, thyrsiform, shape of the flame of a candle, crowded with large orange-coloured flowers. Pe- . dicels four-fold, verticelled, approximate, one-flowered, short- er than the divisions of the calyx. “Bragtes three-fold, subu- late; the inner two permanent, and ‘inserted on the base of the pedicels ; the exterior single one larger and caducous.” Calyx simple, five-cleft, to the base divisions equal, straight, subu- late, half the length of the tube of the corol. Coro? about an inch’ bog. - Tube incurved, compressed, laterally somewhat villotts.i » Border bilabiate'; ‘upper lip broad, projecting forward, deeply emarginate ; under lip of three, efiial: deeply-divided, ovate, acute divsiteal Anthers even with the upper lip of the corol, dark brown, oval, an open- ing on the under side for the discharge of the white -pollen, and studded on the back: Style scarcely so long as the sta- mina,. Stigma entire, Capsule roomier) — Seeds five or six in each cell. « Obs. This is one of the most beautiful species of Seistibia Phave yet met with in India, even pics! pete in vas € At : pbs — nace ree a a rubby, ’ broad-lanceolar, poheked: smooth. | Rihierh terinina eine ; a opposite ; below) fas” 116 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Justicia, cicled, about tle middle tern, and above single ; sub-ringent, with ample-campanulate throat, Capsule linear, few-seeded, A native of the hilly parts of Ceenere. where it blos- soms in February and March, _ Stems scarcely any, but several, erect, stiff, short branches, with their ultimate tender divisions four-sided, the angles sharp, and rather rough; whole height of full grown plants about three feet. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, reflex- ed, from oblong. to lanceolar, entire and. pretty smooth ; from two to four inches long, by from one to two broad. Racemes_ terminal, solitary, rigidly erect, cylindric; from three to six incheslong, Rachis four-angled. Flowers ra- ther small, colour yellowish pink, on the lower part of the raceme in opposite fascicles; about its middle in threes on common very short peduncles and pedicels; above single. Bractes to the single flowers, solitary; to the lower, three, Calyz single, five-parted; divisions broad-subulate. _ Corol with the tabe shorter than the calyx, and an ample-campa- nulate throat ; border sub-bilabiate ; upper lip projecting: al- most horizontally, bifid; Jower lip broad, and three-parted. Filaments much curved, hairy near the base, | Anthers single, linear, lodged under the upper lip of the corol. Germ two-celled, about four ovula in each, paon —— obtuse. Capsule linear,smooth, . — , ee ey ee eee j y eekey, erect, smooth, See saiaiea alk. late. Spikes terminal, and axillary, Flowers remote, Co- rol with filiform tube, and bilabiate border, This very preity plant, a native of the Great ‘Andomnn, was brought from thence to the Botanic garden, by Cent Stokoe, Flowering time the beginning of the hot season. - Stem erect, round, smooth, while young swelled above: he insertions of the leaves, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, ob- long, waved, smooth, and shining on both sides. Spikes numerous, terminal, and onan renee consider- Justicia, - DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ‘V17 able recurvature, longer than the leaves, round, and smooth, Flowers opposite, remote, pure white. Bractes, three small ones to each flower, shorter than the calyx. Corol; tube long, straight, filiform ; upper lip of two, erect, wedge- shaped divisions united below the middle; under lip three- parted ; divisions broader and pointing downwards, a ments short. Anthers - without the tube. xb oi picta, Linn, sp. pl. ea: Witt 1. 88, Shrubby, erect. Leaves broad-lanceolate, pointed. Ra- cemes sub-globular, T'ube of the corol widening, vertically compressed, margins of the segments of the border revolute. ~Tsjude-maram. Rheed. Mai. 6. p. 111. t. 60. ? ' Folium bracteatum, Rumph. Amb. 4, p. 73. t. 30. — A large, elegant, ramous shrub, common in gardens, and one of our finest ornaments. I never saw it wild; itis in _— er most part of the year. ll Leaves opposite, short-petioled, odin chasis mooth- pointed, generally variegated with large white spots, though — sometimes of a uniform green, and we have a variety with the leaves uniformly ferruginous, Racemes terminal, short, erect, smooth, Flowers large, generally of a beautiful crim- son colour. Practes opposite ; below three or four-flower- ed ; above one-flowered. Corol, throat compressed, divisions of the border soon after they expand becoming spirally revo- lute, with their inside wrinkled, and beautifully aaron vn small chrystalline specks. 6. J. | piaichlate Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1.89. - Herbaceous, erect, four-sided, brachiate. Leaves sub-ses- cite, mci sps Racemes — 2 hopes eeciecil — HS iB: - _DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, — Justicia.. . Kreat is the name by which it is known on the» Malabar; coast, &c. where it is much used in medicine, and is the bitter. of the famous Nortrum; called Drogue amere.. _Cara-canirum. Rheed. Mal, 9, p. 109. t. 5. 6. . _ Teling. Nella-vemgoo.: ‘. _A native of dry ground, under the shade of trees, bushes, &e. Flowering and seed time, the wet and cold seasons. Stem erect, generally annual, at least down to the 00's: branchy ; slender, four-sided, jointed, smooth, one to two feet high. Branches opposite, cross-armed, four-sided, spread- ing. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, lanceolate, entire,, smooth; two or three inches long. - Racemes terminal, and. from the exterior axills, horizontal, long secund, four-sided, Flowers remote, rose-coloured, long-pedicelled, alternate, erect, downy. Bractes a large, exterior opposite pair; within the flower-bearing one there are two smaller, embracing: the, base of the pedicels. Corol bilabiates. Tube recurved ; lips, linear, and reflected ; the superior broadest, three-toothed; the inferior two-toothed. Filaments as long as the lips of the: corel, projecting, hairy. Anthers very flat, obovate, firmly united at the base, and three-bearded. Capsule erect, sub=. ego sealer meee or pefour. i in each cell, cylindric. = Fa J. wlisblioa Pree aie ed, Willd. 1. ‘P- 87. _ Annual, erect, four-sided, hairy. Leaves s oblong and linear. Spikes axillary, recurved ae: soms of the leaves, secund, = _ with four, Mere, _ Tucose seeds, Pee-tumbat Riieed, Mal. 9. 1, 46. . A native of Coromandel,and generally found on old walls ; in flower all the year. _ Stem annual, erect, four-sided, hairy, esdhiahailbeas ee op- posite, —- branches from the base; whole ten pie a Justicia, DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. n9 and in general shorter than them ; in luxuriant plants com- pound. » Bractes opposite, small, lanceolate, hairy. Flowers alternate, sessile, erect ; upper lip purple, the rest» white, Calyx of five, long, hairy, ensiform ‘divisions, Corol bilabi- ate. Tube sub-cylindric ; upper: lip erect, broad, and trifid; under lip narrower, recurved, and ‘bidentate. Filaments pro- jecting, straight, and about as long as the lips of the corol, Anthers simple, united and bearded at the. base. Capsule ob- long, erect, hairy, length of the calyx. \ Seeds generally two in each cell, oblong, rough, Ks 8. J. polysperma. R. saiktiak Annual, creeping, round, jointed. Leaves sessile, lanceo- late, downy. Spikes imbricated. Bractes three-fold, one- flowered, woolly. Capsule with from twenty to — seeds, te Chhota-micheta. It is a native of Bengal, and appears during the cold season amongst grass, &e. in uncultivated places, = i Sonia diffuse, or creeping, very. Tamous, six to. sahil in- ches long, round, jointed, a little downy. Leaves opposite, sessile, lanceolate, entire, - downy. — Spikes” terminal, and axillary, imbricated with opposite, decussated, flowers, and bractes. Flowers small, pale blue. Bractes three-fold, one- flowered, the lower one a little broader than the two lateral, all are woolly. Calyx woolly. Capsules linear, e inne er to — small roundish seeds, 9. J. acaulis. pete ~~ ph ed, Willd. 1. 84, R, Conoms on 2. N. 127. ~ Root perennial, stemless. Siem radical, cian inate: oblong, crenate. Spikes ascending, snheicete Corel xin-— penis HBS mianseenedens #29 Hoag n ground, generall under the edn of trees, ete gorsne ca * H4 120 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Justicia, Root perennial. Stem none. Leaves radical, spreading close on the ground, sessile, wedge-form or oblong, crenulat- ed, rugose, woolly on the under side; from six to twelve inches Jong. Spikes radical, several, as long as, or longer than the leaves, ascending, imbricated from top to bottom, with small, rigid, pointed bractes, each of the superior: ones embracing a flower, and two small lateral bractes, Flow- ers sinaidp white. Calyx five-leaved, the superior leaflets nouch the largest. Corol ; tube cylindric, recurved; upper lip vaulted, under lip broad, three- parted, with the divisions — two-parted, Capsules conical, tae Seeds. ws ong form. . | ae © “SECT. IL. “Corols Fiabiate™ either? double. — 10. J. nasuta. Vahl. Symb. 2. 15, Linn, sp. pl. k “Witla. 1. 90. Shrubby, emct, Leaves short-petioled, lanceolate, Panicle axillary and terminal. Upper lip of the. corol, linear and, bidentate ; under lip broad, three-lobed, ;Pubeolli. teheee Mal. 9. 135. t,.69. “Teling. and Tamu, = ee ik at This species 1 have only found i in garde is; fron whence it originally came, I cannot say. Flowers all the year round, but never ripens its seed, owing I imagine, to its being always .propagated by cuttings, layers, or slips. . It grows to be a large thin shrub, of five or more feet in height. _ ' Root woody, ramous, Stems many, erect, ramous, the old woody parts round, and covered with pretty. smooth ash-co- loured bark ; the tender branches, and young: shoots jointed, smooth, and ohalctaly six-seeded. Leaves opposite, petioled, broad-lanceolate, point obtuse, above smooth, below a little “downy, entire ; from two to four inches long, and from one to — Justicia. _ DIANDRIA MONOGYNTA, a ways three-cleft, as also the sub-divisions. Peduncles and pedicels short,’ round, a little downy. © Bractes minute, Flowers small, white. Corol with a long, slender, compressed tube; wnder lip broad, three-cleft; upper lip erect, linear, sides reflected, apex bifid. Nectary,@ fleshy ring surround- ing the base of the germ. Anthers —_— the tube, twin. _— I have not seen.it. Obs. Milk boiled on the roots, is reckoned, iby the Indian sbieatdili aphrodisiacal, and as such often employed ; for no medicines are more sought after by the natives of India than those which are imagined to belong to that class, The roots rubbed with lime juice, and pepper, are used, and often with good effect, to cure the ring worms, or Herpes miliaris, which in India is a most troublesome a and igh common, , They are also used for the bite of poisonous snakes ; hence the Telinga and Tamul name Naga mulli, or Jasmine of the Cobra de capella; Naga is therefore prefixed to the name of the most of their antidotes, or medicines supposed to destroy the effect of poison, and occurs very often in their writings, For likethe ancient physicians of Greece, Rome, &e. those of India at this day, make poisons, and their ashton a very chief part of their studies ; but from the seeming inac- tivity of a very large share of thera, we may safely conclude, that their practice is equally frivolous with that of the an- cients, and ought to be discouraged as much as possible ; be- cause at least, they pee the application of more eflica’ - 14. J. lanceolaria, R. >» Te : -acSheabby,ereta:'iLeaoe sets Lancet iene ee cicles ans panicled, sera on Soest Dube ofthe'co- 122 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Justicia, This beautiful shrub is a native of the Silhet district, where it is called Toogee. . Flowering time, the cold season; = >) Stem: erect, or nearly so; branches round and smooth; and — while young, swelled just above the insertion of the leaves ; whole height from tw® to four feet. Leaves opposite, petiol- ed, lanceolar, (that is tapering equally at each end) entire, acute, smooth; from three to six imches long, and one or two broad. Flowers numerous, large and rosy, collected in nu- merous terminal, clammy, fascicles of from two tofour each, and. embraced. by numerous, ensiform, clammy bractes, like a common calyx, and longer than the proper perianths ; the whole forming a pretty large panicle at the end ofeach branch. | Calyx. -five-parted ; segments . ensiform, smooth, Corol ; tube long, slender, curved outward, and like my’ J.- speciosa, latebrosa, &c. has a half twist ; which, as inthe er- chidee, brings the lower lip uppermost... Border bilabiate, lips nearly equal, oblong ; the superior, in its inverted state, three-toothed ; inferior entire. Filaments from the mouth of the tube of the corol, shorter than the lips, and. projecting straight over the under one. ' Anthers double, one at the end of the other, forming one straight line ; the exterior half of the posterior one being attached to the apex of the haeoaniag iat to the base of the exterior anther, 12. J.:speciosa, R. Perennial, erect. Leaves ovidedtiie ta Secinalty ae lary and terminal, proliferous, few-flowered. Bractes oppo- site, foliaceous, Corol bilabiate, tube curved, and twisted; hps equal ; upper one tridentate, lower one bidentate. A native of the interior parts of Bengal, where it blossoms during the cold season, and is then one not the ere — of the forests. ~ Stems erect, juinted. Branches few, vee ence Bark of the. pee parts ash-coloured ; of the young shoots smooth and gre mn. Leaves opposite, alates petioled, ovate-cor- ire, piichenmetnilemenkiads $form geste. for Justicia, . DIANDRIA MONOGYNIAy 123 inches long. Peduncles axillary, often. proliferous. and much longer than the petioles, supporting two, or three flow- ers. Flowers large, beautiful, bright earmine colour. Bractes or floral leaves opposite, sessile, from ovate to linear, Calya, simple, divided almost to the base into five ensiform, equal. portions, Corol; tube long, slender, curved, villous, and somewhat twisted ; wpper lip linear-oblong, recurved over the tube, apex three-toothed, at the base some dark coloured spots ; under lip broad-lanceolate, pointing directly to the earth, apex slightly two-toothed. Filaments inserted in the mouth of the tube of the corol, nearly as long as its border, and, with the lower lip, pointing downwards, _ 4nthers dou- ble; linear, purple, with pale coloured pollen. Style as long as the stamens, and beyond the tube taking the sanie direction. with them. Stigma slightly emarginate, Capsules a with two seeds in each cell, eet t ory O81 bi ok bt 13.5. tinctoria. R. intel Shrubby. Leaves siioleds oamnebiiadia ilies il minal, fascicled, involucred, Aatherslinear, 8 Folium tinctorium. Rumph. Amb, vi. 51. tab. xxii, fk diy _ Beng. Batia-rung. Found in the woods about Calcutta, in full flower. in October. te hawaii Stem scarcely any ; branches numerous, deloverenty 3 young shoots jointed, and swelled above the joints, round, a little. downy. Leaves opposite, petioled, oblong, entire, covered with a little harsh pubescence, two to three inches: long. | Peduneles terminal, forming the exterior axills, each support ing some few fascicles, of four to six sessile. flowers. Bractes’ Rie sessile, ies those of the oieceneten . : ae " | saliieit 4 cover ee Peacicle of Fiala beenel sanull. Calyz five-toothed. Corol s tube, Heian of he Jargest involucres, filiform, having a 124 : DIANDRIA MONOGYNTA,. Justicia. small twist near the apex. Border two-parted, both divisions oblong, the upper one three-toothed. ectary a gaping cup in which the germ rests. Stamens projecting. Anthers two on each filament. Style rather longer than the stamens, Stigma obtuse, 14, J. bivalvis, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 82. Shrubby. Leaves lanceolate. Peduncles axillary, and terminal, three to six-cleft ; lateral pedicels often trifid; ulti- mate divisions bearing a small head of sessile flowers, between two, unequal, linear bractes.. Capsule clavate, A native of the Moluccas. : Sarah - Folium tinctorium of Rumphius, quoted under the pre- ceding species, does not so well agree with J. bivalvis. I think Adel-Odagam, Rheed, Mal. ix. 81. t. 43. moo to neither of them. pe 15. J. chinensis, Vahl. en, pl. 1.110. Perennial, retroflex. Leaves cordate. ,Umbellets axillary, from three to five, and with the pedicels (from three to five), distichous, Eecalncels obovate, unequal. Capsules round and thin. — | J. chinesolie =e sp. pl, ed. Willd. 1. 80. Burm. ind 8 t.4.f.1. is bad if intended for this plant. 5 A middle-sized, straggling, suffruticose species introduced : from China into the keel nes! ieee a —— oa August till December. | i Stem scarcely any ; brivailide sell iaiaihy? igus straggling and ascending, slender, somewhat six-angular, pretty smooth ; striking root where they rest on the ground; __ from one to two feet long. Leaves opposite, petioled, ovate cordate, entire, somewhat acuminate, smooth, from one to two” inches long. Peduncles axillary, from three to five in each ve eaeepitensl Corot mines and | generally alee 2 Utricularia, DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 143 1. U. stellaris, Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. 1.113. Floating, leafless. Scape. with a verticil of bladders. Corol without a nectary. Teling. Natsoo, . ; Grows in. sweet waters, appears and flowers during the rains, | Root. conferva-like, swimming. in, and not on the water ; I have always found small utriculi adhering to its filaments, _ Scape sub-erect, simple ; raceme above the verticil of bladders, which rest on the surface of the water, , 2. U. fasciculata. R. Floating, leafless. Scapes naked; racemes four to eight- flowered, Utriculi sub-ovate, two-horned, scattered amongst _ the fibres of the root. Nectary horn-shaped, ascending to the edge of the under lip, Capsules beaked, drooping. Teling, Natsoo, Beng, Janjee. Found swimming in stagnant water in the vicinity of Gal. cutta, at the end of the cold, and beginning of the hot seasons. Stem jointed, length various, but often extending some feet, Radicles most numerous, in alternate fascicles, multifid, filiform, armed with minute, acute bristles pointing forward. Uiricult scattered, semi-ovate, dotted, becoming black by age, with two horns from the mouth, Seape erect, from four to eight inches high, bearing generally from four to eight, alternate, large, yellow, pedicelled flowers. Bractes ovate, _ obtuse, one-flowered, Calyx of two large, permanent leaflets, - - Corol as in the genus, Nectary horn-shaped, blunt, nearly as long as the under lip, tees oe girl A085 fonnete conical, —" refiecten, ' 144 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Lycopus, Beng. Chota-janjee. Found with the last described in stagnant water near Cal- — cutta, during the same seasons, A ged smaller plant. Root of a few, scarcely compound, filiform fibres, and some scattered, subulate nigrescent utriculi, with two or more fila- ments from their apices, or mouths, Scape about three inches high, filiform, naked, generally two-flowered, Flowers yel- low, small. Calya and corol as in the genus, with the faux closed, and a horned, ascending nectary as — as the under Hip... Capsules globular, erect. * LYCOPUS. Schreb. gen. N..AA. Corol four-cleft, with one of the divisions pee rine') Sta- mine distinct. .Seeds four, retuse. 1. L. dianthera. Buch, : é Annual, erect, four-sided. Leaves petioled, sins bpothie. serrate. Calyx bilabiate. : A native of Nepala; from thence Dr. Buchanan sent the seeds to this garden, (in 1802,) where the plants thrive dur- ing the cold season, and blossom in March and April. _ Stems annual, straight, four-sided ; sides slightly erooved ; angles somewhat hairy. Branches. axillary, decussate, four- ideas &e. like the stem ; height of the whole plant gicin:ginada sds general length about one inch, or mee va Racemes terminal. | Bractes opposite, lanceolate, one- flowered. Flowers pedicelled, small, very pale pink, alinost ? white, Calyx bilabiate; upper lip ascending, tridentate; lower lip bipartite, and definded with hair on the inside. Corol; tube short, somewhat four-sided ; upper division of 4 tborder. broad and emarginate ; lateral two of the same | Salvia. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 145 tube of the corol. Anthers twin on the long filaments, and ‘ tending to be so on the shorter ones, but very small, and abortive. Is nearly allied to Thymus. 4 SALVIA. Schreb. gen. N. 50. Corol irregular. Filaments two-forked ; anthers ‘on the su- perior ones, Seeds naked, 1. S. Bengalensis, Kon. MSS. Shrubby. Leaves linear-ovate, lanceolate, entire. Racemes verticelled, verticils distinct, many-flowered. An anther to each division of the filaments. The natives on the Coromandel coast have no name for it. From Bengal it was introduced into the gardens on the coast a few years ago, by Mr, Parsons; and is only found in gardens, where it grows to be a Jarge, straggling shrub. Trunk seldom erect, woody, sometimes as thick as a man’s arm. Bark cracked, and peeling off in irregular pieces, Young shoots downy, round, Leaves as in salvia officinalis, _ Racemes terminal, often compound, verticelled, Verticils approximate, globular, many-flowered. Flowers white, Calyx gibbous, downy, three or four-toothed. _ Corol, both lips recurved, or spreading. Stamens, there are sometimes three or even four filaments, with their extremities bifid, each division bearing an oval proper anther. Obs. The leaves of this plant smell and taste considerably ‘stronger, I think, than those of S S. officinalis, and are applied to the same uses, ‘ ; ie eet 2; 8; brachiata. R& oe — brachiate. Leaves ei crenat,tomen- steering time the ood season. VOL, I. J 146 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, — Boerhaavia. Stem annual, erect, ramous, four-sided, four-grooved, dow- ny; from one to two feet high. Branches opposite, cross- armed, ascending. Leaves opposite, petioled, running down on the petioles, oblong, irregularly crenulate, waved, rugose, a little downy ; two or three inches long. Racemes terminal, long, verticélled. Verticils six-flowered, six-bracted, Flow- ers small, pale purple. Stamens as in the genus, with the rudiments of two additional sterile filaments between the large pair. Germ elevated on a large fleshy receptacle. This plant is slightly aromatic, cee “8. S. lanata. R. Herbaceous, four-sided, villous, - Leaves sessile, ovate-ob- long, entire, woody. Flowers verticillate. Found by Colonel Hardwicke on the most elevated moun- tain near Adwaanee, on the road from Hurdwar to Sirinagur. Tt is his S. integrifoha, See Asiatic Researches, vol, 6. p. 349. Obs. Salvia rosea of Vahl, is the same as S, coccinea, an American plant, which though in a manner naturalized here, _ "has no right to a place in this Flora. * + BOERHAAVIA. Schreb. gen. N. 13. * Calyzx inferior, gibbous, entire, permanent, and becoming | an enyelope for the seed. Germ one-celled; ovula single, erect. Corel campanulate, inserted on the ae Seed S0-_ litary. Embryo conduplicate, with inferior radicle, and cen- tral perisperm. 1. B. procumbens. Herb. Banks. __ . Root fusiform, perennial. jE as procumbent, smooth, | Leaves variously cordate, covered with a silver coloured. pellicle underneath, Flowers terminal, in long-peduncled_ - heads, Stamina three, . Sans, Poonurnuva, Shoteghnee, ery peor sy rie Boerhaavia, DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 147 — Beng. (rile fdotia: the red variety ; and Shiwetd-poor. ’ na, the white one. Talu dama. Rheed, Mal.7. p. 105. t.56, good fora young luxuriant plant. < B. diandra, and erecta, Burm, Flor. Ind, p.3.t.1. seem to be our plant, taken at different ages. — B. erecta. Gert. Carp. ii. 209. t. 127. This species, whatever it may be, whether diffusa, erecta, repanda or diandra, or all of them, is the only one I have yet found in India. It is not common every where, but is one of the most troublesome weeds wehave. The Jong, fusiform, perennial roots, strike so deep, as to render it no easy task to dig them up. It produces blossoms and ripe seed during the whole year. Root perpendicular, fusiform, slender, perennial. Stem none ; branches many, herbaceous, with alternate, bifarious, roid smooth, jointed, often coloured branchlets spreading close on the ground, to an extent of many feet in a good s soil, but never striking root. Leaves opposite, unequal i in size, one of the leaves being alternately smaller in each pair; pe- tioled, variously cordate, margins more or less scalloped, - waved, and often coloured ; sometimes acute, sometimes ob- tuse ; all are smooth above, ‘and covered with a silver colour- ed pellicle underneath; size very various. Petioles shorter than the leaves, ahamutiodl Peduncles solitary, from the naked swelled joints between the leaves, but nearest to the “small leaf. At the ends of the branches, where the joints ap-_ proximate, they are so numerous as to form a panicle, each supporting’, from one to five, or six small heads of sessile, red or sto minute flowers. Cah, lyse (apparently the germ), be- i fey, th vothed cup, | eo quires a powerful lens, and much patience to understand the ; J2 . in the divisions of which acy fleaneieg are inserted. It ay 1 oe ott tiie 148 DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, _ Fraxinus. structure of this part of the flower. Filaments generally three, as long as the style. Anthers of two round lobes, — Germ oblong, hid in the belly of the calyx, one-celled; ovulum single, attached to the bottom of the cell. Style slender. Stigma peltate. Pericarp turbinate, five-sided, covered with clammy, pedicelled glands, &c. exactly as in — Geertner’s figures of his Boerhaavia erecta, Obs. There are two varieties of this plant in Bengal ; one with red, the other with white flowers ; in other respects they are the same. In the St, Helena plant, B. repanda of the : Hortus Bengalensis, the leaves are more angular, the inflores- cence terminal, racemes yerticélled, with one bracte only to cart pedicel, ~ FRAXINUS. -Polygamous. Calyx none, or four-parted. Corot none, or» four-petalled. Samara one-seeded, with lanceolate wings. 1. F. chinesis. R. Arboreous, with erect branches. Leaflets from three to seven, lanceolate, serrate. Panicles axillary, and terminal, Flowers without petals. ' A native of China, from thence introduced into the Bota- nic garden by the late Col, Robert Kyd, prior to 1793: where they blossom in April, but have not pias me or ~ even full grown seed vessels. Our small trees have little or no trunk ; but several, hect, ‘aight branches and branchlets ; giving an entire height of from ten to twelve feet. Leaves opposite, pinnate, and ternate, Leaflets from three to seven, opposite, lanceolar, serrate, smooth, The pairs short-petioled,.much smaller and shorter in proportion to their breadth than the terminal one, which is protruded on a longer*winged petiolet, Petioles channelled, eae, with a marginal wing. Panieles axillary, and _ termin i pel, 2 Sons and* composed of most slender, , sub-verticelled ramifications, alate 2 Ligustrum. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. wae in all four-toothed.. Corel none, Filaments in the complete- ly hermaphrodite flower much longer than the calyx. In the female wanting, or abortive, and hid within thecalyx. Male flowers not rey Germ ovate. Style long, and curved, Stigma. emarginate, | at LIGUSTRUM, Corol ur-clef Berry HEF of two cells with two seeds in each cell. 1, Limepalense Wall. Leaves ovate, or ovate-oblong, acuminate, villous below. Panicle terminal, villous, consisting of sub-erect crowded racemes, __. A native of the mountains of Nepala, where it is called _ Goomgacha and grows to be a considerable tree, producing profuse clusters of white, sweet smelling flowers from April to June ; berries ripen in four to six months. Tewashies round, opposite, ash-coloured, dotted with cal- lous spots ; all the younger parts covered with abundance of soft hairs, Leaves opposite, spreadmg, on very short chan- nelled petioles, varying considerably in size and figure, mostly ovate with a rounded base, sometimes oblong or lanceolar, generally tapering into a long apex, terminated by a short cylindric poit; from one to two, or even three inches long, of a firm texture, shining above, densely villous underneath, when old entirely smooth, with very fine remote _herves communicating with each other in reticulated arches hear the margin. Panicle somewhat contracted, ovate, from four to six inches long, sessile, consisting of pretty crowc e racemes, the uppermost very short and alternate. Peduncles —_ villous, es a decidiunns aeunl) lanceolate bracte un- F ch division. Flo 10rt Hed, ‘smooth, dispos- oH in ‘small bun sii Calyx truncate, with four hardly dis- : Gamble, teeth. ord: tube equalling the calyx ; segments — 33 oe 1 DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, Piper. of the limb spreading, lanceolate, acute, twice as long as the tube, Stamina almost as long as the corol ; filaments insert- ed within its mouth between two opposite fissures ; anthers oblong, bursting lengthways on both sides, Pisti/ shorter than the stamina, smooth ; ovarium roundish, two-celled, with two pendulous ovula in each cell; style short ; stigma fleshy, oblong, acute, Berries oval, dark blue, with a beautiful bloom on them, rather smaller than those of the common Pri- vet ; pulp brown, Seeds one or two; cotyledons broad-ovate. In other respects like those of Ligustrum. Gert. Carp. ii. 72. tab, 92. Obs. This species differs from L. japonicum, Thunb. and lucidum, Ait. in the figure and villosity of its leaves and the contracted shape of its panicle. It may perhaps be found the same as L, sinense, Lour. especially if the racemes, which _in the flora Cochin-chinensis are attributed to that tree, are considered as panicles, which indeed has been done by the illustrious author of that article in Rees’s New Cyclopeedia, © VERBENA. See Didynamia Angiospermia. DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA. - PIPER. Schreb. gen. N. 59. Ament filiform, imbricated with peltate s scales, Corol none. Germ, one-celled, with a single, erect ovulum. .. « seeded. Embryo i inverse, and furnished with an ample pe i 1. P. nigrum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 159. © i ' Leaves bifarious, obliquely ovate-cordate, acuminate, po- lished, from five to seven-nerved, ae Pepper-vine, Marsden’s History of Sumatra, p, 105. | | Molago-codi. Rheed, Mal. 7. 23. t. 12. a Sans oe Mureechung, Mourichangs. Kole, Piper. DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA. 15l Hind, and Bit Murich, or —— Tam. Moloovoo-kodi. Pers, Pilpil. Arab, Filfil. Malay. Ladda, Cultivated in various parts of India, and its Islands, 2. P. trioicum, RY Tricecous, shrubby, rooting. Leaves bifarious, obliquely- ovate, acuminate, from five toseven-nerved, glaucous, Aments leaf-opposed, cylindric, pendulous, - ‘Teling. Murial-tiga. Roots long, striking deep into the earth, Stem jointed, winding, when old woody, and scabrous, running along the ground to a great extent, or up trees, &¢, when trained to ‘them; from each joint issue roots which take firm hold of- whatever they meet with. Branches numerous, alternate ; the young ones smooth, the old ones woody, and scabrous like the stem. Leaves alternate, petioled, cordate, broad- oval, ovate, or oblong, pointed, from five to seven-nerved, (generally five,) above, smooth and glossy, below, lighter coloured, often somewhat bubbled, from four to six inches ° long, and from two to four broad, Petioles channelled, smooth, an inch or an inch and a half long. Stipules selitary, spathiform, falling off when the leaf begins to be unfolded. ‘Maze Puant. Calyx an ament, leaf-opposed, odtincled, filiform, pendulous, closely imbricated with five spiral rows, of fleshy, oval, one-flowered scales, Scales oblong, peltate, “ sessile, one-flowered. Corol none. Filaments three, very : thie, and very orth scarcely elevating the Gathers thoxe than in ‘ie ade: dinbricated with Ace pid rows of scales, Scales as in the male. Corol none. 3 34 : 152 DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, Piper, Stamens none. Germ sessile, globose, immersed in the sub- stance of the ament. Style none. Stigma three-lobed, white, glandular. Pericarp,a small, round, red, somewhat eae berry. Seed one, globose. Obs, When I described the three vines included in this one species, I had not seen Piper nigrum, and took it for granted that this was it; but as soon as I had:an opportunity of see- ing that famous plant, | was immediately convinced that they were distinct species. In ¢riotcwm, the leaves havea glaucous appearance, which readily distinguishes it from P, nigrum, which has shining dark green leaves. 7 This vine I have found wild amongst the chainof mountains — directly north from Coringa, in the Raja-mrundri Circar. It delights in a moist, rich soil, well shaded with trees; to them it adheres most firmly, by means of the roots which issue. from the joints, Flowering time, in their wild state, during the latter part of the wet season, September and October, The pepper ripenssin March, With me, inacultivated state, they flower almost all the year round, but chiefly AyORE the | fore-mentioned period. 3 Lhave not met with any author, or any sort of informeatOh : that could lead me to think black pepper was the produce of a dicecous plant, (male and female on distinct vines,) till upon examination, I found it was so. ‘Attention to this circum- stance will, 1 think, render the culture of pepper much more - certain, and successful, viz, by planting to each prop tree a male and female plant, the male on the sides from whence — the most prevailing wind blows; and the female. on. the other, | rs The vegetable world is full of proofs ‘that the otha id system of the immortal ‘Linngeuas is founded. on the soundest principles; and not a single plant have I ever found in India, that does not corroborate this fact, The Arabians “i rom time immemorial knew, that to render the Srostet Hates Piper. DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA. 153 female flower, just before it is ready to burst and thrusting therein a branch of the male spadix. 1 have therefore the utmost reason to conclude the pepper vine will be much more productive, if the above-mentioned circumstance be attend- ed to, by the cultivators, I think, if the Malays in Sumatra bad known it, the accurate Mr, Marsden would not have ne- glected mentioning so material a circumstance, when describ- ing this plant, and the method of cultivating it there. Soon after the above description was made, I found a third vine bearing aments with hermaphrodite flowers; or hermaphrodiie and female flowers mixed on the same aments, At the same time I found that the pepper of the female vine did not ripen properly, but dropped while green, and imma- ture from the plant, and that when dried it, had not so much pungency as common pepper, whereas the pepper of this third sort ripens perfectly, when dry is exceedingly pun- * gent; and has been, by pepper merchants at Madras, reckon- ed equal, if not superior to the best pepper of the Malabar coast, or Ceylon; consequently this must be the sort that is — found cultivated ; the whey two bana k conjectare, — _ neglected, This hermaphrodite lone grows wild, with the male and female, in the moist, uncultivated, over-run shady vallies, ap amongst the mountains ; and also upon the mountains, where © springs keep them moist. Such places are common in the — cliffs of the rocks, and there the vines thrive with the greatest — luxuriance. In its stem, branches, leaves, and stipules, it- agrees perfectly with the other two. The aments are also the same in every respect, except that here are four spiral rows ‘of flowers ; the scales of the ament are as in the other two, viz, the oak and female — nase ‘ ms Unibet oils the Spex of cath bei Ceri? i globular, immersed in the substance of the ament. Style Cy DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, Piper, none. Stigmas three, spreading. Berry globular, size of a small pea, red, smooth, one-celled. ‘Seeds solitary. 3. P. longum. Willd. 1. 161. : - Dieecous, shrubby, creeping. Lower. leaves petioled, broad-cordate, floral leaves sessile, stem-clasping, oblong-cor- date ; all are from five to nine-nerved. =~ ; Cutta-tirpali, Rheed. Mal. 7. p. 27. t. 14. Sans. Krishna, Oopukoolya, Videhee, Magudhee, a" : Kuna, Ooshuna, Pippulee, Shoundee, Kola. : . Beng. Pippul, the root Pippwla-moola. English. Long pepper. Pippul-chittoo is the Telinga name of the plant and Pip. puloo the pepper. The plant I have found wild amongst bushes, on the banks of water courses, up towards the Circar mountains, It flow- ers and bears fruit during the wet and cold seasons, * Ki Root woody, perennial. Stems many, creeping, jointed, round ; joinis swelled; young shoots downy. Branchlets bearing the fruit are erect, with the leaves sessile, or nearly so. Leaves on the creeping branches largest, petioled, broad-« ' cordate, seven-nerved ; on the erect, fruit-bearing branchlets (floral leaves) stem-clasping, oblong-cordate, five-nerved ; all are smooth, somewhat wrinkled ; below pale green ; size various, Stipules of the petioled Leaves two, joining length- ways to the petioles, lanceolate; of the sessile a the leaf, single, spathiform, 6 semereest _ FEMALE riowers. Ament sessile, Aeaboppalees pedir, a erect, cylindric, imbricated with five, or more, spiral rows of small, orbicular, permanent, | peltated, one-flowered scales. Calyx none. Corol none. Stamens none. Germs numerous, aggregate, sessile, sub-orbicular, Style none or exceedingly _ short, Stigmas three or four-lobed. Pericarp aggregate, sub- : ‘sylindrical, pommpones of iemsly united, one-seeded — i a only ofr as Vhave been able 1 : Piper, DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, | 155 learn, that this plant is cultivated for its pepper. When the pepper (ament) is full grown, it is gathered and daily expos- ed to the sun, till perfectly dry; after which it is packed up in bags for sale. . The roots, and thickest parts of the creeping stems, when cut into small pieces and dried, forma considerable article of commerce all over India, under the name of Pippula moola ; for which purpose it is particularly cultivated in many of the vallies amongst the Circar mountains. This sort is more esteemed, and bears a higher price than that of Bengal; ’ where by far the largest proportion is cultivated. — It is, as well as the pepper, chiefly employed medicinally, and the consumption of both these drugs is very great. ~ . CurtivaTion 1n Bencat., The long pepper is not pro- ry pagated by seed, but by suckers, and requires to be cultivat- ed upon a rich, high, and dry soil. The suckers are trans- planted soon after the setting in of the periodical rains, and the pepper (which is preserved merely by drying it in the sun), is gathered in the month of January, after which the. stalk, and branches of the plant wither, and the roots only re- -main alive. A bigha of land (the third of an English acre) will yield in the first year about a maund (eighty-four pounds) of the pepper, in the second year four maunds ; and in the third, six ; after which, as the plant becomes annually less and less productive, the roots are grubbed up, dried, and sold ; and fresh roots, or young shoots are set in their stead, the entth requiring merely a slight covering of manure. The plants. are never to be watered, and at the commencement of the hot season the roots are to be carefully covered. with _ Straw to preserve them against the heat of the sun. a : plants should be set about five feet asunder. Large quanti tiee.of this, pepper. and-aleo ofthe soute ane 9% aa rt _* 156 DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, . Piper, plant brinjals (Solanum melongena), in the intermediate space between the plants, A. P: Chaba, W. Hunter in Asiat. Res,.ix. 391. - af Shrubby, creeping. Leaves short-petioled, ovate-lanceolate, base unequal, scarcely triple-nerved ; aments leaf-opposed, erect, cylindrico-conical, firm and fleshy. Sans. Chuvyung, Chuvika, Chuvee, Chavikung. - Beng, Choee. Piper longum. Rumph. Amb. 5. p. 333. ts 16.f.1. Obs. Cattu-tirpali. Rheed. Mal. 7. p. 27.t. 14. represents a very different species, the fruit of which is also used over | the continent of India, and particularly in the western part thereof, as long pepper, and is much cultivated in Bengal, — chiefly for its root, which the natives call Pippula. Wood- ville’s figure, in his Medical Botany, is very bad, for it an- swers neither to this, nor P. longum, Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd, 161. which may be called the long pepper of the continent of India, Blackwell’s figure is still worse. 5. P. sylvaticum. R. . : Leaves all. petioled, broad-cordate, from five to seven-nerv- ed, obtuse ; lobes of the base large, equal, circular, Aments erect, short-peduncled, columnar ; male flowers tetrandrous. A native of the mountains on the north-west border of Ben- gal, where the natives call it Pahari peepul, or mountain long pepper, and use it, both green and ripe, in their dishes. In the Botanic apeatees: it — = the antes ojucpeeee ing the rain ee Root perennial, Stem or ails bdisidlicn creeping on. the ground, or rooting on trees like Ivy, and most of the East In- dia species of pepper ; all the young parts polished. Leaves alternate, petioled, equally-cordate, obtuse, from five to seven- ; = es from three to five inches aren me from two to Piper. _DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, | 157 opposed, short-peduncled, or columnar, slender. Scales one- flowered. Corol none. Filaments generally four, oval, fleshy, very short. Anthers one-celled, Germ none, Female aments on a different plant, leaf-opposed, short, peduncled, cylin- dric. Germ oval, orie-celled, ovula single, erect, that is, at- tached directly to the bottom of the cell. G6. P. peepuloides, R. Leaves equally-ovate, and ieleacoolate, chit -petiilied, from three to fiye-nerved, smooth, acuminate, -Aments sub- sessile, cylindric. Pippul the vernacular name in Silhet, and on the adjacent range of mountains where it is indigenous, and considered the Pippul, or long pepper of that country, and as such is used in medicine, &c. It differs specifically, no doubt, from the long pepper plant of lower Bengal, as well as from that of Rumpbhius, called P. Chaba by Dr. W. Hunter, who found ‘itcommon on the Island of Pulo-Pinang. It is immediately known from P. longum by the shape of the .leaves, as well _ by their being all equally petioled ; and from P. Chaba, by both sides of the base being equal, or nearly so; whereas in Chaba the lower side ismuch larger and longer. Root perennial. Stems and alternate branches creeping, young shoots smooth, Leaves alternate, short-petioled, from ovate-oblong to lanceolate, entire, acuminate; generally five- nerved, of which the exterior two are minute, and when absent the leaf is perfectly three-nerved, from three to five inches long, by from one to three broad. Stipules stem-clasp- ing and petiolary. The female aments have only been found, which induces me to think this species is dicecous, as most of them are; they are short-peduncled, solitary, and directl; i rei the leaves, bos hive no wag gee ‘in ‘common perm con iis NG sd ied Mir yethaatd idged in ait tle hollow in the apex of the perisperm. : 58 DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA. Piper. 7. P. Betle. Linn, sp. pl. ed, Willd. 159. Perennial, dicecous, creeping.” Leaves alternate, bifarious, cordate, from five to seven-nerved, smooth, entire. ——— aments sub-cylindric, drooping. ; P. qui saururus, &c. Burm. Zeyl. p. 193, t. 83. i 2. Beetla-codi. Rheed. Mal. 7, 29. t. 15. Sans, Tambooluvullee, Tamboolee, Naguvullee. Hind, and Beng. Pan. I have never met with this plant in its wild state, Itis— much cultivated over India and the Malay countries, Root woody, ramous. Stems woody, creeping on the earth, or rising up trees, poles, &e, when carefully trained to them ; smooth in every part; innumerable roots issue from the joints, by which the plant is well supported after they have taken hold. Leaves alternate, petioled, bifarious, from broad- cordate to obliquely ovate-oblong, somewhat pointed, from five to seven-nerved, entire, smooth ; from four to six inches long, and from two to four broad. Petioles of various lengths, and channelled. Stipules as in P. nigrum. Female aments leaf-opposed, peduncled, filiform, sub-pendulous, closely . imbricated with several spiral rows of scales, and corollets, — _ exactly as in P. trioicum. The male flowers 1 have n never | found, 5 Obs, The plants are Sala raised from the slips, and cuttings, these are carefully planted in a rich moist soil, well inclosed, and shaded, so that they are in great measure, pro- tected from both sun and wind, In some places, small plan- tations of Zschynomene grandiflora, are made to train them to, and to keep off the sun; in others, poles are employed for — the first, and a thin shed of mats over them for the latter pur- ‘ pose, they require to be frequently watered during the dry weather, Every history of India describes, and every body __ knows, the use the Hindoos of all ranks make of the leaves of see plant. ‘ Piper. DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, 159 | 8. P. Cubeba, Gert. Carp. ii. 67. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, . 159. Shrubby, creeping. leben petioled, gitabmte ' scarcely triple-nerved. ments leaf-opposed, on peduncles longer than the petioles, Berries pedicelled,. Piper canninum, Rumph, Amb. 5. t. 28.,f. 2. A native of Prince of Wales’ Island and the countries to the eastward of the Bay of Benet; ; 9. P: a R. Creeping, every part very woolly. Leaves nolioled; ovate- lanceolate, scarcely three-nerved. .Aments leaf-opposed, one- peduncled, as long as the petioles, Berries pedicelled, clavate. A native of the Malay Archipelago. 10. P. methysticum, Linn. sp, pl. ed. Willd. 161. Leaves short-petioled, from salient to obliquely re-enter- ing, cordate, from seven to nine-nerved, entire,smooth, =~ A native of the Malay Archipelago. There is no doubt but this is the Sirium decumanun. Rumph. Amb. 5. t. 27. but whether it be the South Sea Island intoxicating species, I _ cannot: take upon me to say. The leaves are often a foot “Jong, by six or eight inches broad, on sheathing petioles not more than a an inch long. Ihave not seen ees fruit. “11. P. arborescens. R. Arboreous, creeping. Leaves petioled, ovate-elliptic, acute, — five-nerved. .Aments leaf. opposed, long, slender, cylindric, ‘ a on peduncles about as long as the petioles. Sirium arborescens tertium, iyi ae Amb. ba “ , 28, ee A. native of the Mou ca Islands. egos 2 * Shrubby, sigan Leaves shor-petle, broad-tanecoe ‘i 160 DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, Piper. late, prominently five-nerved, smooth, sdments. leat opposed, long-peduncled, filiform. ns ‘A native of the Molucca Islands, 13. P. Malamiris. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. 160. Shrubby, creeping. Leaves: rather long-petioled, from salient to re-entering, cordate, five or seven-nerved. Aments Jeaf-op posed, filiform, on peduncles that are zeacrany — er then the petioles, ; . Amalago. Rheed. Mal. 7. t.16. hoa » Sirium. Rumph, Amb. 5, t.116. f. 2. is no doubt P. Beile, | 5 must be excluded. fom the list of ne ——s to this — | 14, P. rostratum, Rv Ss anh ie SERRE Armee 2329 _ Creeping, tender parts hairy, pais short-petioled, obo- vate, cuneate, obtuse-pointed, villous, five or seven-nerved, downy, meeting above the base. ments leaf-opposed, short- peduncled. Berries beaked, A native of the Moluccas. 1. P. diffusus, Vahl. enum. pl. 1. 333. 4 Leaves long-petioled, round-cordate, sharp- pointed, five or seven-nerved, smooth. | Aments cylindric, short-peduncled. Sirium frigidum, Rumph. Amb. 5. 345, i. sin nine a “: native of the Moluccas. * 16,P. sarmentosum., R, . io aiacliinaame: Erect, ramous at the top, darmentose. docwel from wall cordate to oblong, smooth, five-nerved, the superior ones sub- sessile. /4ments leaf-opposed, short-peduncled, _ P. latifolium, Hunter in Asiat, Res. ix. 392. -. Gadu, Cando, or Gudukh, of the Malays, ae _ A native of the Malay Islands, and brought by Mr. Smith fe in oth Brericgncien, where | it cheives + eis and ae Piper. DIANDRIA TRIGYNTA. 161 Siems erect, from six to eighteen inches high, ramous:at top, jointed, and smooth. Sarmentose shoots’ of a great length, issuing im abundance from the top of the root, and the lower part of the stem, by which the plant is quickly propagated to any extent. Leaves alternate, the lower ones petioled, broad, re-entering, cordate ; the upper ones sub-sessile, obliquely-ob- long’; all are sitigott) on both sides, and shining on the upper one, Aments solitary, opposite to the leaves, short-peduncled, oblong, very small, being rarely more than a quarter of an inch long. ‘Germs oval, one-celled ; ovulum one attached by the base to the bottom of the cell. Fruit compound, sub-cy- lindric, about the size of an infant’s finger, when ripe softish, and of a dark green or livid colour. Berries numerous, most of the germs prove abortive, one-celled. Seed solitary, oval, attached to the bottom of the cell. Integuments single, thin, light brown. Perisperm conform to the seéd, friable. Em- bryo shape of ¢small broad inverted cone sang in the bea of the e pattie Radicle superior. Ve ee angusatfitiaat R. sss pacgultenaalala Scandent, or creeping, smooth. Leaves scasile, obliquels y- lanceolate, vey smooth. Aments leaf-opposed, short-pedun- cled,. A native ol the ney Archipelago, 18. P. saxatile, Wail, _ Stems furrowed, creeping, with villous joints and fascicled sub-erect branches, Leaves sub-sessile quatern, obovate- cuneate, fleshy, convex and villous beneath, with three co- loured nerves, veinless, Spike terminal, —— —-* | A native of the neighbourhood 66 Kaaasilie dah Napela, . i hel sccm _~ first four sicled, soinetimes i cacte, opposite or Ce ate branches: ae © OL K 162 DIANDRIA TRIGYNIA, Piper. from each joint, which scarcely rise four inches above the surface on which the plant grows. Stems thread-like, pubescent, with four or five furrows; branches once or twice sub-divided into small opposite branchlets. Leaves gener- ally quatern, rarely tern, four or five lines in length, obtuse, cuneate at the base, shining. and somewhat concave above, with copious short hairs below, slightly ciliated, without veins or ribs, and losing even the three pale-coloured nerves. when dry ; the lowest verticils many times, the others two or three times, shorter than the interstices between the joints. Leaves of the young shoots linear-oblong, measuring some- times an inch inlength, _ Petioles very short, villous, erect, with a gland-like body in their axills, villous. Spike terminal, very slender, from an inch to an inch and a half long, round, villous, excavated on its surface with innumerable small pores in which the flowers are lodged, on a ep about half its length. Obs. All the parts of this elegant little epecioa vies. a faint pungent taste. I have not been able hitherto to examine its organs of fructification in a satisfactory manner, CLASS IL. | TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. VALERIANA. Schreb. gen. N. 60. ~Calyz 1 none. Corol superior, one-petalled, gibbous on one : side a the base. Seed one. lee 35 y! Jatamansi. ‘Sir'W. Jones in Asiat. Res. vol, ii, P- 405, and vol. iv. p. 109, Roxb. ibid. 433, | Flowers triandrous. Leaves entire, four-fold, the inner radical pair petioled, and cordate ; _ cauline Racers lanceo- late. Seeds crowned with a papiss. | . spica, Vahl. en. pl. 2, 13. - OLAX. Schreb. gen. N. 61. Calyx entire. Corol three-petalled. Nectary of afew sen tive filaments inserted on the petals. Germ one-celled ; ovu- lum one, erect. Drupe half hid in the enlarged daly x) olls- seeded. Embryo inverse, and amply furnished with a peris- 1. ee Corom, pl. 8. N. Wai — ; Shrubby, scandent. Leaves ovate-oblong. - Petals and nectarial filament bifid, . > Fissilia psitiacorum. Linn, sp. coi ed, Wita, - 194, “2a Kee Backiniwese = a A large, woody, ching & ek ietiee of «son Flow- & ers all the year round, K2 164 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Loeflingia. Trunk leaning, often as thick asa man’s thigh. Branches numerous, climbing. TJ’horns one here and there over the old woody parts only, very large and strong, shaped like the * horn of a Rhinoceros. Leaves alternate, bifarious, petioled, oval, entire, smooth, about two inches long, and one broad. Racemes axillary, solitary, half the length of the leaves, few- flowered. Flowers small, white. Calyx cup-form, entire, permanent, and, enlarging with the fruit. Petals three; one, two, or all three half two-cleft; divisions linear, spreading, Neetary, a bifid, filiform, yellow body, rising from the in- side of the base of each division of the petals. Filaments three, short, standing between the nectaries, iserted into the petals below their fissures. Anthers oblong. Germ superior, ovate, one-celled, containing one ovulum attached to the. bot- tom of the cell, Style length of the corol. Stigma, simple. . Drupe or berry globular, three-fourths covered. with the en- larged calyx, yellow, pulpy, one-celled, Birds are fond. of them. Seed single, globular. Integuments two; ‘exterior nu. ciform; inner one white and spongy. Perisperm conform to the seed, amygdaline. Embryo inverse, minute, lodged i in the apex of the perisperm. Cotyledons two, equal, minute, semilinear. Radicle larger. than the cotyledons, oval, supe- Rs 0. ehchiate R. ane ue Shrubby, scandent. Leanes bifarious, from. ovate-lanceo- late to oblong, entire, glossy. Racemes axillary > before the flower expands bifariously imbricated, Ce the spiculee i in Briza.) Drupes ovate. A very large climbing soni or die, 30 any sesiaat plant can be so called ; a native of Cues: where it flowers i in the hot season, . . " wa LOEFLINGLIA. Schreb. gen. N. 71. Hippocratea, —_ TRIANDRIA MONOGYNTA.” 165 LLL, indica, Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd, 1.191. Retz. Obs. 48, Annual, diffuse, branchy. _ Leaves sub-verticelled, eunei- form, Flowers terminal, Style three- cleft. Calyx rs. Pharnaceum depressum. Mant. 564, A small, diffuse, annual pee ‘appearing and oe in the cold season. ~ ' Stems many, pressing on the ground, branchy; ‘Leaves opposite sessile, with many smaller ones from their axills, which makes them appear verticelled, oval, smooth, from a quarter to half an inch Tong. Stipules four-fold, membrana- ceous, with many small similar scales about the flowers. Flowers sessile in the divisions of the branches, and terminal. Petals linear, with three or four-toothed a pices. HIPPOCRATEA. Schreb: gen. N. 73. Calyx five-parted. Petals five. Germ three-celled ; ovu- la a few, attached to the axis, ‘Capsules three, one-celled, two-valved. Seeds meinbrane-wihged: ae erect, —_— out perisperm. “1. HL indica. Linn. silbe a: Willd. 1. 193, Corom. ples ba N. 130. | Shrubby, climbing by tendrils. Leaves oblong, ventricose, serrate. Corymbs axillary. Capsules oblong, two-seeded, A large, twining shrub, a native of forests, hills, and wild uninhabited places, over various ‘parts of svat Flowun about the beginning of the hot season. Tendrils simple, woody. Leaves opposite, short pti oval, pointed, serrate, smooth, shining, about two | inch if Panicles Ca Umbells ) saree opposite, —, ak ° at a8 ee oc Se ee F ithddiedF vo te xin. ee : egg than the stamens. Capsules from one to three, | es 166. " TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Hippocrotea. - ghe-célled, one-valved. “Seedle. two, broad:winged) affixed to the bottom of the tec by the apex of the mine 2. H. obtusifolia. R. Shrubby, climbing by the help of cirrhose branche Leaves eliipically oblong; entire, obtuse. | Corymbs termi- nal and axillary. Capsules obovate, four-seeded. A native of the coast of Coromandel. Flowering time in the Botanic garden, March and April; the seeds take one year to ripen. _ Stems and larger Secoibhes ligneous, and covered writh cracked: spongy grey bark, climbing to a great extent by the help of the smaller, round, smooth, diverging, opposite branchlets, which take a turn or two round their supporters, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, entire, (large luxu- riant leaves are sometimes obscurely ‘pahnliet obtuse, firm, polished, length from three to four inches. Stipules of the leaves four-fold, minute, subulate; those of the branchlets larger. Corymbs terminal, or from the exterior axills, often compoundly dichotomous, and shorter than the leaves, Bractes minute, ovate. Flowers small, pale greenish yellow. Calyx five-leaved. Petals five, ovate-lanceolate. Nectary, a large, fleshy receptacle receiving the base of the germ} its margin becomes thin, and is divided into three, tapering, antheriferous segments, which are at first erect, but soon be- come revolute, Filaments no other than the three “segments of the nectary. Anthers two, round, one-celled lobes. Germ three-lobed, immersed in the thick, fleshy nectary, threé-” celled, each cell containing several ‘seeds, attached to the | axis, Style the length of the filaments ; stigma three-toothed. | Capsules three, obovate, thin, smooth, slightly veined, about — two inches long, by one and a half broad, one-celled, two- valved. Seeds generally, four in each capsule, two on each pe about its lial of, a si ee —_ 3 Hippocratea, | TRIANDRIA,MONOGYNIA, ~ 167 the capsule. Integuments two; exterior a very thin, smooth membrane; interior rather thick and somewhat spongy. Perisperm none. Embryo erect. Cotyledons oblong, pale green while recent. Plumula two-leaved. Radicle short, inferior. Obs. In the following species inion are ood to sdaaleas in the capsule, in every sai. respect it resembles bnctheth this species. 3. H. arborea, R. Sub-arboreous, with climbing branches. Leaves opposite, oblong, serrulate, cuspidate. Corymbs axillary. Ceneuet linear-oblong, two-seeded. , B. Katha-paharia. | A native of the interior parts of India. It blinded’ in idee. ly, and the seeds ripen in March. Trunk tolerably straight, but short, about as thick as a. man’s thigh, covered with smooth; dark brownish ash-colour- ed bark. Branches and branchlets spreading and climbing to a great extent, young shoots round and smooth, indeed. highly polished ; many of them form the claspers. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, drooping, oblong, taper-pointed, serrate, very smooth on both sides ; from six to seven inches long, and about three broad. Stipules none, but two or three small, dark brown, scaly gems are found in each axill, €orymbs axillary, dichotomous, with a pedicelled flower in the divisions. Bractes opposite, small, permanent. Flowers very numerous and small, pale greenish yellow. Calyx beneath, generally four, though mnertions vy cena, . parted ; divisions rounded, and only about half the length of | the corol, Corol four, five, or six-petalled, (six is the m 0 st common, and I mapper oe wease 5 EN in a is comet perm: Félamen nnn te riot aaiied than pier Se. aes four-lobed, Germ ovate. Siyle short. Stigma K4 168 . TRIANDRIA MONOGYNTA. —— Johmaa. simple. Capsules three, cuneiform, striated, three inches long, and about one and a half broad, -one-celled, two-valy- ed; valves. exactly boat-shaped. Seeds two, ovate, com- pressed, enlarged with an oblong, soft, thin, spongy wing, the attachment is between its apex and the base of the ' eapsules. Integument single, ochraceous. _Perisperm none. Embryo oblique, compressed. Cotyledons conform to the seed, yellow. Plumula two-lobed. Radicle oval, sub-in- ferior. JOHNIA. R. kobe inferior, five-leaved, or five-parted. Corol_ five- petalled. Nectary or receptacle of the stamina and pistil- lum sub-globular. Germ three-celled ; ovula one or two in each cell, palates Berry one or mone-eandeil Embryo with- out perisperm, direction various, In honour of the Rev. Dr. John of Tranquebar, It is near- ly allied to Salacia, Gen. pl. ed, Schreb. 1380, ts proper place is probably the third order of this class, A. J. salacioides, R. | Leaves opposite, broad-lanceolate, entire, firm and polish. ed, Calyx five-leaved. Petals sessile. Anthers sessile on the three divisions of the nectary. A native of Tipperah, Chitageng, wal one ei 08 ‘hie eastern frontier of Bengal. It flowers in the Botanic garden during the hot season, and ini inirapsa caries A ; the rains, a ae A large, very ramous halk ith ‘ate eclae poate much, and often drooping elegantly. Bark of the ligneous — pests Irena eeagnearemsnevenmronny sett: thier panne twigs smooth. | Leaves opposite, short-petioled, ciated veladinaiad Mt satins, firm, points ghiaenaccsiah es ; about four inahal : Johma, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, : 169 flowered. Flowers small, deep greenish orange colour. Calyx of five round, villous margined, minute leaflets. Petals round, sessile, with the margins recurved, #ilaments no other than the three, short, triangular segments of the fleshy urceolate 1 nectary, elevating the three, large, twin anther even with the stigma. Germ above, conical; three-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the axis. Style scarcely any ; stig- maacute, Berry size of a crab apple, round, smooth, dull- red. Pulp in considerable quantity, white, of a soft, tough, gelatinous consistence, and eaten by the natives. Seeds two, or three, separated by a thick partition of pulp ; transversely oblong; flat on the inside, convex on the exterior, Integu- ments single, spongy, brown. Perisperm none. Embryo con- sisting of two equal cotyledons, conform to the seed, and un- til vegetation begins, so firmly, and closely united, that they seem to be of one entire piece. Radicle small, lodged at the umbilicus, relative, centripetal. 2. J. coromandeliana. R, Leaves opposite, serrulate, polished. Calyx five-toothed, Petals unguiculate. A small, strageling tree, or rather a large climbing shrub, a native of forests and mountains of Coromandel. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oval, smooth, shining, : sometimes most slightly serrulate; about three inches long, and one and a half broad. Peduncles axillary, several, bow- ing, one-flowered. Calyx inferior, one-leaved, five-cleft. Pe- ~ tals five, clawed, round, or oval, spreading. Nectary alarge globular, fleshy receptacle, elevating the stamens and pistil. Filaments three, spreading, shorter than the petals, inserted into the top of the nectary round the germ. © neha” small, 170 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Commelina, IRIS. Schreb. gen. N. v.97. Corol six-petalled, petals unequal, alternate, jomted wa spreading. Stigmas (petals, ) from cowled to bilabiate. ‘1. I. chinensis, Curtis’s Bot. Mag. N. 373. — : Root creeping. Leaves ensiform, drooping ; 3; scape ramous, many-flowered. This elegant species has been introduced from China into the Botanic garden, where it thrives best in cool, moist, shady situations. Flowering time the beginning of the hot lio viz. March and April. MOREA. Schreb. gen. N. 80.0 60> Corol six-petalled ; the three inner siren. _ narrow- er. Stigma three-cleft. 1. M. chinensis. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. 245, Thunb, Diss. N-19. a Herbaceous, stems compressed. Leaves bifarious, ensiform. Umbels terminal, proliferous, all six-petals expanding. ol Belameanda-shular mini. Rheed. Mal. 11. t, 37. | Ixia chinensis. Curt. Magaz. 171. : Pardanthus chinensis. Amals of Bot. 1. 416. ves Beng. Dusbaba, or Dusbichundi, — ‘A native of India, China, &c. Flowers in ‘the a re in the Botanic garden near Calcutta. _ ae Is common in gardens over India, where it blossoms dur- ing the rains, and ripens its seeds in the cold season, COMMELINA. Schreb. gen. id a in erior, three-leaved, Coral three-petalled, ¢ saci EERE: nas ss _ Commelina, — TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 171 form head. Capsules two or three-celled. Seeds one or more, Lmbryo simple, and furnished with a perisperm. | 1. C. communis. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, 1. 249. ~ Polygamous, creeping. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, smooth ; spathes many-flowered. Petals unequal. Anthers dissimi- lar. Capsules tricoccous. : Beng. Juta-kanshira. Ephemerum dipetalum, Kempf. amen. p. 888. t. 889. This species is common over the low moist parts of India; flowering time the rainy season chiefly. Root fibrous, Stems numerous, creeping, dichotomous, jointed, round, smooth ; length very various. Leaves alter- nate, sessile on febular: vaginated sheaths, ovate-lanceolate, acute; margins waved ; smooth on both sides, with delicate, parallel veins running Jengthways on the under side; from two to four inches long; mouths of the sheathing petioles a little ciliate. Spathes terminal, or sub-fasicled, cece a Us pba sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 250. Polygindias creeping. Leaves cordate. Shintlee thrée- flowered. Petals unequal. Anthers dissimilar. Capsules three-celled, six-seeded. _Ephemerum bengafense, &c. Pluck. 1. 27. f.3. Beng. Kanshira, also Kanuraka. ‘Like the last described, this species is a native 6h wet ras over Bengal, but much scarcer and smaller ; flowering time the same. | _ Stems creeping, dichotomous, jointed, hairy. Leaves 4 : ternate, petioled, cordate, nervous, a little hairy, about an inch long and three-fourths of an inch broad. Pet es | shicathing, hairy, and ciliate. i ee and axillary, cled male one, Flowers small, bright blue colour. Calyx a ad : 172 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Commelina, as in the former. Corol three-petalled ; two of them larger, and long-clawed, as in the former species, the third small, and sessile, but coloured. Nectary, stamens and pistil as in C. communis, only the style is here beautifully spiral. Pe- ricarp three-celled, three-valved, with generally two seeds in each cell. 3. C. moluccana. R. : Be ; Annual, “creeping. Leaves sessile, oblong, about. five- nerved, Flowers terminal, solitary, sub-sessile. Petals equal. A native of the Moluccas, Compare with Vahl’s ©,-at- tenuata, ‘ 4,C. salicifolia. R. - Polygamous, creeping. Leaves pers each Pe- tals three, equal, _ Spathes from four to six-flowered. . An- thers dissimilar, Capsules pointed, three-celled, six-seeded. Sans, Langulee. Beng. Panee-kanshira. Found with the former in wet places near Calcutta, it is also a native’ of the, Lotemandel coast ; Bometing time - wet season. Stems creeping to a great extent, sheild reve ait jointed, very succulent. Leaves alternate, sessile on their cy- lindric sheaths, narrow-lanceolar, a little hispid on the upper side and margins, when the finger is drawn backwar 3 from ri four to six inches long, and not quite one inch broad. Sheaths — cylindric, striated; mouth ciliate. | Spathes leaf-opposed, long-peduncled, semi-cordate, long-pointed. Flowers berma- phrodite, and male; large, of a beautiful deep azure colour, disposed as in the Fee species, only there are fewer to the common shorter peduncle, and often two on the longer ones Calyx as in the former. Petals three, equal, except that the ¢ low pne. pee a shorker claw is nearly ecasile. ” Ne a ries, Commelina, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 173 pointed, three-celled, three-valved, with two seeds mic: Cattle are fond of this species, 5. C. nana. R. Creeping. Leaves cordate-lanceolate, sah Mleaping. Flow- - ers terminal, sub-panicled, Petals equal. Capsules rete celled, many-seeded. - A-native of wet places over India; it appears dea the rainy and cold season, » Root annual, | Stems or branches creeping, enveloped in the sheaths: of the Ieaves; from three to six inches long. Leaves stem-clasping, sheathing, linear-cordate, somewhat ci- liate, and waved ; sheaths a little downy. Flowers terminal, sub-panicled, small, bright blue. Calyx equal, permanent. Corol of three, roundish, equal petals. Wectarial filaments as in the other Indian species, but naked, . Filaments three, from the middle downwards clothed with hairs, converging over the stigma, .4nthers blue. Style shorter than the-sta~ mens, straight and tapering. pr sane tee ont with finda aise ix ci iE ee te Obs, Were the style longer, or even spirally as: I aonid have concluded this plant to be Commelina spiraia, Mant. 2, p. 176, Burman’s figure of his C. diffusa. Flor. Ind. tab. 7. f. 2. isso bad that no comparison can be made ; es or 4 the same, 9 . ‘ e C. smudigorit. Linn, sp. at: ed; Willd. 1. 252. - Frequently creeping. Leaves linear, sessile, senshi ; Blowers terminal, racemed, diandrous, Priel away sit | sules three-celled ; cells -desuuwguncak y SRG p. “Beng. Kanduli, 5 TAB, Shien ean! Rheed. Mal, 9. pl 123, t. 63. spel Stems none, es it Pleainat: sliort creeping, aio dint) 174 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA,” Commelina, ed branches, with their flower-bearing extremities sub-erect. Leaves alternate, sessile, linear, sheathing, smooth, excepting a few fine hairs about the mouths of the sheath, Racemes — terminal, long-peduncled, corymbed, bearing on their upper side many small blue flowers in succession. Bractes solita- ry, one-flowered, concave, caducous, Calyx three-leaved, equal. Corol of three, obovate, equal, blue petals. Nectari- al filaments with a very few, moniliform, blue hairs ; corpus- cles two, clavate. Filaments three, two of them ascending, larger, and thicker, well clothed with beautiful jointed blue hairs, Anthers blue, oval, the third filament sterile, Style short, ascending. Capsules three-celled, with two scabrous — in —_ ; iy beat 4 ; 7. C. cespitosa, R. m4 | Polygamous, creeping. Ligeanieiiatiniis Spathe iebeiss peduncled, few-flowered ; petals nearly equal. oo three-celled, with one or two seeds in each, _ A native of Chittagong, from thence.the plants were sent ‘to the Botanic garden by Mr, W. ——— pat is in Bloee som most part of the year. . » Stéms and branches numerous, slender, ical S ioedle : creeping close’ over a space of some feet and striking deep’ root at the joints. | Leaves alternate ; sessile on their'smooth’ cylindric sheaths, ovate-lanceolate, the upper ones i narstinte! er and longer; all are entire, and smooth on both sides. “Sheaths, besides the usual leaf-bearing one, there isa second ‘or inner annular one wherever there is a peduncle, Pedun- cles solitary, leaf-opposed, about an inch long, round,.and smooth. Spathe cordate, or rather semi-cordate, in their na- tural folded state, each embracing two common pedicels; the ‘superior one bearing two, ‘three, or four, pedicelled male flowers; and the lower about as many hermaphrodite ones; all eesihink?:i in succession. Calyx of three, equal, obovate, concave, pele. blue, .pelluckd te fetal three; heya Commelina. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 175 sub-sessile, all of a most beautiful light blue colour, Vecta- * ries three, erect, on the upper side opposite to the stamens. Filaments three, equal, ascending. Anthers, the middle one larger and sagittate. Germ ovate, (in the male flowers want- ing.) Style ascending, as long as the stamens, Stigma in- _ curved, simple. Capsules oblong, three-celled, with one or two seeds in each, 8. . ace fat R. Root perennial, Racemes radical, erect, with alternate, ma- ny-flowered spathes, Petals equal. Leaves in a tuft, ensiform, Beng. Kurelli. A native of Hindoostan and introduced into the Botanic: garden by Colonel Hardwicke, where it blossoms in March and April, at which time the plant is: destitute of leaves, nothing being seen but the racemes ornamented with large lively blue flowers round the apex. ... Root perennial, composed of several, smooth, elongated tubers, with a few filiform radicles, Stems none, except the sheathing bases of the leaves which appear a month or two after the flowers; these are ensiform, waved, acute, smooth, and marked with several straight veins; length from four to eight inches, breadth one. Racemes radical, erect, straight, smooth, invested at each of the remote two or three joints, with a small, solitary sheath ; these sheaths towards the top are more approximated, each of them there embracing the inser- tion, of a branchlet which bears several pedicelled. flowers, Calyx. the three leaflets thereof broad-layceolate, and consi-, derably shorter than the corol, Petals equal, round, concave. Nectaries alternate with the stamens, hairy. Filaments three, alternate with the petals, longer than the filaments of thenec- _ taries, anal ie, thean bales Ne Se Ne Anthers Dine. ee ehageag't. “eh Rx Bebeeki gen. Ny 9. zat 4 hss ok. Det es et imbricated. roiheoncte with: ee eorot of wo ct valves each. Seed one. - 1. K. monocephala, Linn. sp. Mt ed, apie 1.256. Vahl a 2. 379. ‘Rotth, gram. 13. t. 4. f. 4. tboosieidl 25 emi six to eighteen’ inches high, immpenale jelielide nal, sin; oer vests aut ee », with- obeigigss Abe SRA gabe ae [ok ARIQONG OpAe BI Kyllingia,. TRIANDRIA'MONOGYNIA, 18] _ Pee-Mottenga. Rheed. Mal. 12. p» 99, t. 53. Ad Gramen capitatum. Rumph, Amb. 6. p. 8. t. 8.f- 2. > _ Beng. Sweta gothoobi; Nirbishee, its fragrant aromatic root being accounted an antidote to poisons. Common over India on low shady pasture ground, when totally shaded the heads are — more ils wan is rather uncommon... iy Root fibrous, and’ seoleaiadecnal Culms erect, Some six to eighteen inches high, generally about eight; three-sided, smooth, naked except near the base ; angles sharp, and sides hollowed. Leaves sheathing, as long as the culm, smooth, sharp keeled, Head terminal, oniile oval, generally white. Involucre. three-leaved, unequal, the. largest leaf as long as the culm. Back of the glumes of the corol hispid. Stamens ‘three. Stigma three-cleft, Seed pues: stapes ‘much compressed, smooth, light brown. 12. K, triceps; Linn. sp. pl. ed, Willd. 1,256. 9. Culms from six to twelve inches high, three-cornered, Heads terminal, sessile, from three to six; involucres three or four ; florets diandrous, Seed oblong, without angles. — ..Mottenga. Rheed. Hort. Mal. 12. p. 97. t. 52. A native of low shady pasture ground, ipiit Root somewhat tuberous, with capillary fibres, - Culms straight, from six totwelve incheshigh, smooth, naked, except at the base, obtusely three-sided ; angles rounded. — ‘Leaves sheathing, nearly as long as the peibi: smooth, Head termi- nal, composed of from three to six sessile, oval, white spikes, the largest one is in the centre, the rest in the circumference, Involucre as in K. monoceplfala, Stamens seldom more‘ that two. Stigma two-cleft. Seed eats much compressed, white, no angles, _ tsa 8 FS scabs Eke ge? ‘Obs. It didiere feos, Ky onoce hata nt onlin av no a bor long ls ical pee a have found i ceviant olin = with more than one flower in the calyx. wee a . L3 im TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, _ Kyllingia. 3. K. umbellata. pee sp. pil. ed. . Willd. 1. 257. Rottb. gram. 15, t. 4. f. 2. Culms from one to two feet highs dhveslabled) umbel of ses-_ sile and peduncled, cylindrical, ragged spikes, involucres many; involucels none. Seeds three-sided, linear-oblong. Kolpullu. Rheed, Hort. Mal. 12, t. 63. Mariscus umbellatus. Vahl. Enum. it 2. 376. Beng. Bura-gothoobi. __A native of wet or marshy places. Root tuberous, rust-coloured, with rust-coloured. fibres. ' Culms erect, from one to two feet high, three-fourths naked, three-sided, smooth, Leaves sheathing, nearly as long as the culm, .Umbel ‘terminal, sessile, composed of sessile, and pe- duncled, cylindrical spikes of numerous diverging flowers. Involucre ; universal, many Jeaved, unequal; the largest leaf often as long as the culm; partial, none, Calyx and corol, &c. asin the genus, Seeds three-sided, Obs, As this plant wants the partial involucre it syn K, sumatrensis of Retzius. + K saiantidles R. _ Culms from six to eight inches high, three-sided. U mnbel compound, consisting of globular heads of numerous spike- lets, mvolucre three-leaved. Seeds oblong, three-sided. _An elegant cyperus-looking nese —_— a native of } moist, pasture ground, . _ Root fibrous. Culms dite, tincsthinds anil easilan's to eight inches high, three-sided, smooth. “Leaves sheathing, ‘as long as the culm. Znvoluere ; universal, three-leaved, very unequal, the largest leaf being as long as the culm, and the smallest one inch; pariial, minute. Calyax, corol, &c. as in the genus, excepting that there are sometimes’ two hqvieet in the si same calyx, Tunga, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 183 TUNGA. R. Ament ovate, imbricated on all sides, Calyx one-valved, one-flowered. ‘Corol two-valved. Seed naked. The plants which come under definition I cannot by any means reconcile to the character of Schaenus, nor indeed to " any genus known to me, Ihave therefore constituted a new one of them, under the Telinga name Tunga, which is applied to the whole family of Calamarie. Linn, Cyperoidee. Juss, This genus is probably the same as Vahl’s Hypaelypium. 1. T. triceps. R. Culms from four to eight inches high, a little compressed ; — two or three, tovmntinls involucre two-leaved, ¥ A native of Coromandel, growing with other eyperi. ~~ Root fibrous. Culms erect, mostly naked, from four to eight inches high, a little compressed, smooth, Leaves sheathing, broad, nearly as long as'the culm, Spikes terminal, Hetierally three, sessile, oval, imbricated with innumerable small rust-coloured flowers. Involucre two-leaved, the larg- est is often erect, and looks like a continuation of the culm, it is from two to three inches long; besides these there are two or more oval, lateral, scales. Calyx, a scale, single, nearly as in the scirpi, one-flowered, wedge-shaped, striated. Corol two-valved, membranaceous, shorter than the scale. Stamens three. Stigma three-cleft, Seed oblong, three-sided without bristles, 2.7. inate Re: vs caci Culms from one to two feet high, three-sided.” Spikes se- veral, terminal. Znvolucre three-leaved. Saget _Anative of moist vallies, eee’ igs oy Root fibrous ; “Cuine cre fomone to two et high near- ly naked;.shrees ee thine half as long as s the « cul. Head terminal, generally compos- ed of about seven oval, sessile, closely imbricated eS oe L4 184 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Schonus, Involucre two or three-leaved, very unequal, the largest from five to eight inches, the shortest one, or one and a half, Calyx as in T. triceps, only sometimes three-lobed at the apex. The rest as in T. triceps. lee 8. T. diandra. R, Culms leafy, two or more feet high, three-sided ;_ cor: ymbs terminal; involucres alternate, Flowers sins lniehs Siyle two-cleft, . . A stout, erect, smooth, Jong-leaved species; a native of Amboyna. . Culm jointed, three-sided, smooth. eaves one at each joint, sheathing, rismg much higher than the culm, linear, smooth, acute, three-nerved, about three feet long. . Corymbs terminal, decompound or more, Jnvolucres several, the larg- est at the first division of the corymbs, and like the leaves of the culm, but smaller; spikelets oval, minute, composed of many sma}| brown imbricated flowers as in the seripi, Calyx, a glume, roundish, smooth, Corol ; the two valves, small, placed transversely with respect to the calyx, and smaller than it, Filaments two, one rising laterally from the bosom of each valve of the corol; anthers linear. Germ oblong; style deeply two-cleft. Reed ahr rather ae than the calyx. ; ~ | SCHENUS. Schreb. gen. N. 92. Calyx, or Corol, glumes several ; seed one, naked. “1S. articulatus, R. Culms three-sided, erect, from four to five feet high, joint- ed, leafy. Corymbs terminal and axillary, compound and _ decompound. Style undivided. Seed obovate, beset with | — and crowned with the conic base - te mites pe Cyperus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 185 tains. It may be referred to Vahl’s paints enum, pl. 251220; § su hueden Culms erect, three-sided, leafy, jee cate from fourto five feet high, angles sharp, between the joints fistulous. Leaves of the root as long as the culm, smooth, except that the mar- gins are a little hispid, slender considering their great length, those of the culm from five to eight, sheathing, shorter, than those of the root. Umbels the terminal: one decompound, those only from the exterior axills compound. Jnvolucre of the terminal umbel, from three to four-leaved, about as long as the umbel, leaf-like ; the axillary umbels have no involucre, or, at most, a very trifling one. lowers’ sub-solitary, ches- nut-coloured, Calyx none, Corol; petals four. Style un- divided, with a permanent conical base, Stigma entire, acute. Bristles, six permanent ones surrounding the germ. Seed a little compressed, crowned with a large’ — spongy, conical body, the base of the style. Obs. There is frequently a very slender male flower with. in the large or inner glume of the corol; it consists of ‘one glume or scale, and three stamens. The a coarse i fF nates ; s yoke iors Pp atest CYPERUS. - Glumes chaffy, bifariously imbricated. Corol none. Seed one, naked, , SECT. I. with culumnar Culms. fed 1. C, setaceous, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, 1. 269. Retz. Obs. 5. p. 10. Culms setaceous, from two to slarpe hen ‘highs spike terminal, solitary, naked. _A native of es epee tin flowers = ding the 2.6. Creche ee pled. wind. 1 1. 273. Ret ee Obs, 5. 10. an maggie 186 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. — Cyperus. » Culms from six to eight inches high, round, incurved, half- naked. Spikes lateral, sessile. Involucre one-leaved, besides the continuation of the culm. Seed oval, rounded. -»A native of moist sandy places, over various parts of . India. Root creeping, invested in brown sheaths. Culms half naked, issuing singly from the root at some distance from each other, nearly round, ascending, from six to eight inches long;, the lower half is involved in the sheath of a single, short leaf. Leaf sheathing, generally one to each culm, which is only about half its length. Head about an inch and a half below the extremity of the culm, it consists of five _ or six small, oval, ten or twelve-flowered spikes. Jnvolucre one-leaved, about as long as the spikes; besides these there are some small, chaffy, calyx-like scales, Seed na a : compressed, white. ponds - 3. C. lateralis, Forst. descript. 13. N. 28. | Culms erect, columnar, from eight to twelve inches long, ~ naked ; > head of five or six sessile spikes beneath the straight apees of the culm ; stigma bifid; seed oval, compressed. — - A native of Coromandel. Root creeping, dark rusty brown. Cudms straight and per- fectly erect, from eight to twelve inches high, roundand naked. Leaves no other than a short sheath or two, embracing the base of each culm. Spikes sessile, five or six, forming a small head on one side of the culm about an inch and a half below its apex. Involucre, a minute, subulate leaflet imme- diately under the spikes, and of the same length with them. Scales of the spikes numerous, ovate-oblong, white, smooth and rather obtuse, Stamina three. | Stigma bifid, Seed oval, flat on the inside, and convex on the preemie lead-co- jour or grey, and smooth, | see This differs from the plant which I coli J to vihe us of Retz. fasc..5. p.10. in being perfectly erctand destitute offline; whereas tat species hs eaves ey Cyperus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 187 is smaller, and always ascends in a curved direction ; in that the scales of the spike are acute, in this obtuse, in other res- pects they are very much alike, At present I am inclined. to think C. mucronatus of Vahl and Rottboel may be refer- red to this, consequently Willdenow’s C. mucronatus, sp. pl. Bi = includes these two species. A, C. nudus. R. ~ Culm from three to four feet high, round, naked, intend intercepted. Leaves none; wmbel compound ; involucre chaffy. Stigma three-cleft. ‘Seed three-sided. A native of stagnating, or slowly running sweet water over. India, Root perennial, fibrous. Culms erect, round, naked, articu- lated, smooth, from three to four feet high, above as thick as a common large quill. Leaves no other than a rusty coloured. sheath or two embracing the base of each culm. Umbel ter- - Minal, generally compound, though sometimes decompound. Involucre several small, chaffy scales. Umbellets long, slen- der, peduncled, bowing, composed of from eight to twelve linear, sessile, rust-coloured spikes. Involucels like the invo- — Seed Pl oa three-sided, smooth, light brown, 55 ©. elcid: R. : Culms from two to six feet high, round, tending to pee! gular at the top, naked. - Leaves none. Umbels decompound, with an involucre half its ——e Stigma three-cleft; seed three-sided. | Beng. Gola-methee. Teling. Godoo tunga kooda, _ This species is with the former a native of wet Rene © het Root perennial, toate, atienione poisined erect, from two eee iy ti - Umbels' Ppieetity iy diana Zs : a . und, erect, Involucre three-leaved, equal, pases: = : 188° TRIANDRIA MONOGYNTA. ~ Cyperus, the umbel, sides and keel hispid. Umbellets and partial wm- bellets peduncled, composed of linear-lanceolate, yellowish ’ ype a Seed three-sided, smooth. Obs, Cattle are not fond of it, and it is onl y eaten occasion- ally by buffaloes. SECT. I. with a three-sided Culm. 6. C.. dubius. Rottb, gram. 20. t. A, f. 5. Linn, sp. pl. ad Willd. 1, 273. 3 Culm from six to twelve inches high. Head sceiah, roundish, sessile. Jnvolucre of four or five long leaves, some of them longer than the culm. _ Cyperus longus, Rumph, Amb. 6. p, 5,4. 2. f..1. C. kylling@oides, Vahl. enum, pl. 2, 312. TFeling. Tagadatunga. Beng. Chhota-gothoobi, ' This species in mach like Kyllingia nonocephale, aml. is, with. it, a native of shady, moist pasture lands. __. a, Root, a somewhat tuberous head, with many net-soloured capillary fibres. Culms erect, from six to twelve inches high, three-sided, smooth, the lower third or fourth part involved: in the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves sheathing, radical, em- bracing the base of the culm, very smooth, many . of them longer than the culm, Head globular, size of a larg. cherry, composed of numerous, lanceolate, sessile, white-pointed. spikes. Involuere four or five-leaved, unequal, some of them — longer than the culm, Seed three-sided, pointed, dark rust-. coloured, smooth, Obs. Cattle eat it, 7, C. monocephalus, R. ~ Culms from twelve to eighteen inches high, poseiia: 7 one : minal, ovate, compound ; involucre, from three to four-. Here ‘Cyperus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. ‘189 Beng. Gothoobi, afeel Sortdicsce't A native of low wet places over Bengals fed ain bras _ Root fibrous. Culms straight, three-sided, smooth, gondtal height from twelve to eighteen inches. . Leaves three, four, or five, investing with their sheaths, the lower parts of the culms straight and smooth, length various, the longest about as long as the culm. IJnvolucre, leaves several, diverging, of very unequal lengths, the longest as long as the culm, and the shortest about an inch. Heads terminal, composed of a larger one in the centre, and four or five smaller ones in the circumference, all rigidly sessile. Spikelets ovate, incurved, ten or twelve scaled, each spikelet embraced on the wnder side by an ovate-cordate, smooth, dark brown, bracte. Scales boat-shaped, pointed ; keel greenish; sides deep, polished, chesnut colour, Stamens three. Style simple and undivided to the extremity, Seed three-sided, entries on a spongy whitish receptacle. ~ Obs. The undivided style and spongy nica of the seed distinguish this from all the mre mE ont ge fon in oi ob snail eee) aan wi re ilapincs R, - Diffuse, from two to four inches high. Heads eorvhiabl, glomerate, sessile; spikelets incurved. cates it stoeiie many-leaved. eee oR Rheed. Hort. Mal. 12. p. 101. t. 54. ’ +A native of moist pasture ground, Root fibrous, Culms three-sided, several, diffuse, fromewo to four inches long, smooth, towards the base leafy, ane a dark chesnut colour. Leaves sheathing, two or three em- pia the base of ancl eulm _ about ‘the same length. “twelve-slowered apikes. Involucre kin abveks aa oe Se vd cS jof é 190 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cyperus. rior three larger, being as long as the culm or longer. Stigmas two, revolute. -Seed three-sided. . ; . . 9. C. squarrosus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 274. Culms erect, from four to six inches high, leaves. as long asthe culms. Head terminal, glomerate, round. Jnvolucre _ many-leaved. Scales with acute, recurved points, C. pygmeus, Rottb. gram. 20. t. _ 82. C. Pangorei. Rottb. gram. 31. t,7.f. 3. Linn. sp. pl. . ed, Willd. 1.284, a Culms from three to four feet high, naked. Leaves scarce- ly any. Unmbels decompound ; involucre three or four-leav- ed; involucels setaceous. Spikelets filiform, Seeds ties “Beng. ‘Claas Pie It is common on the banks of the Gasp and serves, ne C. inundatus, the same useful purposes, though in an inka degree. Root jointed, creeping, stoloniferous, perennial. Culms erect, naked, smooth, three-sided towards the apex, sides concave, from two to four feet high, and about as thick asa uill. Leaves 0 one. or SB. Pa aber 7 vey short, oe Cyperus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 203 the length of the umbel ; partial minute, setaceous. Umbel decompound, composed of one sessile umbellet in the centre, and from four to eight deed compound ones in the cir- cumference, supported “on fine, compressed peduncles of unequal lengths, Spikelets filiform, from ten to twenty- flowered, ‘Scales obtuse. Stamens three. Seed oblong, compressed. Obs, Its naked, exactly three-sided culms, and scarcity _ of short leaves readily distinguish it from all the other species — I have yet described,» C. tegetum has the angles rounded, and no Seth: : 33. C. procerus, , Rotth. gram, 29. t. 5. f. 3. Culms from three to six feet high, angles sharp. Umbel decompound, Involucres none; spikelets alternate, linear ; flowers diandrous, Seeds obcordate, reer se without angles, “ Pota-pullu, Rheed, Mal. 12. p. 93. t. 50. Fe Is a native of moist ye Brae &e, amongst the gown. tains, Obs. i. Bengal this plant, or one een like it, (for it differs from it only in having three stamens, the culm, leaves, umbels, scales, and seeds being the same) grows on the banks of the Ganges and so low as frequently to be entire- ly under water during the high tides; yet it thrives and helps to bind the banks of the rivers where it grows, and is one of those plants that prevent their giving way so much to the rapidity of the stream as s they otherwise would do. “84. C. spinulosus. R. ; “Culms from three to five feet high, rigid. Umbel pai BA decompound ; ; spikes long and short peduncled, globular; spikelets ae from three to Sit: Riwaredy a and 204 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cy perus.. Root fibrous. | Culms erect, from two to. five feet high, very rigid, obsoletely three-sided, smooth, four-fifths naked. Leaves sheathing, length of the culm, rigid, striated, margins hispid. _Umbel terminal, decompoitnd, from. six to eight, inches each way. Umbellets with peduncles of various lengths, composed of peduncled, globular heads, and. these again, of numerous small, sessile, linear, lanceolate, rigid, spinulous-pointed, from three to four-flowered ‘spikelets, Jn- volucre from four to six-leaved, unequal, the largest beg from two to three feet long, and the shortest about the same number of inches, margins hispid, like those of the leaves.. Tnvolucel from three to maleate, length of the umbellets. Scales linear. _ Obs. T have not seen the pistil nor seed, It is a remark- ; ably coarse species ; no animal eats it. oe 3% C. elatus, Linn. sp, pl. 7 Willd, 1. 287. Vahl. enum. 2. 363. ~ Culms from six to twenty feet long, sharp-angled. Umbel scarcely decompound. Spikes all sub-sessile, linear, erect. Spikelets most numerous, alternate, from six to eighteen- flowered, anthers gure: 3 in a thread, Peiiad oblong, three- sided. ee _ Beng. Gol-mulunga, tara: 1 esd aes _ Teling, Rakisha, | °°" So 28) gee iter coin's __ This is by far the lage species on the coms of Coroman- del. “It grows in sweet standing water, Root fibrous, Culms erect, from six to twetity feet high, and thick in proportion, naked, except near the base, three- sided, angles sharp, rigid and scabrous, so as to cut the hand readily, other parts pretty smooth, Leaves sheathing, im, small plants, as long as the culm, about an inch in diameter. at the broadest part, triangularly concave, with the keel and margins sharply serrate. Umbel terminal, dee Pee = igi tot Se vlons dang aly, sta a Cyperus. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 205 sessile and from eight to ten peduncled, composed of erect, Imear, short-pedicelled, compound spikes, of simple, sessile, lanceolate, from six to ten-flowered spikelets which surround every part of the compound spikes, * Involucre three-leaved, with some smaller within these three, margins and keel as in the leaves. Involucels small, one-third the length of the umbellets, Scales membrane-bordered, acute. Filaments three, membranaceous. .Anthers ending in a thread. Seeds three-sided, 36. C.. vaibetdites, Vahl, enum. pl. 2. 362. Culms from four to six feet, blunt-angled. Umbel de- compound ; spikes all sub-sessile, linear,spreading ; spikelets numerous, alternate, from three to four-flowered. Seed elliptic, three-sided, ‘ Teling. Pedda shaka. pee A large species, growing in standing fresh weirs, ide os Root fibrous. _ Culms erect, from four to six feet high, pretty ‘smooth, naked, except at the base, obsoletely three- sided, angles rounded, sides hollowed. Leaves mostly radi- _ cal, sheathing, the longest of them about as long as the culm. Umbel decompound, spreading, about six inches each way, Umbellets, two or three sub-sessile, and from five to ten on pretty long peduncles of unequal lengths ; they are compos- ed. of small partial, short-pedicelled umbellets of three to six linear compound spikes, composed of numerous, small, ses- sile, from three to four-flowered, simple spikelets, Involucel from three to four-leaved, of the length of the umbellets, _ Involucre from three to six-leaved, unequal ; the longest from two to three feet, the gacnabrousas inches. | 23 ; t high. Umbel Seka pola, fas. | igi, “ frecbheare aud seteldsen many-leaved ; spikes digi- * 206 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cyperus tate, linear ; spikelets diverging, manaar cress scales with long recurved points. A middle sized species; grows in satay places, ditches &e..: - Root, a somewhat ‘hice head with many fibres. Culm erect, from one to six feet high, mostly naked, smooth, three- sided. Leaves sheathing as in the other species, their mar-— gins slightly armed: with minute prickles, Umbel compound — or decompound, from two to four inches high. _Umbellets sessile, and peduncled, composed of erect, compound spikes, of small diverging, linear, acute, from four to six-flowered spikelets. Involucre many-leaved, unequal, most: of them longer by far than the umbel, margins armed like the leaves. Involucel many-leaved, length of the umbellets. Seed three- sided, oblong, with grooved sides, Obs. In Bengal I have met with this species six feet + high, with a daconipeagd umbel, a foot or more’every way, and with from twelve to twenty-four flowers to the spikelets, the culm between round and three-sided, and im the largest al. most entirely round. ' 88. C, verticillatus. R. : Culms four feet high, three-cornered, leafy at the base. Um- bel decompound; involucre many-leaved ; involucels filiform, spikes of the umbellets verticelled;’ ‘spikelets. ‘anceolate. eles with a hemes ee Seed Tinea, oblong, three-sided. — Besad anip ‘ie’ rains, in n wet low eer the vig of Calcutta. ' Root perennial, somewhat tuberous, with numerous datk:: oe coloured, thick, spongy fibres. Culms naked, except just at the base, from two to six feet high, and about as thick as a stout quill, absolutely thee sido smooth, shining, deep green, Leaves, one, two, or three at the base ofeach culm, and: about thes same hengthy keeled, somewhat, spe ve ee Cyperus. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA,. 207 - short, sharp, aciculz, pointing forwards. _Umbel, compound and decompound. Umbedlets many on smooth somewhat an- . gular peduncles of various lengths, composed of from five to eight cylindric, spreading spikes in a verticel, with an erect, sessile, simple or pedicelled. compound one in the centre. Spikelets most numerous, imbricated, lanceolate, from eight to. twelve-flowered. Involucre many-leayed, some of them nearly as long as the culm, and like the radical leaves keel- ed and armed on the margins, Involucels scarcely so long as their respective umbellets. Scales of the spikelets boat- shaped, with membranaceous margins, and sharp thickened points. Stamens three. Seed oblong, obsoletely three-sided. Obs. This, species comes near Rottboel’s Cyperus alope- . curaidesy,. 389. C.. distans. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 288. Yahi. enum. pl, 2, 362. . Culms about three feet high, ikea eccghaedh Umbel ie compound, with the involucre and involucels many-leaved ; spikelets linear, alternate ; lowers distant, wih obtuse scales. Seeds oblong, three-sided. pine - «1 C, elatus. Rotib.'gram. 37. t. 10... Beng. Panee-mulunga. ‘It is a native of wet places around Samulcota. Root fibrous. Culms erect, two feet high, four-fifths or more naked, three-sided, smooth; angles blunt, Leaves from two to four, embracing the base of the culm, and nearly as long, sheathing, deeply grooved above, and keeled below, smooth. Umbel decompound, from four to six inches high. Umbellets some sessile, and from four to eight, with erect pe- duncles of unequal lengths. Partial umbellets oblong, ra- - crane ee: being Ray aah et alternate , needle-like, diverging ork : many-flowered. 208 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Cyperus. . 40. C. tegetum, R- litle culms from three to six feet high, angles founded umbel decompound. Jnvolucre as long, and longer than © the umbel ; izvolucels chaffy, Spikelets linear-lanced, altar: nate. Seed clavate, three-sided. - Hind..and Beng. Madoor-kati. Is common in ditches, borders of lakes, &c. in the vicinity of Calcutta during the rains. Root creeping under ground, perennial. Culms naked, generally from three to six feet high, obsoletely three-sided, smooth, Leaves no other than two or three sheaths embrac- ing the base of the culms. Umbei decompound; umbellets sub-sessile, and on peduncles of various lengths, sub-ereet. Involucre about four-leaved, one or two of them longer than * the umbel. Involucels minute. Spikelets alternate, linear- lanceolate, many-flowered. Seeds eliptically triangular. — Obs, Those elegant, useful, durable, large mats so com- mon.on the floors of rooms in and about Calcutta, are made of the culm of this plant. When green they are split into three or four pieces, which in drying contract so much as to bring the margins in contact, or to overlap’ each other; m _ this state they are woven. 41. C. alopecuroidus, Rottb. agri 38. t. 8. 77 2, Vall enum, pl, 2. 368. A Culms from four to five feet high. Umbet dslesipniind’ re ‘three-leaved ; spies pease bp 3 Wara-pulla. Rheed. Mal. 12. p. 77. a 42, Cyperus glomeratus, Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. 12. 277. és This is also a large species, and a native of the same places. — Root fibrous. Culms erect, from four to five feet high, except at the bases three-sided, smooth, Leaves as in the other species. Umbel decompound, drooping, from six to res _ ‘twelve inches high. Umbellets one or two sub-sessile, Lame a nee tp eeiniet seta oa ~~ Cyperus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, | 209 tial umbellets peduncled and composed of beautiful, linear, bowing, compound racemes of lanceolate, many-flowered, chesnut-coloured spikelets, Jnvolucre three-leaved, unequal. Envolucels small, frequently only perdi scales. Seed three- sided, smooth, Obs, I have seen small plants with the umbellets sina, dense and globular, ~ 42, C. nudus, R. Leafless. Culms from four to six feet high, three-cornered. Umbels super-decompound, naked. Jailoleciins and involu- cels chaffy ; spikelets subulate, alternate. Seed oblong, compressed without angles. _ Beng. Goola-Methhi. rb A native of low wet places over Bengal. Flowers during the rains, | Lage Root perennial, somewhat tuberous. Leaves no other than a short sheath or two, which envelope the base of the culm, the uppermost one sometimes ends in a short ensiform leaflet. Culm about five feet high, naked, smooth, bright-green _ three-comered, with the angles rounded. Involucres thirée or four, sub-lanceolate, erect, about one-fourth the length of the umbel. Umbels decompound and super deabahipeniil : with the sub-divisions, and slender, smooth, compressed pe- duncles of various length. Spikelets alternate, subulate, of a bright brown colour, each bearing from twenty to thirty flowers. .Stamens three, Style three-cleft, Seed —_ compresied,; without angles. | : Obs, This species is very like C. tegetum, and about the « same sgsss though lam reprise never Dew for mats, as__ 210 ‘TRIANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Scirpus, 43. C. Haspan, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 287. ' Culms from four to sixteen inches high. Umbel super-de- - compound, involucre two-leaved. Seeds globular, white. Gramen cyperoides madasarpatanum, &c, Pluck, aim. 12. F 2. : Teling. Poo-cushalic, : An elegant small species, a native of cultivated moist places. Root fibrous, Culms erect, from four to twelve inches high, three-fourths naked, obsoletely three-sided, smooth, Leaves sheathing, often as long as the culm, very slender, Umbel ~— super-decompound, in small plants as long as the culm. Um- bellcts one or two sessile, and from four to six-peduncled. Partial umbellets of the first and second degrees pedicelled. Involucre generally two-leaved, unequal, the longest rather longer than the culm; involucel a few chaffy scales only. Stamens two or three. Seed sub-globular, pure white, smooth. * SCIRPUS., “Glumes chatty, imbricated on all sides. Corolnone. Seed’ ‘SECT. i Without. Leaves. wih S.tuberosus, R. | feral act : _ Root tuberous. kali cates ial abies aia minal, cylindric, naked. Scales oblong. Rie ee cordate, Seed obcordate, beset with glochidate bristles. Pi-tsi, Maa-tai, Pu-tsai, or Pe-tsi, or water chesnut of the é Chinese. yo _ It is mentioned by Abbe Grosier under the. first name, wes under the other appellations was transmitted from Canton, by* Mr. Duncan, at the desire of the Governor General, for the’ . Company’s Botanic garden, where it blown about the: : lose wt the zap, in sit sy ae Seripus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Qt shaped tubers. Culms erect, naked, slightly twisted to the right, inwardly intercepted: by slender membranes, distant a line, or a line and a half from each other, every eighth or tenth of these partitions, is ef a firmer texture than the others and visible on the outside, even when the plant is growing. Leaves none except a slender short sheath or two at the base of each culm, Spike terminal, solitary, cylindric, naked. Seales oblong, membranaceous margined. Stamens three. “Style two or. three-cleft, at the base swelled out into an ovate-cor- date, compressed shape. Seed obcordate, surrounded with ~ glochidate bristles. 3 Obs, For the economical uses of the tuberous roots of this plant, I beg leave to refer to Abbe Grosier, and other historians. who have had opportunities of observing: in what manner they are employed by the Chinese, and to the following ex+ tract from Mr, Duncan’s letter which accompanied the plants, “The Maa-tai, -Pee-tai or Pi-tse of Abbe Grosier, the water-chesnut, grows in ponds, which are manured. for its reception about the end of March. A pond being drained of its water, small pits are dug in its bottom, these are filled with human manure, and exposed to the sun for a fortnight ; their contents are then intimately blended with the slimy bottom of the pond, and the slips or roots of the plant de- posited therein ; the water is now returned to the pond, and the new crop * tubers comes to perfection bast the etindacened of September. “ This. nut is in high estimation among all ranks of Chinese, not only as a pot root, but also a medicine. It is eaten either boiled or raw: I will not vouch for the truth of the singu- lar virtues ascribed to the Maa-tai, but just relate one of the most plausible. The children here often play with cash in their. mouths, wivicll: sometignes ——— moe never ° fails nahn ¥eliek; “tem considered | a ator wie has the effect of decomposing the metal.” N2 212 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Scirpus. 2.8. plantaginus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1. 291. Rottb. gram, 45, t, 15. f. 2. Vahl. enum, pl. 2. 251. Retz. Obs. 5, 14. Culms culumnar, from two to four feet high, intercepted. Spike terminal, naked, sub-cylindric ; scales oblong, obtuse. Seeds beset with bristles, A leafless, rush-like species; it grows in shallow — sweet water. | Root stoloniferous, with thick, spongy, and ae fibres. Culm erect, round, smooth, naked, except the lower part, which is covered witha membranaceous sheath or two ; in- wardly intercepted with transverse, rigid septums, at every inch and quarter, besides numberless, irregular, smaller ones between, Spike terminal, cylindric, two inches long, naked: Scales obovate, smooth, a little keeled, margins membrana- ceous. Stamens three, with bristles intermixed round the a of the germ. 3. S.tumidus, R. Culms from two to three feet high, round, eS inter- cepted, Spike terminal, cylindric. Scales broad-lanceolate: Seeds beset with simple bristles. _ This species is very much like the last desribed, his y _ naked, somewhat five-sided, slightly striated, otherwise smooth. Leaves no other than a sheath or two. Umbel termi- nal, compound, small, erect. Involucre, a few small chaffy scales, with long tapering points, Stamens single, Stigma three-cleft. Seed somewhat three-sided, white, scabrous: Scirpus. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 219° SECT. Il.. With Leaves. 19. 8. shiesniiyiitaiac Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 204. _ Grows in small tufts, Culms from three.to four inches high, setaceous, erect, culumnar, longer the leaves. Spikes terminal, naked, solitary, oval.. -A-native of poor, wet sandy, pasture land. 20. S. minimus. R. Grows in tufts. Culms Front. one to two inches long, seta- ceous, curved, shorter than the leaves... Jnvolucre three-leav- ed. Spikes terminal, globular, squarrose, about as long as the involucre. Found with S. atropurpureus on poor, wet sandy lands, 21. S. monostachyos. Kon, “3 Culms straight, from six to twelve inches long, culumnar, Spike terminal, solitary, naked, scales roundish. eed obcor-. date, smooth, ip ata - Delights in barren, sandy pasture lands, Root fibrous, purple-coloured. Cu/ms erect, from six to twelve inches high, round, smooth, three-fourths or more na- ked. Leaves sheathing, nearly as long as the culm, filiform, Spikes terminal, single, naked, oval ; Siete few. Scales sub- orbicular. Siyle broad, with dentiena margins, Stigma two- cleft. Seed etme vomprensed smooth, light brown. 22. S. strobilinus. R, ~ Culms two feet high, three-sided, base leafy. Leaves fib, ean Spikes lateral, solitary.-' Seales cordate, idate, Sein two-cleft. Seed roundish, beset with. bristles. ie A native of the soft, wet banks erent, reine: ple, er bok. two ‘feet mre Gracaided. Leaves. two or three, of different sizes, embracing the base of each culm, * 220 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Scirpus. the longest nearly the length of the culm, keeled and deeply channelled, smooth. Spike solitary, lateral, one-third part of the culm below its apex, ovate-oblong, about one inch in length. - Involucre one-leaved, besides the continuation of the éulm, length of the spikes. Scales cordate, cuspidate, smooth. Stamina three, with about double the number of bristles be- tween them. Anthers linear, when old spiral. Germ obovate. — Stigma two-cleft, Seed flat, particularly on the inside, round- ish, obcordate, crowned with a minute portion of the remain- ing style, and embraced by about six slender, soft, permanent bristles which are about the same length. 23, S, seaber, R, Culms erect, from four to eight inches high, angular. Spikes terminal. Scales oblong, — es eas bifid, Seed ob- cordate, scabrous. : - Campare with 8. potytrichoides, Retz, Obs. iv. p. WL _ A native of dry, sandy pasture ground on the coast:of Co- romandel, ~ Root composed. of dark purple capillary fibres. Culms erect, from four to eight inches high, four-fifths naked, an- gular, smooth, Leaves sheathing, mostly radical, filiform, — half the length of the culm. Spike single, erect, oblong, ma- ny-flowered.. Involucre two or three-caducous scales, shorter than the spike. Scales oblong, apex rounded, falling as the seeds ripen. Stamens generally two, Stigma two-cleft. -_ — ape ec mee sae S. Baliosien Kita. ctiex ee . Culms erect, from six to twenty-four iil high, filiform. sts Spikes from two to three, terminal, sessile, and peduncled, involucred ; scales roundish, Seed obcordate, with a callous margin. ‘eoedvediee S ~ Teling. Khooshi-tunga, Scirpus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 221 Root fibrous. Culms sub-erect, four-fifths. naked, very slender , filiform, somewhat five-sided, smooth, Leaves sheath- , in large plants long, slender, and often twisted a little, ia nae plants more rigid,. Spikes two or three terminal, ovate; one is always sessile, the other one or two peduncled, Involucre one or two-leaved, about as long as the peduncled spikes... Seales nearly orbicular, Stamens and style as in S. monostachyos, Seed obcordate, compressed, white, with a . thick callous margin. 25, S. schenoides. Kin. Retz. Obs, v. 14. Culms erect, from six to twelve inches long. Spikes one or two, terminal, naked, acute. Scales pointed. Seed obcor- date, angular, dotted. Beng. Moormoori, A native of dry pasture ground, etc amongst riot Root fibrous. Culms sub-erect, from six to twelve inches high, three-fourths naked, filiform, a little compressed, parti- cularly towards the tops, and striated. Leaves as in the for- mer. Spike generally single, though there are sometimes two, in which case one is peduncled, few-flowered. Involu- cre entirely wanting. Scales large, with a large keel and sharp point. Style enlarged at the base. Stigma three-cleft, preaches scrape very scabrous, pees: shoes 26.8. nse Vahl. enum. ii. 25d. | : Culms from six to eight inches long, slender, curved, stri- ated. Leaves Shorter then the culms. Spikes from two to four, oblong. “uwolnere ‘ two-leaved,* one longer tex the SS spikes, apparently a continuation of the paeee ityletwo- pee villous. 1 Riettsohcedaten’ pest: nrh see 3 bent, Rar nearly Seema, grooved, parti- : eularly. deep on the opposite sides, from six sci eight sniches: | 299 -TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Scirpus. high. Leaves few, subulate, hard, half the length of the culms, Spikes. generally three,. varying however from one to five, sometimes short-peduncled, oblong. . Involucre two- leaved; one erect, longer than the spikes, seems a continua- tion of the culm. » Seales oval, somewhat mucronate. ma cordate, Style villous, Stigma two-cleft, i Obs. It differs from Rottboel’s plant in having the’ sci mucronate, and the stigma two-cleft; yet I think they must be the same, . : 27. 8S. squarrosus. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 308. Rete gram. 49, t. 17. f. 5. Culms from three to six inches long. Spikes fei invo- lucre two-leaved. Scales ending in a long naan _ horn. Seeds angular. ie Motta-pullu, Rheed, Mal. 12. p. 72,1 t. 38. ies! Beng. Goori, - A small delicate species, es in distinct tufts on ary A sandy pasture ground. uo Root fibrous. Culms numerous, bent in various direction from three to six inches long, four-fifths naked, round, smooth, © filiform. ‘Leaves a few only, sheathing, shorter considerably than the culm, Spikes terminal, generally three, sessile, oval. _ Involucre two-leaved, the largest about an inch long; being se nearly erect, it appears a continuation of the culm. Scales _ humerous, terminating in a long, oe recurved ee ee besser ss ee smooth, 28. S. monander, Biew: sp. wl: ed, Willd. i ds su. . Rotts gram. 50, t. 14. f. 3, ad Culms erect, from three to six inches high, angular. a terminal, of three to five spikelets; involucre from two to three-leaved ; scales acute, monandrous, Seed roundish; al» Scirpus. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNITA, © é 223 from three to six inches high, angular, smooth. Leaves fili- form, as long ‘as the culm, woolly near the mouth of the sheaths. Head terminal, sessile, composed of from three to five small, sessile, few-flowered spikes. Involucre from two to three-leaved. Scales pointed.. Stamen single. Stigina — Copenaiet Seed three-sided, short, thick, smooth, white. 29, S, antarcticus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 310. Vahl. enum. ii. 261, Culms erect, from three to six inches high, round.. Head terminal, of many spikelets. Involucres from two to three- pointed, Seed three-sided. Grows on sandy pasture ground. - Root fibrous. Culms erect, from three to six inches high, round, smooth. Leaves radical, embracing the base of the culms, sheathing, half the length of the culm. Head or umbellet terminal, globular, composed of numerous small, sessile, few-flowered, conical, pointed spikes. Involucre from two to three-leaved, scarcely the hengtls of the leas ee: a Seed sh aa amines Sais: 30. acini Sita, Rinbeb orice: 61. t. 17. f. 6. Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. i. 311. - Culms sub-erect, from four to eight inches high, semi-cu- lumnar. Head terminal, of many sub-sessile spikelets, Jn- volucres from two to three; scales obtuse, monandrous, Seed roundish, compressed, Fimbristylis argentea. Vahl. enum. ii. 294. Found on sandy pasture ground, growing in gtd ees 3 with the exterior culms of the tuft curved. 4 Root fibrous. Culms erect, or ascending, cathy naked, — from four to eight inches high, round on omesides ‘and flatten- ed on'the other, sometimes with a groove on the flat side. Leaves as in the former species. end or wmbellet terminal, composed of from fifteen to twenty cylindrical, obtuse, sessile, silver-coloured, many-flowered spikes, Jnvolucre two, three, 224 ‘ TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Scirpus. or four-leaved, unequal. Scales oblong, obtuse; keel green, the rest silver-coloured. Stamen single. Stigma two-clett. Seed ene compressed, smooth, pearl-coloured. 3h. scat tie Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 296. Culms six inches high, semi-culumnar, Leaves numerous, from one to two inches long. Umbel composed of from six to twelve ovate spikelets. nvolucres and involucels the length - of the spikelets. : Hind. Bura Nirbishee. Native of Coromandel and Bengal. 32. S. arvensis. Retz. Obs. iv. p. eee Culms from six to twenty-four) inalaie high, coutpeenlet furrowed, Leaves tortuose. Umbel simple. Involucre one or two-leaved, shorter than the umbel. Scales obtuse, diandrous. — Seed obcordate, striated and dotted. A native of various parts of India, appearing in low: nioist places during the rainy season, Culms about six inches high, compressed, and farowed. Leaves radical, or surrounding the lower portion of the culms, © - marrow, a little twisted, and nearly as long as the culms. — Umbel generally simple, of from four to six sessile, or pedi- celled, ovate-oblong brown spikes; sometimes one of the pe- - dicels supports two spikes, Involuere one or two-leaved, \qnalandishortossbaeithexitall: -Sedlenalthelaiies owe - chaffy. Stamens two. Style thick at the base; apex two cleft, and villous,» Seed obcordate, furrowed domgeeoetnelly; and dotted with white on a brownish wsteite oe Culms twelve pies high, leafy, sub-cylindric,- Umb Is thin, searcely compound, Jnvolucres minute. Style with en- = pert i> base, tion three-cleft, Seed shames: sents per ° Scirpus. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, — Se ~ Culms many, uncommonly slender, erect; about. a’ foot high, toward the base invested with the sheaths.of afew slender leaves. Umbel very thin, composed of one sessile, ob-| long spike, and of from six to twelve or about half the num- ber of pedicells of various lengths. Jnvolueres minute, the lougest scarcely exceeding the sessile spike. Scales boat- shaped, scariose, with a short points Style swelled:at the base to the full size of the germ; this swelled part, however, . is not more permanent than the rest of the style. Stigma trifid. Seed obovate, igbacurel y three-sided; much dotted, penttaviolam 84. S. pridéntatus: R Culms straight, from two to five feet high, angular. Umbet compound ; involucres from two to three; spikelets pointed ; scales lapped, jagged and pc BE Seed ee: angled, and bristly. ‘a “Compare with S, maritimusse 0 9 Teling. Goorapa-shaka-tinga, . lity Nenoutrred 1 Grows in water courses, cade Ries on esa Mate) is fresh ; never in salt, or brackish water. Root stoloniferous with some small tubers, and many Pn i Culms erect; rigid, leafy, jointed, from two to five feet high, three-sided; smooth, angles sharp. Leaves numerous, sheath- ing, sub-erect, rigid, keeled, smooth. Umbel compound, small. for the size of the plant. Jnvolucre from two-to, three-leaved, erect, unequal, the longest being three times the length of the, * _ umbel, and the shortest equalling the latter: Spikes lanceo~ late or cylindric, large ; some sessile, some peduneled, Seales, _ three-toothed, the Jateral ones torn, the middle long ; A> . 7 bulate, ikeek green, tho rtet:réet-colonntd of Seed three-sided, — VOL, I, o 7 296° TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Scirpus. 35. S. strictus. R. Culms straight, from twelve to eighteen inches high, cu-" lumnar. Umbel compound. Involucres chatty ; scales obtuse, diandrous and roundish, compressed. Grows on a moderately dry, hard, barren, sandy soil. - Root fibrous, Culms straight, naked, rigid, from twelve to eighteen inches high, round, very smooth, Leaves radical, short; rigid, but smooth, Umbel terminal, sometimes decom- pound, contracted, seldom more than two inches long, and one broad, Jnvolucre from two to four, small, chaffy, tapering sheaths. Spikes ovate, small, many-flowered, Scales with a. broad, white, membranaceous border, Stamens two, Stigma two-cleft. Seed much compressed, obcordate, dotted with brown. 36, S. brevifolius, : Culms erect, from six to eight inches high, semi-culugainta; Umbel decompound; involucels chaffy ; scales cuspidate, monandrous. Stigma bifid. Seeds obcordate, striated, Is found generally on low sandy pasture ground, Root fibrous. Culms erect, mostly naked, from six to. | eight inches high, flat on one side and rounded on the other. Leaves sheathing, short. Uimbel terminal, decompound. FInvolucre from two to three-leaved, shorter than the umbel. ' Spikes small, oblong ; while young sessile, but when old ap- pearing peduncled, the scales and seeds gradually dropping | off and leaving the rachis naked. Scales keeled and_ ointed. | Stamen single. Style broad, enlarged at the base; above, the margins are hairy. Stigma two-cleft. Seeds obcordate, — convex on the outside, flat on the inner, white, striated. oe Obs. The single stamen and striated seed are the best’ specific marks. It much resembles Rottboel’s figure of Si. dichotomus, but that species is described by Vahl as having three stamina: (see Fimbristylis Srinenas enum, i, Pe aoe aie | Bese Lie ses eter y at a ae * Scirpus. TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, | 227 37. S. aestivalis, Retz. Obs. iv. 12. Spikes rounded, sub-squayrose ; involucre six-leaved, a Wie: er than the compound umbel: scales monandrous. Vaht. enum. ii, 288, (under Fimbrtaeytt ) at I received this elegant little grass from Nepala where it grows in low fields during the rainy season. 38. S. diphyllus, Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 301. Culms erect, from one to two feet high, semi-culumnar. Umbel decompound ; scales obtuse, diandrous. Seeds round- ish, obcordate, smooth. z. imbristy lis diphylla. Vahl. enum. ii. a ~ Delights in a rich wet soil. Root fibrous. Culms erect, seven-eighths naked, from’ one to two feet high, sometimes a little compressed. Leaves chief- ly radical, half the length of the culm, rigid. “Umbel termi- nal, decompound. Facts two or font Teaved, the larger about the length of the umbel ; partial involueres small ; spikes numerous, oblong, some ‘went some pe uncled, ex- clusive of the naked birch of those that are old, dark brown. Scales oblong, obtuse, dark brown, Stamens two. Stigmas 3 hat amd Seed obcordate, much compressed, smooth, bro vn. Cee er 39. S. miliaceus, Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd, i. a a gram. 57, t. 5. f. 2. Retz. Obs. 5. 16. Culms erect, from one to two feet high, semi-culumnar, Umbel decompound, Involucres and iboWeeld shorter than the umbels and pmbellets. Seed obcordate, pine - Fimbristylis miliacea. Vahl. enum. ii. 287. This species delights in wet pasture ground. _ Root fibrous. Culms: erect, baie one to two fet ot i fe 14 - five leadeil “uneq ba but the Sats is el doti so long as the’ umbel. Involucels like the involucre, but much smaller. Ze: 02 a 228 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Scirpus. Spikes sessile, or peduncled, oval, rust-eoloured, many-flow- ered. Scales broad, a little pointed, very concave. Siamens two or three. Style enlarged at the base, broad, with hairy. margins. Stigma two-cleft, Seed obcordate, compressed, pearl-coloured, striated, without bristles. 40. S. complanatus. Vahl. enum. ii. 279, Retz. Obs. 5.14. Culms sub-erect, from one to two feet high, edged, Umbel from compound to super-decompound. Involucre two-leav- ed, erect; scales lanceolate, Seed obcordate, dotted. : Hind. Kuratiya juvani, .- A native of moist or wet places. i Root fibrous. Culms nearly erect, but waving a x: lites from one to two feet high, naked except at the base, compress- ed, two-edged; edges sharp, and turned different ways; _ striated, smooth, often a little twisted. Leaves radical, or em bracing the base of the culm, nearly as long as the culm, linear, waved, often a litile twisted, apex abrupt. Umbel super- decompound, dense. Involucre two-leaved, opposite, erect, unequal, the longest about the length of the umbel. Jnvolu- cels chafty, alin like bristles, Spikes sessile, or short+ pedicelled, oblong, few-flowered. Scales rust-coloured, acute. Seeds obcordate, nen’ ga Al. S. saieiloees R. | ey from one to two feet hicks jomnanaielic Vabel de. \d and super-decompound, Involgers and i lee bristly ; scales roundish, diandrous, Seed round, = Hind, Bura-juvani. Teling. Murcushalee. Grows with the other species on moist pasture ground, Root fibrous, Culms nearly erect, from one to. two feet high, naked, except at the base, four-sided, smooth. Leaves radical, and about the base of the culm, bifarious, aperina 7 Sap canis «9 the calm. Rapier: le | Peay, Scirpus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 229° cels small, bristlelike. Spikes minute, globular, many- flowered. Stamens, from one to two, rarely three. Stigma two or three-cleft, Seed nearly oo es on the’ inside, scabrous, white. 42.8. quinguangularis: Vahl, enum. ii. 279, Culms from one to two feet high, five-angled. Umbel super-decompound ; invoduere much shorter than the umbel ; scales oval, monandrous, Seed three-sided, rugose, A native of similar places with the last species. ae - Root fibrous. Culms as in complanatus, and tetragonus, and of the same height, but in this species always five-sided, The, angles sharp and the sides concave, Leaves as in'S. complanatus, Umbel super-decompound, rather thin, and unequal as in Se, tetragonus, . Involuere three-leaved, the: largest about the length of the umbel.. Spikes méstly pedi- celled, oval, very small, few, from: six to eight-flowered. Scales oval. Stamen one. pars thrée-eleft. shied ft tlerecsideals rugos | trie Lares vial et FH x mee sid ghana powder fo Vievy ~ Culms from six to ten ice high Btn: Umbel su-~ pebdlocinaiennd; ‘rather shorter than the involucre, monan- drous. Scales obtuse. Seed —— without poh ee oe ed, and wrinkled. , | Mg »'A-native of low pasture ground. Root fibrous. Culms: nearly erect, from six to ten ial ‘ high, mostly naked, nearly round and. striated, ~ Leaves sheathing, as long as the culm, concave ; edges slightly ae serra late, somewhat woolly. Umbel teiveaiatile super-dec a large in proportion to the rest of the plant. - satin eg teaved, nearly erect, opposite margins slightly serrulate, long- er than the umbel, a few small seales intermixed, Spikes very i . Scales oval, concave. Stamens solitary. Style two-cleft.: ‘Seed obcordate, a little compressed, striated aad tudinally, and wrinkled transversely. 03 ' 230° TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Scirpus, AA, Sc. anceps. Rs — ‘ Culm erect, twelve inches high, Seewdepnds Tincinot two-leaved, shorter than the miperutenetay ena a or five times-divided umbel. Beng. Joopi. A native of Bengal. . 45. Se. Kysoor. R. Culms from five to six feet high, triangular, and biepid: Umbel super-decompoand, Spikes ovate, Seed oblong, three-sided, crowned; and beset with five villous bristles, Beng. Kesoor or Kesooree. Common in Bengal, growing on the borders of biked; onal &e. of fresh water, in flower on the latter ee of the rains, i ‘Root tuberous, with numerous ferruginous fibres. Culms straight, from four to six feet high, three-angled, the sides deeply grooved and the angles very sharp, and backwardly: hispid. Leaves several to each culm, and about their length, sheathing at the base, above that part deeply channelled, with the margins and keel while young, somewhat hispid, and the points Sesig and subulate. Umbel terminal, super-de-. compound, —Involucre about three, very unequal, the larg- est from one to two feet long, and the shortest as many inches; resembling the leaves in form. Spikes ovate, brown. _ Scales roundish oval, concave, chafiy, brown, smooth; the _ rib’ or nerve ending in a subulate point beyond the rounded apex. Stamens three-on the exterior side of the germ, one- bearded bristle between each filament, and three on the back, making in all five. Germ ovate. Style with swelled; per- manent, cordate base. Stigma three-cleft. Seed oben? three-sided, surrounded by the five-bearded bristles, — ‘Obs, It approaches Sc. grossus. Vahl, enum, ii, 270; the } test marks to distinguish them by, are the bristles which em- brace’ the germ, and continue with the. seedsheretheyare five in numb r acne ans a = : Scirpus, TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 231 on the margin, with sharp bristles pointing backward, My Sc, maximus is a much larger species, and the germ destitute of bristles, , _ 46. Se. grossus, Vall. enum. ii. 270. [i Culms erect, from six to ten feet high, triangular, Umbel super-decompound, (Seed three-sided, beset — six, back- wardly hispid bristles, Exclude Sc. grossus, Retz. Obs. v. 15, which T presume is my Sc. maximus; the germ and seed being there destitute of the bristly involucre. To which of these Sc, grossus, Linn. Suppl. ought to be referred, I camot say. ; This, next to Sc. maximus, is by far the largest species 1 have ever met with. It grows in standing sweet water. Culm erect, mostly naked, from six to ten feet high, three- sided; angles sharp, sides concave. Leaves radical, and round the base of the culms sheathing, much keeled, almost as long as the culms; edges slightly scabrous. Umbel super- decompound, five or eight inches each way. Involucre three-leaved, the largest about two feet, the shortest six inches, they taper to a long, acute point ; margins pretty smooth. In- volucels chatty. Spikes oblong, dark-brown, many-flower- ed, Stamens three, with two bristles between each pair, Style three-cleft. | Seed three-sided, embraced by the six en- larged bristles, which are armed on the edges with stiff, bent back, short hairs, t a. Sev maximus. R, Culms straight, from six to fifteen feet high, tria Umbel. shleesineueis apie roundish, Seed ob Penoaitteds without bristles. _ i o 22 8e. somite Retz, Obs. v. Lb. pa probably Linn. ane ” 104. ee ‘ ee aay 7 se Seadawing, « Paced water. » Root fibrous, and stoloniferous, Culms erect, most rigid, O4 232 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Scirpus, naked, except at the base, from six to fifteen feet high, and from one to two inches in diameter, three-sided ; angles very sharp ;.sides somewhat concave. Leaves mostly radical, al- most as long as the culm, much keeled, (a transverse section appears like the letter V,) smooth, inside only a little striat- ed, Umbel superdecompound, generally about a foot long. Involucre trom three to four-leaved, the largest from three — to four feet long, the smallest from tliree to four inches, — smooth, Jnvolucel chaffy. Spikes minute, ovate, few-flower- ed, Scales broad; and short. Stamens three. Stigma three-cleft. Seed three-sided, without bristles, which easily distinguishes it from the last Sc. grossus, Obs. 1 have not’ in any of the foregoing genera of Cype- roidee@ taken notice of the sheaths which embrace the base of — g the peduncles and pedicels of the umbels, and their sub-divi- sions; because they are common to all, and so much alike, that I do not think they can convey any information, | Nor, have I attended to the form of those peduncles and pedicels; because I have not found it uniform, The culm, inflorescence, involucre, and seed, are:I think, the best marks to discrimi- nate the species by, particularly the culm and seed, The number of stamens and divisions of stigma, sometimes vary even in the same plantimanch more in different plants of the _ Same species, — fer bs Nearly the whole of the plate cen to the six forego- ing genera (called Calamarie by Linnzeus, and Digpctoidoa by: Jussieu) are natives of low, barren, moist places, and bor- ders of rice fields on the coast of Coromandel. They appear, blossom, and ripen their seed during the rains, and the be- _ ginning of the cool season, a are in general rejected by) cattle, t i te. ae Cenchrus. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 233 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. PEROTIS. Schreb. gen. N. 1714. Calyx none. Corol two-valved ; valves equal, and awned, 1. P. latifolia, Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 324. Culms piped, from nine to eighteen inches high. Leaves short, waved, and ciliate, Raceme cylindrical. Tsjeria-kuren-pulla, Rheed. Mal. 12. 117, t. 62. Anthoxanthum indicum. Linn. sp. pi. ed, Willd, i. 157. Saccharum spicatum, Linn. sp. pl. 79. Is a native of high, dry, sandy, barren ground, over the __ coast of Coromandel. Root fibrous. Culms at the base resting on the ground, and there branchy, above erect, leafy; jointed, from nine to eighteen inches high, smooth. Leaves sheathing, short, broad at the base, margins waved and hispid; sheaths about half — the length of the joints. Racemes (not spikes) terminal, erect, cylindrical, lead-coloured, Flowers numerous, diverging. Calyx two-valved, both awned, and are totally destitute of hairs round their base, or any where else. Corol two-valved, very minute, “Seed... Spat Obs. Cattle are not fond of this grass. CENCHRUS. Schreb. gen. N. 1574. Involucre echinate, and four-flowered. Calyzx from two to three-valved, one or two-flowered. 1. C. biflorus, R. © : rs, Spikes simple, cylindric. — Involueres two-flo were red od; seg- ments subulate, hooked and ini. > A nativ Z para’ a the Coro- Nh PGi atk to twenty-four inches high, smooth, ° ' _ Leaves long, dieddes. somewhat scabrous; mouths of their 234 | SRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Saccharum, sheaths a little hairy. Spikes terminal, solitary, simple, cy ylin- dric, from three to four inches long. Rachis tlexuose, three- sided. Flowers numerous, solitary, alternate. Involucre two, rarely one-flowered, multifid, divisions Jonger than the flow- ers, subulate, grooved on the back, inside hairy, apex slight- ly hooked. Both flowers hermaphrodite. . Calyx three-valv- ed, one- flowered, the exterior one smaller, all are thin, smooth, nerved, Corol two-valved, valves hard, acute, but not awn- — ed, in length nearly equal, and scarcely longer than the calyx.. Stamina three, Styles two, plumose. SACCHARUM. Schreb. gen. N. 104. Calyx one-flowered, two-valved, girt at the base with wool ; corol uncertain. 4 (oEnt 1, S. eylindricum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, i, 323. . : Culms from one to two feet high, shorter than the leaves. Panicles linear, white with the wool of the calyx. Corol and. Z calyx two-valyed and diandrous, or ae Lagurus cylindrica, sp, pl. 120. “ ae. S. Thunbergi. foe pl. ed. Willd, 1,323. Retz. Obs. ¥ ve ao p. 17. : 18s ea! Gramen caricosum, Rup. Amb. 6. 17. t. ap 2. Beng. Ooloo, 1 et aR ee asc at A _ Teling, Baroombiss, i Ze sa mative « of moist, stiff, pasture planers poe AE ee common over Bengal, where the. fields are white with. it when in flower, after the first rains in Apriland May. oe Root creeping at some depth under the surface, Culms erect, simple, from one to.two-feet high, leafy, jointed, joimts bearded. Leaves, those.of the root or lower part of the culm. ~ are much longer than the culm, tapering equal towards each end, smooth, those of the culm are little else than sheaths. o Pomicles seine, arin from three to. four. jnshendenes : Saccharum, — TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 235 whiteness, from the quantity of wool that surrounds the inser- tion of the flowers, Flowers pedicelled, generally simple. Calyx two-valved, with here and there a long white hair. Corol two-valved, minute. Stamens two. . Obs, Cattle are not fond of it, particularly when old, It is used in the marriage ceremonies of the Telingas. In Bengal it is much used for thatch, pom . 2. S. spontaneum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, i, 321. Culms from five to fifteen feet high, Leaves involute when dry. Panicle linear, spreading, verticelled ; ramification sim- ple ; calyx ciliate. Corol one-valved. - Sans, Kasha. a Kagara. ' Teling. Relloo-gaddy. ) djsorte Grows on the banks of rivers, in hedges, and on moist, un- cultivated land ; in a good soil, it is frequently from ten to fifteen feet high, in a poorer soil, from five to ten. “Root peremial, creeping very deep in the grounds Culms annual, erect, leafy, round, lower parts perennial, and : as thick as the finger, annual shoots about as thick asa common quill, solid, height various as above observed. Leaves sheathing, remarkably long and narrow, but firm; margins hispid ; a transverse section appears crescent; sheaths with their mouths woolly, Panicles terminal, spreading, erect, oblong’, from one to two feet long, composed of verticelled, filiform, simple, ~ (except the lower verticil or two,) spiked racemes; spiked, because half the flowers are sessile, and half pedicelled. The immense quantity of long, bright, silver-coloured wool, which surrounds the base of the flowers’ gives: rerrarnaersiad conspicuous, gaudy appearance. Flowers paired, one-pedi- celled, the other sessile. de two-leaved 5 nargins | . © Obs, L have not seen the ripe seed, erway coarse 236 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Saccharum, a that cattle do not eat it, except while very young. It makes Bends mats for various purposes, and is used to thatch houses. _ a5 _ fuseum. R. . ’ Erect, five to eight feet high, Leaves ube teow : smooth, Panicle spreading, verticelled ; ramifications com= pound. Flowers paired, both pedipellad, wool of the ~~ short and scanty. Coro/s three-valved. . Beng. Khuree or Pata-Khuree, A _ A native of damp places over Bengal. Flowering time the rainy season, Pra Culms erect, from five to eight feet high, as thick as the little finger, hairy near the top. Leaves sheathing, lineat- lanceolate, smooth in every part, except the margins of the sheaths, which are fringed with much soft hair ; length about _ three or four feet, breadth about, or under two inches. Pani- cles from one to two feet long, erect, linear, verticelled, except toward the apex ; ramifications compound ; ramyle nodding. Flowers paired, one short-pedicelled, the other longer, both hermaphrodite ; wool of the pedicels, &c. short and in small quantity, Calyx with ciliate margins, otherwise smooth and shining. Corol three-valved, of which two aré equal and nearly as long as the calyx, the third minute, all much cet ed. Seed long, obovate, brown, smooth, 4 sae Obs. The natives make des eh y the pete wis and use it fap screens aaeen fone bon ies portion of the culms seceiiihons: ail — pee Leaves narrow, channelled, Panicle oblong, lax, with com= pound verticelled ramifications ; corel one- velxpdi — _ Beng. Khuree. sth A native of Bengal, where it delights in ie wet sees sy blossoms about the close of the rains, snetiniede be te onl season... Saccharum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 237 sixteen or more feet long, one half or more, generally resting on the ground, and striking roots at the joints ; this portion is often as thick as the little finger, and perennial; the ex- treme portion erect, Straight, and taper to the thickness of a crow-quill at the panicle; filled with pith in every _ part, Leaves from one to six feet long, very slender, pointed, chan- nelled, bottom of the channel white, margins most acutely hispid, mouths of the sheaths and for some way above them — bearded with much soft white hair. Panicles ovate, or oval, erect, large. Ramifieations coloured, verticelled, compound. Flowers approximate, paired; one sessile, the other pedi- celled, both girt with much, pure white, soft hair. Calyx two-valved ; inner valve ciliate. Coro one-valved, ciliate, » 5. 8. Officine um. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 821. Culms from six to twelve feet high... Leaves: flat. : Pavii; cle ovate, spreading ; branches alternate aise ase Corot one-valved, . » Sans. Ikshoo, Rusala, the — varieties Poon: dra, and Kangwruka, the red, ? Beng. Ik, Ook, Ak, Kooshiar, also Doart ‘nd Kullooa the two re pal varieties, and Kajooli the red. - Teling, Cherukoo-bodi, or Cherukoo-duboo. Where wild, Ido not know. | Panicles terminal,’ ware ing, erect, oblong, from one to three feet long, of a gray co-— litte; from the large quantity of long soft hair that surrounds: the flower. Ramifications alternate, very ramous, expand- ing. Rachis striated. lowers hermaphrodite, in pairs; one sessile, the other pedicelled. Calyx two-leaved, mee = Corol one-valved, smooth, membranaceous, rose-coloured. ee Stamens and pistil as in the genus. I have not seoir thie seed. Obs, It is much cultivated in ie ——. Gircar, pound. “The cane i is , cultivated on aie peal lands: which 238 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Saccharum, can be easily watered; but, unless the farmer pleases, not easily flooded during vider rains, % The land is first well ploughed during the sista of April and beginning of May. The field is then flooded from the river, if there is not sufficient rain ; the upper part of the cane is then cut into two lengths of one or two joints each, (the lower part of the same canes are employed to make = sugar from) these are placed over the wet field, at about fifteen or eighteen inches. asunder, in rows, the rows about four feet from one another, and trode under the soft, wet sut> face with the foot; in six days after the planting, the field is again flooded, if there has not been rain. In about eight days more the shoots appear ; the land is soon after slightly hoed and weeded, A month after the planting some rotten chaff, or other such manure, is scattered about the young plants, Every ten or fifteen days, if there be not sufficient rain, the field is watered; two months from the planting, — some stronger manure is strewed about the plants; and every _ fifteen or twenty days the field is slightly hoed, _ ee ie weeds rooted out. 4 - During the wet season, drains must be made, to carry” off \ the superabundant water. By August or September, the cane will be from three to five feet high; in each shoot, the produce of every cutting, which may contain from three e to six canes, a straight bamboo is stuck into thé earth, in the centre; to this thé canes are tied by their Teaves:’ In this country the leaves are never stript from the cane, but as they wither are tied round them. This must impede the free cif= culation of air, which may be conceived hurtful. In Janua~" oe ry, viz. between nine and ten months from the time they” were planted, the cane, when stript of its leaves, and the useless top cut off, will be about as thick asa good stout walking” cane, and from four to six feet long; they then begin to cut . the cane, express the juice, and beaks the sugar, which is with ‘eetivte here, a very simple process ; a small mill tu : € by cattl squeezes a one boiler boils it. Saccharum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, | 239° - In Bengal there are three varieties cultivated, viz. The above described or common yellow cane, called by the Ben+ galees Poort. Secondly, the purple cane called by them Kajooli, which is said to yield juice one-eighth part richer than the yellow cane; but the sugar thereof is always of a dark colour, The third and last, is a very large, light colour- ed cane, called Kullooa, which grows in a low swampy soil, where neither of the other two will succeed ; its juice is still weaker than that of the yellow cane; but it has these advan- tages, that it grows to a much larger size, and where neither of the other two will thrive. It is therefore much cultivated, because the other sorts planted on higher situations are apt to suffer from drought, uivideas” 6. S, sinensis. R. pe OA Culms from six to ten feet high. Leaves ‘iy itt mar- gins hispid, panicles ovate, with simple and compound ver ticelled branches, Corol of two valves on the same side, ‘Siem erect, jointed, whole height from ten to fifteen feet ; the greatest part covered with the sheaths of the leaves; Joints from four to eight inches long, and from two to three inches in circumference, colour pale brownish yellow. Leaves: _ sub-bifarious, tapering from the base, to a long, fine, point ; plain, smooth on both sides ; margins armed with numerous,’ small, very acute spines pointing forward, length from two to three feet, and about an inch and a half broad at the base. Sheaths smooth, with a small ligula, or stipulary ring round: the inside of the mouth. Panicle ovate, erect; branches, simple and compound, sub-verticelled, eckeinnan, Jong: rena 3 slender, In S. officinarum the branches ofthe panicle are: — scattered over the common rachis and are decompound, and) es on, Daa rst the most obvios specie dent of the nal small inner scale, or the corol. Caly ijt ite martoulinis wool, as in. the genus. “Corol of the! two valves on the same (anterior) side, the inner one very small, Nectary of two, large, broad, 240 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Saccharum, cuneate, crenulate, fleshy scales, which occupy the two pos- terior sides of the germ, opposite to the two valves of the corol, = - Obs, This new species, for such it appears to me, was in-. troduced from China into the Botanic garden, at the close of the year 1796, in hope of finding it insome respects better than the common cane cultivated over India, | It promises: considerable advantage ; particularly from its being so solid, and hard, as to resist the forceps of the white ants, and the teeth of the jackal, two great enemies to’ our East Indian sugar plantations. At the same time it bears drought mach better than the sorts in general cultivation. It produces a “profitable crop even to the third year; while the common cane of India must be renewed every year. It is also said to yield juice of a richer quality, ss ap This seems to be the sort employed over China for making their sugars, as appears from the following’ extract of a letter fron Mr, A. Duncan, surgeon to the factory at Canton, to Richard Hall, Esq. President, &c. of the Select Committee, dated Canton 26th October, 1796, which accompanied plants of this cane from China; explaining the mode of neler and manufacturing the sugar in the province of Canton.) “ Sugar canes, A first sand second sort are cultivated in the province of Canton; the former being small, compact. and highly saccharine, is manufactured into:sugar, whereas” - the latter, being of a larger size, and. looser fexture, is gene ae rally cut* into joints, and ‘eat’ = the aire ets gently heated, ee Site ie “ The culture of sugar ‘canes commences: ioe the middle: of March or begiming of April, in proportion to the tempe-" rature of the weather, when a good, light, sandy soil is” thrown up into beds of about four feet diameter leaving i-’ termediate spaces of one and a half, which*serve as:draims’ and passes for the husbandmen, A pompaneneee human Saccharum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 241 economical) are planted in a slanting position, and occasion- ally watered at sun-set, till the young shoots rise a cubit high; when the husk and refuse of the ground nut, or of some Oleaginous seeds after the oil is extracted, are well beaten into a kind of powder and put round the root of the plants, in small quantities, and afterwards covered over with earth. The canes are now left to the fertility of the soil till they arrive at maturity, except when it proves such a dry sea- son, that watering becomes requisite, and are cut down about the Ist of November. The first sort planted in the foregoing manner, generally yields three crops while the second re- quires fresh planting. “The sugar canes are now removed from the ground to the mill for expression, The juice, being extracted, is carefully strained, mixed with a small quantity of lime water, then poured into large warm iron pans, placed on a platform of brick work, with fire places below ; it is now boiled for a length of time, and being removed from the fire, and allowed to cool, it is a second time strained, and being again returned to the pans the boiling is repeated for once, or twice, till it acquires _ asaccharine consistence. The sugar, still very moist, is now put into. cylindrical jars, which have a small hole in each of _ their bottoms, for the purpose of draining ; and their tops _ being covered over with from half an imch to an inch of _ dayey moist earth, these are placed on stands, and remain for _ three or four days; when the old earthen covering is remov- _ed, and a fresh one put on. They continue in that situation. for three or four days more, the covering is then taken of, and . the sugar being sufficiently clarified is removed from. the : - dry, when it is fit for use | | ae “The mill for oxprenink te jue, of which I have sent a a ss , 0 fara sapeserilect, pre- ss its reer is aaeaied to ‘the long axle of one of the Pili, -- VoL. 1, P , ; 4 242 . RIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Saccharum.. ders. The canes having undergone one expression, and being consequently in a split state, are not thrust a second time through till all the irons are greased. The cylinders are not always of the same dimensions; those I examined were two -eubits high, and one and two-thirds in diameter, these are the common size; I am however told they are sometimes much larger.” : Topoint out the benefit that may accrue to the cultivators of this sugar cane, I need only add the following copy of a letter from Mr. Richard Carden, superintendent of the Ho- nourable Company’s rum and sugar works at Mirzapore Culna in Bengal, to me, dated 13th August, 1801, —— the introduction of the cane. “ With respect to the produce of the common Bengal sugar : canes, I have never been able to collect an account that can — be depended upon; the natives generally manufacture the — juice into Jaggery in my neighbourhood; which yields them nearly 14 cutcha maunds, of 60 sicca weight, per bigha on an average ; and a profit of about 11 or 12 rupees per bigha. Neither the white ants nor jackals have committed any de- _ predations on the China canes that I have planted, although the latter. have often been seen among them, which certainly gives these canes a decided preference to the Bengal sugar | canes. I do not think the China ones degenerate i in the least, nor do they improve; they appear to me to remain nearly in the same state. If planted at the same time the natives put their canes into the ground, they will not make such good returns as the Belial sort, but planted in the West India mode, in the month of September or October, and suffered to remain on the ground till the December or January twelve > months, they will then yield double the returns of what the — Bengal canes do, which is owing in part to the length oftime they are in the ground, and principally to the ants and jack- eS a ee destroying them, whereas if the Bengal cane was nain so long on the ground, the natives would have’ ee difficulty to a part of them from ber ae oy _ Saccharum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA. 243 ing destroyed, and the young shoots would suffer very much from the hot winds, and ants, which I witnessed the second year I came to Mirzapore; but the shoots from the China canes IJ cut last January, stood the last hot season uncommon- ly well, and will next January, I have reason to believe, from _ the present appearance, make half, or nearly three-fourths the quantity of sugar they did last January ; and that with the trifling’ expense of clearing the ground twice; cutting, and manufacturing the juice. Ishould be extremely happy to have sent you a more particular account, but that is not in my power, as the native statement is not to be depended upon, I did purchase twelve cottas of the best Bengal canes last January, merely as an experiment, which yielded just half the quantity of sugar my China canes did.” 7. S, procerum, R. . Perennial, from ten to twenty feet high, erect, 5 i en- -_siform, with a white rib, and hispid margins. Panicle diffuse, with verticelled, compound and decompound branches, Co- rol of the pedicelled flower two, and of the sessile three-valy- ed, with the inner one retuse. | : Beng. Teng. __A native of onl. and by far the most beautiful of the genus I have yet met with. It comes nearest in appearance to S, Officinarum, but is a taller and much more elegant plant. _ Culms perennial, straight, simple till the second or third year, then branchy, about as thick asa slender walking cane; joints from six to twelve inches long, and filled with ‘insipid pith; height of the whole plant, when in Hors fom ime twenty feet. Leaves from three to five feet long, ta ering a long and very fine point, the greatest breadth is is at one | or Ri ifort, above the , from one to two id. Sheaths bearded round — iat at their insertion’ on the outside, Panicles dere’ on one te two feet long, ovate, erect, composed of P2 * 244 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA; Saccharum, numerous expanding, sub-verticelled, compound, woolly branches, when in blossom much expanded, afterwards they become erect, and pressed in on the common rachis, forming a dense cylindrical panicle, and I haye repeatedly observed this variation in the form of the panicle at different periods, — to run through the whole genus. lowers in parts, one ses- sile, the other pedicelled. Calyx purple, woolly. Corol of the sessile flower three, of the pedicelled two-valved; all are exceedingly delicate, and the third valve of the sessile flower is retuse. ‘Obs, The seeds or culms are long, strong andstraight, a chaplived by the natives for skreens, and various other eco-_ nomical purposes, 8. S. Sara. R Erect, from eight to twelve feet high. Leaves flat with 7 prickly margins. Panicles dense, sub-verticelled ; 3; ramifica- tions dstempsound. Flowers paired, one of the pair sessile. Corol three-valved. - Sans. Goondra, Tejunuka, Shura. vi Beng, Shur. . Sara. Asiat. Res. iv. 247. “Found i in the vicinity of Calcutta, but vetted rare, hitheass . . s. spontaneum (which Sir William Jones mistook for Sara) is very common every where. It is readily distinguished by ‘ being a stronger reed, the leaves much larger, with very his- A ‘pid margins, the ramifications of the panicle decompound, _ and a corol of three valves. Culms perennial, erect, from six to sixteen feet high, often near the base as thick as the little finger, smooth, remarkably strong. ’ Leaves, the lower oe ones from four to eight feet long,and narrow; the superior ones shorter, broader, tapering from the base to a most fine point, strong, and rigid ; concave above, margins hispid, Sheaths from, twelve to eighteen inches long, with a tuft of hair abowe = their ‘mouths: on the inside. Panicle dense, when in flower open, when in seed condensed andof a ipsiee, shape, from Saccharum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 9A5 one to three feet long ; branches decompound, or more; the inferior alternate, the superior sub-verticelled with generally three sharp angles armed with small stiff bristles besides long white silky hairs, lowers paired, one sessile, the other pe- dicelled. Calyx two-valved, clothed with long, soft, white, silky hairs, Corol three-valved, fringed. 9. S, exaltatum. R. Culms from ten to sixteen feet high. Leaves flat with prick- ly margins. Panieles linear, crowded. Calyces woolly. Co- rol two and three-valved. Kerpa. Hort, Mal. 12. t. 46. seems to be this, rather than S. spontaneum, Teling. Konda-Kanamoo. A very high beautiful species, a native of vallies. | Com- pare with S. Arundinaceum. ; Root creeping. Culms many, erect, feelin ten to sixteen feet high, towards the base perennial, ligneous, inwardly spongy, (not piped,) smooth, round, without any groove, or hollow any where, about an inch in circumference at the thickest part which is near the middle. Leaves alternate, sheathing, remote, remarkably long and narrow, but firm, ta- pering from the middle towards each end; margins armed with very sharp spines, mouth of the aliclits woul y- Pani- eles terminal, crowded, when the flowers are on the decay, linear, oblong, erect, eighteen inches long, three in diameter, and composed of beautiful Siiesitstliocane downy, short, sub-erect, ramous, sub-verticelled spiked racemes, — round, striated. Flowers in pairs, one sessile, the ther pe- dicelled, both hermaphrodite. Calyx one-flowered, sarod, itz zalee pointed, and covered ‘ vitl P3 246 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Saccharum, &c. as in the genus. Seed clavate, smooth, clear whitish yellow, Obs, Cattle do not eat it, 10..S. Munja. R. Straight, from eight to ten feet high, every part aio except the inside of the base of the hispid, long, margined, li- near, white nerved, channelled leaves. Péinieles large, oblong, spreading ; branches thereof verticelled, and super-decom- pound, Flowers all hermaphrodite. Corols two-valved. Hind. Munja, See Asiat. Res, iv, 248. A native of the countries about Benares where the natives make ropes of it. In the Botanic garden it blossoms in No- vember. I never saw it, nor, so far as | can find, is it known so low down as Bengal, otherwise I might have ene . KGnig’s 8. bengaiense, ; 11.8. saikeRielaiun. R, : rs Perennial, erect, (from eight to twelve feet hich.) ‘Leaves subulate, deeply channelled, very long. Panieles linear-ob- long; ramifications simple, and verticelled ; calycine valves with. ide callous base and Soexin margins; corol one- valved. s Asinoet Kewatilak datalg’ species, a native ‘ali pingaijiee | most thickets, &c. where the soil is rich, seapete in See and. September, “QCulnsabpat. 96 tick: ae chctinestisdilics kata a white substance under the sheaths ; filled with pith. Leaves — from five to seven feet long, semi-cylindric, no where thicker ae than a pack thread, the whole being only a perfect channel 3 their sheaths simply bearded at the mouth. ‘Paniclesub- _ cylindric, about two feet long, waving with its immense — quantity of silver-coloured, long, soft hair, to every breeze. : val ene — senariable espomcinnet & Bice eu pe s ae vers paired, one sessile, the other pedicelled. Calycine — ee Anthistiria, : TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. ; a ANTHISTIRIA. Schreb. gen. N. 1567. Polygamous. Involucre one-valved, seven-flowered. Her- maphrodite flower solitary, with a two-valved, one-flowered calyx, and corol of one valve and an awn. Accessary florets male or neuter, six ; four sessile, resembling a calyx, and ‘two pedicelled, their utriveeané various, © 1A. ettiaen: Linn, sp. es ed, Willd. iv. 899. Erect, Leaves taper from the ciliate base. ecessary florets two or three-valved, neuter, exterior valve of the ses- sile flower papillose, ciliate near the apex. A. ciliata, Gert. Carp. ii. p. 465. t, 75. An erect annual species, a native of various parts of India, ; appears about the close of the rains, in October and Novem- ber, and continues during the cool season. Culms erect, about two feet high, in our rich soil of Ben- gal, more slender than a crow-quill, smooth, and often colour- ed. Leaves few, ensiform; broadest at the base and there more ciliate, particularly the small floral leaves. Sheaths much shorter than the joints, smooth, and carinated on the back, Ligula short and chaffy. Panicles sometimes droop- ing, though in general erect and composed of a few, rather . remote, axillary branches. Involucres jenuent than the —_—* smooth, cuspidate. HERMAPHRODITE Fiowers bearded at the base. Calyx two-valved ; valves hard, obtuse, and somewhat hairy, by age changing from straw colour to dark brown, Corol one small, pellucid valve, and a very strong, long, thick, brown, hairy | awn on the opposite side, Stigma three. Styles two, with ochraceous plumose stigmas, which become brown i age. Nectarial scales large, with: crenate, — : _Accessany Froners six, all neuter. Calyces two-valved, hose of the , apillose fede weer the apex ; those of de? upper ipodicelied two, smaller and smooth. Corols. ‘tone, or of one, small, hyaline valve. Stamina none, P4 248 - TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. _Anthistiria, 2. A. polystachya, R. Culms numerous, aaaene Leaves taper from their sub- ciliate base. Accessary florets three-valved, male, exterior valves of the sessile four, papillose, ciliate near the apex. A native of Bengal, and with the other species which are natives of the same country, appears at the close of the rains, in October and November. ‘ Culms many, annual, erect, or ascending, smooth, frond one to two feet high. Leaves about the length of the joints of the culm, taper from the base, and there sometimes sub-cili- ate. Panicles slender, erect, or nearly so, composed of a few alternate, axillary branches. Involucres longer than the flow- ers, smooth, sub-aristate, vad - HERMAPHRODITE FLowers breaded at the ita Calye two-valved, both hard, a little hairy awn on the oppositeside. Corol one-valved, with a long, strong, hairy awn on the oppe- site side. : by Accerssary Frorerts six, all male. Calyces two-valved, the exterior one of the four sessile florets papillose, ciliate near the apex. Corol of one transparent valve. seater : ‘threes Pistil none. see BAL sci Res toes deeded dey ee Perennial, ramous, mien aided aniteines ih es e from the joints, Floral leaves with the base ciliate. Pani- ‘eles copious, shaggy. Involucres smooth. Accessary flo- rets two-valved, neuter ; exterior valve ane: . as pillose, ciliate near the apex. 6 A native of Bengal ; flowers ities the cool season, Root — Culms scandent, running to an extent of -many feet, smooth, ramous, jointed, and coloured; from the joints numerous roots issue, and enter the ground if not too — far removed from it. Leaves ensiform, the ‘floral ones miuch ae “shorter, and ciliate at the base. Panicle terminal, composed a Anthistiria, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 249 ed with a boat-shaped spathe or bracte, and consists of four, sessile, neuter, two-valved florets in a verticil ; above these are two more, but much smaller, on short pedicels, with one sessile, awned, hermaphrodite one in the centre, on a short scaly receptacle. Calyx two-valved, the exterior valves of the lower four neuter florets bearded, of the hermaphrodite ones boat-shaped, and very obtuse. Corol of the hermaphro- dite flower two-valved, with a long, ferruginous, straight arista, ° Obs. It differs from A. ese: in being an extensively scan- dent, penne plant. a 4. ‘Ai Seiseottiin, R. Culms leaning, geniculate. Leaves ciliate. | Involucres five-flowered, two awned hermaphrodite ones, and three ci- diate male ones, This is one of the smallest of the genus, a native of wily made pasture land in. the vicinity of Calcutta, where it ap- pears about the close of the rains, and during the cool season. _ Culms annual, erect, or leaning, geniculate, smooth, and coloured ; from twelve to twenty-four inches high. Leaves ensiform, soft and hairy. Sheaths much shorter than the joints, Panicles copious, hirsute, composed of numerous small umbells and these in general of five or more umbellets, the former with a common cymbiform, bristly involucre, and the latter with a small, proper characteristic involucre, equal- dy bristly ; all the bristles’ have a round bulbous base, Um- bellets five-flowered; the two hermaphrodite ones awned, and the three male ones pedicelled, and awnless; one of the — former is sessile below, with a pedicelled male one by it; the ig other elevated ona common peduncle, embraced by the other — tw i € ifasalaenbamsothe ‘tO apotin may be jaxinodiately distinguished by its -umbellets being composed of two hermaphrodite awned 250 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Anihistirta, florets, and three male ones. In all the rest, which I have met with there is one awned hermaphrodite, and six male, or neuter florets in the umbellet. 5. A. prosirata. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 901. : Creeping. Leaves scarcely longer than their sheaths, Jn- volucres smooth, Accessar) y florets male, with a two-valved. hairy calyx and one-valved awnless corol. A common grass, delighting in rich pasture ground. ~ Culms creeping, or leaning on other plants, filiform, ra- mous, winding from joint to joint, round, smooth, from one to three feet long. Leaves below, and on leafy shoots bifarious, small, particularly the floral ones, smooth. Sheaths short, compressed, Panicles thin, leafy. Flowers numerous, col- lected in little pedicelled, involucred fascicles from the axills of the exterior leaves. Fascicles, or wmbellets, their pedun- cles are jointed near the apex, and from thence upwards em- braced by a long, boat-shaped sheath or involucre, Flowers of the umbellet seven ; one hermaphrodite or female, and six” male ; four of the male florets on their proper short pedicels. surround a common pedicel which elevates the hermaphro- dite or female one, and the other two male florets ; these last. two have also their proper pesesies all sanemedeamaleits: ; surrounded withhair, = set | HERMAPHRODITE TWO, OR Pucuies THREE Raoviails Calyx two-valved, pointed, Corol one-valved, a pretty long” twisted awn occupying the place of the other. | Stamens three, or none. Male flowers, four at the base, and two em- 7 bracing laterally the hermaphrodite, or female flowers, each = of these two has its proper pedicel. Calyx two-valved; Jan- ceolate, hairy. Corel one-valved. Stamens three. = Obs. It often happens that there are two hermaphrodite, and seven male flowers in the fascicle; in that case one of the — usual lateral pedicels supports the additional two flowers, Ss apg iea Py tieeticeaeee Ogata anintg Sees is Anthistiria, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 251 6. A. eymbaria, R. . Erect, ramous. eaves many times longer than ‘their sheaths. Involucres smooth. Accessary florets male, with — a two-valved, ciliate calyx, and a one-valved, awnless corol. Andropogon cymbarius. Linn. mant. 303. sp. pl.ed. Willd. iv. 909. ; -Teling. Pedda Ghella. This is a large species, I have —_— found it — bushes on mountains, Culms many, erect, ‘from ddiiee to six feet high, very ra- mous, smooth, solid, ligneous, joints smooth. Leaves large in proportion to the size of the plant. Pamnicles linear, leafy, erect, composed of innumerable bracted fascicles like those of the last described. Bractes boat-shaped, ending ina very long, subulate point, sometimes coloured, and in luxu- riant plants fringed with many long rigid hairs, Flowers seven in each fascicle or umbellet as in the last, and dispos- ed exactly in the same manner, only here the four male flowers that surround the base of the —— sessile, HERMAPHRODITE Pesca? hile Geetuived, Vales lets nearly equal, obtuse, smooth, of a firm texture. Corol one-valved, the place of the second is occupied by ee twisted awn. Stamens three, &c, as in the genus, Maze Fiowers, Calyx two-valved, the exterior vile fringed with many strong hairs about the apex. Corol one- valved. Stamens —s é 7. A. arundinacea, R, epee a Tae Perennial, straight, from six to twelve feet thigh aaa S from four to eight feet long; accessary florets male, with both pp seaman! sooo the exterior valvelet of the . : ng time the Béprining of the cool ate | ~ Root pec Culms sinight, jointed, glaucous, between 1 252 TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA, Andropogon, the joints much contracted, round and very smooth, the lower joints of the large plant as thick as the fore finger; every part filled with white spongy pith ; height of the whole plant when in flower, from six to sixteen feet, In the Botanic gar- den where the soil is rich some plants are full sixteen feet high. Leaves from six to eight feet long, slender, deeply channelled toward the base, recurvate, margins hispid,’ The radical ones are bifarious, the floral ones alternate, sheaths smooth, compressed, much shorter than the joints of the culm, Panicle, the whole upper half of each culm may be so call- ed, and is composed of numerous,, axillary, very ramous branches, bending elegantly to one side, particularly witha _ breeze of wind. Bractes one to each umbellet of flowers, boat-shaped, Umbellets numerous, long, slender, pedicelled, drooping, each one is composed of four, sessile, awnless ac- essary male flowers surrounding, and inserted on a short clavate pedicel, which supports an ee sae flower, and two pedicelled awnless ones, Maze Fiowers. Calyx, glume, two-valved, the enterid valve clothed with much diverging fulvous hair, making it quite shaggy. Corol, glume, two-valved, linear, membranace- pus. Neetary of two tote truncated scales, pane Hesmaphiaaale apenas cialis eunielieds villous. Corol one-valved, a long arista oceupies the place of the usual second ss Afertery: ond stamen faiese eerie fa ieee ee. ANDROPOGON. Schreb. gen. N. 1566. . Polygamous. Flowers in pairs, hermaphrodite, pe . Calyx two-valved, one-flowered.» Corol for the most part two-valved, and generally awned, Male, or neuter pediceh = ded. falas. os:fe.the Dermoplcadion Cheek Seca sis : Jseconemads ove oak enti se Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 253 SECT. I. With terminal Seibel 1. A. serratus, Retz, Obs. v. mi Linn, sp, pl. ed, Willd, iv. 903. Spikes solitary, or paired, imbricated with sessile, herma- phrodite, awned flowers on the outside, and two rows of awn- less pedicelled male ones on the inside. v1 Sans. Venee, Khura, Guree, Uguree, Khuraguree, Cutiggil ree, Devutara, Jeemoota, Beng. Detara, or Detta. . Anative of pasture ground. Flowers during the cold sea- son. ' Culms at and near the base creeping, branchy, with only about a foot of their flower-bearing extremities erect, and as thick as a sparrow’s quill, round, smooth, joints slightly vil- lous. Leaves small, inside a little hairy, mouth of the sheaths hairy. Spike terminal, generally solitary, though sometimes there are two or even three; when single, long-peduncled, when two, each has a very short, erect pedicel ; the spike or spikes are about an inch and a half long. Flowers in pairs, numerous, imbricated, on one side are two rows of sessile, her- maprodite ones, and in the other two rows of pedicelled ones; male rachis waved, jointed and hairy. “Hermaphrodite flow- ers sessile. Calyces two-valved, the exterior one broad, com- pressed, striated, a little hairy, rounded at the apex; mar- gins fringed with hairs; involucre smooth, glossy, keeled, pointed. Corol of the hermaphrodite flower one-valved ; the arista which is pretty long and twisted, occupies the place of a second ; that of the male twe.valved; thei inner one e slender 254 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Andropogon, Teling. Yeddi. : Grows in tufts on rich pasture ground, - Culms near the base spreading a little, there compressed _ and ramous, the rest from one to two feet high, erect, round, and smooth ; joints smooth. Leaves below bifarious, middle- sized, upper side scattered with a few hairs, margins and mouths of the sheaths hairy. Spikes always single, terminal, bowing, cylindric; rachis jointed, waved, round, below where it is occupied by the male and neuter flowers smooth; above’ where the female flowers are, it is covered with much short, brown hair. Flowers numerous, imbricated in pairs; on the lower half of the spike they are all neuter, or male, and awnless, one sessile, one pedicelled; on the upper half the sessile flower is female, and the pedicelled one male, .- MALE or neuter FLowers, Calyx two-valved, one-flower- ed ; exterior valyelet green, and covered with stiff white hair; inner valve membranaceous, and smooth, except the margins, which are slightly ciliate. | Corol two-valved, membranace- ous, margins slightly ciliate. Stamens three or none. Femaue Fuowers. Caly2 one-valved, one-flowered, ti- gid, embracing the corol on all sides, brown, a little hairy. Corol one-valved, small, the place of the other is mention se a very long, twisted. arista, | 3. A. tenellus. R. _ Filiform, spikes paired, Fuses aa Paces. ones hermaphrodite, and awned ; the pedicelled ones neuter, and — awnless ; exterior valves of both. calyces. oblong, strinte,’ se hairy, and three-toothed ; neuter corol of.one minute valve. A most delicate tall grass, a native of Bengal, where it tape pears in hedges, &c. during the cool season, Culms from two to three feet long ; at the base nesting on the ground, ramous, scarcely so thick asa pack thread ; pe villous, Leaves slender, a few hairs toward the base. Spike aired, erect, short-pedicelled ; outside imbricated with we rows of sessile, awned, nacelle flower, insid earth ee . Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 255 rows of pedicelled, awnless, neuter ones. Rachis jointed and hairy. Calyces two-valved ; exterior oblong, three-toothed, _ Striated, hairy ; interior acute, three-nerved, that of the neuter flower shorter. Corol of the hermaphrodite flower one-valv- ed, with a long brown awn on the opposite, or inner side, that of the neuter flower single, and very minute. 4. A, binatus. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 918. Retz. Obs. v. 24, Slender, towards the base creeping ; spikes paired, incurv- ed ; flowers paired ; the sessile ones hermaphrodite, and awn- ed; the pedicelled ones male, with an awnless, two-valved oti ; A native of Bengal, appears sista the cool season. Culms very slender, toward the base ramous, and creep- ing ; joints with a scanty short beard. Leaves slender, some- what hairy toward the base. Spikes paired, on a long fili- form peduncle, short-pedicelled, somewhat incurvate ; outside imbricated with two rows of sessile, awned, hermaphrodite flowers ; inside with two very distinct (for they are separat- ed by a deep groove) rows of pedicelled, awnless, male ones. Rachis jointed, and hairy. Calyces of both two- valved ; exterior oblong, hairy, ciliate, five to seven-nerved, edges thin, apex of the male tridentate, of the hermaphrodite obtuse. Inner valves acute, three-nerved. Corol of the hermaphrodite flower of one hyaline valve on the outside and an arista for the other; of the male one of two very unequal hyaline valves, ‘Styles two; stigma purple, villous. Seng oblong smooth, ibe. 5. A. conjugatus. R. : | : Straight, very ramous, siihatiings Spikes ae both Aowenn:hermophroinn: ape hou arma cami of A native of viet and teatnallent of the genus I have . yet met with. Flowers during the cool season. 256 {RIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Andropogon, |. Root afew very slender, brown fibres, Culms in tufts, and yery ramous, filiform, erect, smooth, even the joints ; from six — to twelve inches high. Leaves minute, a few hairs nearthe ) base. © Spikes always exactly paired as in most species of Ischeemun, erect, flat on the inside, where they touch each other. Rachis winding, and clothed with long, silver-colour-_ ed hairs, length about an inch. Flowers in pairs, one sessile, a one pedicelled, both. hermaphrodite, and both awned. Caly- ces two-valved, one-flowered ; exterior valve in both lanceo- late, with the margins copiously ciliate. Corol two-valved ; valves transparent, and brown ; that (the inner) which gives support to the arista, bifid. Stamens three. Styles two. Stigmas long and plumose, | - 6. A. filiformis, R. ' : ; Filiform, annual, erect. Spikes paired. Flowers all ses- sile, solitary ; hermaphrodite, diandrous, with a corol of one ane which ends in a long awn. ’ This is the most delicate species I have i met with ; “ap pears in small tufts, on pasture land near Calcutta, in the months of October, November, and December. ‘ _-- Culms numerous, filiform, smooth, erect, from nine to — twelve ‘inches high, Leaves small, slender, and smooth. Spikes two, terminal, filiform, scarcely two inches long. _ Flowers all hermaphrodite, solitary, sessile, no pedicelled — _ flower being found, no pubescence about the calyx, or rachis. alyx two-valved, one-flowered. Corol of one large, awned ie ‘ealve.. Stamina two, one of the anthers larger. Germanaie: Stylestwo, : a eS a _ 7A, tristachyos. R. Spikes three, both flowers oe and both awn _ ed, Calyces lanceolate, and ciliate. A cliente, beautiful X species found on » newly i down Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 257 Annual, with numerous, nearly straight, erect, ‘smooth, slender, pithy culms, of from one to two feet in height. Leaves taper from the base, most acute, about as long as the joints of the culms; a few long soft hairs on the inside near the base. Sheaths smooth, shorter than the joimts. Spikes two, rarely three, and I have not seen four, one sessile the other two a lit- tle more elevated on a common pedicel, expanding ; from two to three inches long. Rachis jointed, winding, and hairy. Flowers im pairs, one sessile, the other pedicelled, both her- maphrodite, and both awned, Ca/yces two-valved ; valve- lets lanceolate, ciliate; backs smooth, and brown. Corol of two, small, pellucid, brownish valves, the inner of each, ends in a long, brown, arista, proceeding from the bifid apex of the valvelet, 8. A, tridentatus, R. Spikes paired, hirsute, both flowers sitesi, and awned, Calyces shaggy, exterior valves en — tridentate. Corods four-valved. fame A delicate, rather tall species; a native of niente - Culms straight. Leaves small. Spikes terminal, paired, sessile, lanceolate, shaggy. Flowers in pairs; one sessile, the other short-pedicelled, both hermaphrodite, and both awned, Calyx, exterior valves in both flowers cuneiform, with apices truncate, tridentate, back striated ; middle part, as well as the margins from thence down, and the base beard- ed with fulvous hairs; inner valve longer than the exterior, ending in a pretty long arista; margins amply fringed with _ long fulvous hairs, — Corol in both flowers wpe 8 ae exterior one on the ante watts and reser ec OLA. . oncenatas Re : — 2 en! : y iliate cled. Sessile or Pecipieodite flower awn “ Fait (cad aiargta of the exterior valve of the calyx seutely pectinate, serrate. e ¥ot, 1. Q Y . se TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Andropogon. . A native of Coromandel, and very much like Panicum setigerum. Culms scandent, or creeping, emitting roots from the joints, seems perennial. Leaves lanceolate, base cordate, and stem- — clasping, apex acute, smooth on both sides, but the edges, from the middle down, bristle-ciliate... Spikes terminal, two, three, or four, peduncled. Rachis and pedicel of the male flower somewhat woolly. Calyces lanceolate ; exterior valve, _and chiefly that of the hermaphrodite sessile flower with the margins minutely and acutely pectinate-serrate, Corol in both two-valved, with an arista in the hermaphrodite one. 10. A. scandens. R. Climbing ; spikes from three to six, digitste; calyx ddan: late; male corols one-valved, and awnless; hermaphrodite ones ieith a one-valved corol and an awn. ‘Grows commonly in hedges, and on that account scandent; appears and flowers during the rains, stevie, Culms long, ramous, creeping, or inabings over bushes, &c. emitting long roots from the joints; smooth and deeply grooved on one side; flower-bearing extremities erect, and — about one or two feet long; joints woolly. . Leaves some- times a little hairy on the upper side, mouths of the sheaths membrane-stipuled, and hairy. | Spikes generally from three to six, terminal, short pedicelled, sub-panicled flowers in approximate pairs ; one hermaphrodite, and sessile, the other _ male, and pedicelled. In both the calyx-is of two lane somewhat hairy valyes. In the hermaphrodite one the.corol is of one valve, and the place of the second valve is. occupied by a long twisted arista, ‘In the male one it is two-valved. Obs. It is a coarse grass, Cattle are not fond of it, HL A, pertusus. Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. iv. 922. — | 7 oe Near the root creeping. Spikes from four to eighties edic neg exterior’ valye of the. ie awned, hermaphro- Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 259 dite calyx with a bit on the back; male or neuter — one- valved. beget! . Holcus pertusus, Kin. Linn, Mant. 301. Is found on old pasture ground, whieh i is generally shaded by trees, ‘Culms creeping near the base, &c. as in 1 the last two species ; joints bearded. Leaves small, ciliate; mouths of the sheaths bearded. Spikes from four to eight, in other respects exact- ly as in the last species. lowers, the specific mark is to be found in the pit of the exterior valves of the calyx of the | hermaphrodite flowers, as in A, sfrictus, and A, punctatus, to be described ; an arista occupies the place of the second valve of the corol ; the valvelets of the calyx are both awnless. “Obs! V should doubt this being Kénig’s Holcus pertusus, Gf he had not pointed it out to me intl roe 12. A. Bladhit. Linn. sp. pl. ed, Willd. iv. 920. Sub-scandent ; joints pubescent. Spikes from three to six, sub-panicled. Calyces lanceolate ; male corols two-valved; pds Hebi ones Ss with an arista ; s flowers paired. Beng. Loari, A native of noire and road sides, but chiefly of old ‘pas- ture ground, — ~ Culms as in the last described species; joints much beard- ed. Leaves the same. Spikes from four to eight, short-pe- dicelled, inserted round the last half in each of the culms; in other respects they are as in the last described species. ' The flowers resemble those of that species, but are a little more remote. i and = 2 the same as in >) scandens, cigs 49: A, 1s iil: Linn, ap pl. dae Willd. iv. 91. ee "Spikes from six to as fascicled, peduncled 5 “rachis lane: +; herm ite, sessile, and awn- ynless ; ; ealyces acute; exterior 260 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Andropogon, A native of Coromandel, a stout, erect species, with a branch from the axill of each of the superior smooth short leaves, having much the appearance and habit of Bladhii and perivsus ; from the former it differs most conspicuously in the valves of the calyces being acute, whereas in Bladhii they are broad and rounded ; and from pertusus in the want of the pit on the back of the exterior valve of the —— dite flower. : we SECT. Il. With long Bauheids axillary pie - 14, A, monandrus, R. Erect, filiform, with erect, filiform, branches at, the a, Spikes solitary, flowers hermaphrodite, and female ; exterior valvelet of the calyces and corols of both awned ; ; hermaphro- dite, monandrous, . A native ot mountainous countries. | . ” ¢ Culms many, ramous, filiform, straight; about a foot high, round and smooth, Leaves small, base and mouths of the sheaths hairy. Spikes generally solitary, terminal, and from the exterior axills, long-peduncled, straight, about an inch long. Peduneles filiform, jointed, and spathed at the mid- dle. Rachis jointed, winding, hairy. Flowers numerous, — imbricated in pairs; one, the hermaphrodite, parle. and the other, female, pedicelled. ; _ Hermarnropite FLowERS gle Chae tet neat y equal, exterior valvelet ending in a long slender arista, ‘the inner one with its apex obtuse, and bearded, Corol, exterior valve ending in a Jong slender awn, Stamen one. Styles two, &e. as in the genus, f Fema.e Frowers pedicelled. Calyx and corol as ine hermaphrodite ones; only the inner valve of the bani is — and beardad: TAs inestoissith : _ Straight ramous at the top base ofthe leaves ciate, me. * Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 3 261 Spikes fascicled on their own proper pedicels; exterior valve- lets of both calyces pitted ; inner glume of the’ hermaphro- dite corolawned. A native of mountains, and their vicinity. Culms straight, ramous, about two feet high, and as thick as a sparrow’s quill, round and smooth; joints bearded. Leaves slender, a little hairy, and ciliate near. the base; mouths of the sheaths stipuled, Spikes from three to six, long-pedicelled, and collected on a common peduncle, one of which is terminal, and one or two more from the next one or two exterior axills; very slender, perfectly erect, and about an inch long. Rachis as in the former species. Pedicels most fine, straight, two inches long, jointed near the base, where a fine slender spathe begins. Flowers in pairs; one hermaphrodite and sessile, the other smalland pedicelled. HERMAPHRODITE FLowers sessile. Calyx as in the genus, except that the exterior large valvelet has a large pit in it, as in A, pertusus, Corol, imer valve ae es in a long twisted awn. Mate Flower pediccHclt Calyx elisa di pitted as in the hacconppiatiey flower. Corol two-valved, awnless, * a 16. Resdeapolgettiliyoo: R ° Straight; spikes numerous, axillary, simple, each ddesihaee on a long jointed, sheathed peduncle. Flowers, inferior pairs male and awnless ; one of the superior ones is female and amply awned, the rats male and awnless. - A native of the Peninsula of India, The flowers me resemble those of A. Keeps a but the habit of the; sigramee to : PO or gsr hes Sewer tini-thirde of the ibaa all male, , and. awnless, and, as usual, one of them sessile, the other Os. 262 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Andropogon. short-pedicelled ; swperior pairs, the sessile one of each of these is a slender female, amply bearded at the base with much dark brown hair, which is the more conspicuous as every other part of the spike is smooth; the other short-pedi- celled, male, and awnless, like the inferior pairs. 3 Mate Fiowers, Calyx two-valved: Corol two-valveds Stamina three. Femate Fiowers. Calyx of one linear, striated, hard, dark brown valve, Corol one-valved, with a very long, twist- ed awn on the other side, Stamina none. Styles two. SECT. Ill. Panicles naked, and terminal. 17. A. aciculatus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 906. ; Creeping. Leaves shorter than their sheaths. Panicle linear- oblong, erect ; ramifications three-flowered, one hermaphro- dite, sessile, acs two male, peduncled. Gramen aciculatum, Rumph. Amb. 6. t. 5. fi 1. good. Raphis trivalvis. Lour. Cochin Ch, 676. ‘Kadira-pullu. Rheed. Mal, 12. p. 97. t. 43. ~ Sans. Shunkhinee, Chora-pooshpee, Keshinee. Beng. Chora-kanta. ‘ Grows on barren, moist, pasture ground ; its seeds are ex- ceedingly troublesome to those who walk where it grows, as they stick in the stockings, and Seige aa ehingscc: et /dbasintinitjuiciaieclitighion: sont i feet high, jaiee and smooth, Leaves small, waved, with the margins prickle-_ ciliate. Panicle terminal, erect, linear-oblong, from two to — three inches long. Ramifications (or rather peduncles) ver ticelled, simple, three-flowered, nearly erect; apex armed with short stiff hairs. Flowers, one sessile, hermaphrodite, and two pedicelled male ones on each peduncle, _ Hermarnropite Frower. Calyx two-valyed, nearly — equal; the inner one ends in a short arista, and has the keel _ scabrous ; ‘base:involvet in brown short hair. Corel two- : * Andropogon, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 263 valved, the inner one euding’s in a short vigil arista, oe three, &c. as in the genus. Mae Frowers, Calyx and corol as in the igs exbept that there is no arista to the corol. Obs, It is of a very coarse nature, I never found it poumis ed by cattle. 18. A, verticillatus. R. A ) Erect, Leaves long, and very ey: panicle conical; ra- mifications verticelled, three-flowered ; one Herings, sessile, with two awns; and twé-iddiectod; male, with one awn each, A native of mountains, flowering about the end of the we season, Root woody, perennial. Culms erect, simple, cy smooth, round, towards the base soiled, as thick as a small goose-quill ; from four to six feet high. Leaves approximated, eighteen inches long, and three quarters of an inch broad ; margins set with minute spines, and particularly hairy on the inside near the base. Panicles erect, conical, lax, from eight to ten inches long, composed of many verticelled, most simple ‘filiform, waved, bowing, three-flowered branches, as in A, * iculatus, ‘Hermapuropite Fiowers sessile. Calyx, glume one- . flowered, two-valved, inner valve awned, both hairy, having the base surrounded with much brown hair. Corol one-valv- ed, a long twisted awn occupying the place of the other. Stamens three. Style yellow. . Mate Frowers pedicelled, one on each side the herma-_ phrodite one; pedicels covered with brown hairs. Calyx, exterior into a little hairy, and awned, base involved in . peers: Geclannreleet: Lcaategenaan ie ss Linn, sp: pl. ed. Willd. iv. ‘912. } Leaves: ‘marty long. Panicle pepo: wa hay fei A 264 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Andropogon... composed of simple, alternate, filiform, short-pedicelled, erect, patent branches ; neuter florets two-valved and pedicelled. A large, leafy, sub-erect species; a native of the moun- tainous parts of the Northern Cirears. | lam not possessed of any other description of Swartz’s fe saccharoides than the specific character, as it stands in Will- denow’s edition of the species, which agrees with my plant; 1 therefore conclude they are they same. 20. Ischemum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 921, eek Spikes from six to eight, fascicled, peduncled ; rachis hairy, Flowers lanceolate, hermaphrodite, sessile and awned ;. male pedicelled and awnless ; calyces acute, exterior valve hairy. | A native of Coromandel. _ It is a stout erect species, with a branch from the axill of each of the superior smooth short _ leaves; it has much the appearance and habit of Bladhii, and pertusus ; from the former it differs most conspicuously in the valves of the calyces being acute, whereas in Bladhiithey ~ are broad and rounded; and from pertusus in the want of the. pit on the back of the exterior valve of the hermaphrodite — flowers. + 21. A, punctatus, R. Erect, simple. Leaves large, Jong, and numerous. Desinle at ) of numerous, simple, second ramifications, Exterior valves of the gat of both Rennes and neniar graces (pit. This is is ‘3 Mountain grasa. ai seman} _ Culms from two to four feet high, ‘Ssithont beantca, diel bent towards the earth for half a foot, often erect, entirely” surrounded with the sheaths of the leaves; not piped, but re-- plete with spongy pith. Leaves numerous, large, with some long white hairs scattered over them near the base; omaha of ‘the sheaths stipuled, bearded, and woolly. Pasig erect, — or ne from four to five inches hah ceengeds of ay, oe be LES ee Se Andropogon, _ TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, | 265 chis and flowers exactly asin A. Jascicularis ; except that here the outer valve of the calyx of both flowers has a pit | in - the middle. The corol of the hermaphrodite flower wants the inner valve ; in its place is a pretty long twisted awn. 22. A. fascicularis. R, | Erect, ramous. Panicle composed of fascicled, simple, or divided branches. Flowers paired ; hermaphrodite ones awn- ed ; neuter ones awnless and without a corol. Teling, Kunda-jeri. A native of mountains, Culms erect, jointed, smooth, rather thicker than a crow’s quill, from ‘thrée to five feet high, sulcated, mostly naked, rush-like, not piped. Leaves from three to four, small, re- mote, retrorso-scabrous ; mouths of the sheath hairy; from each sheath springs a ahiire panicle-bearing branch, Panicle terminal, six inches long, erect, fascicled ; fascicles remote, alienate; composed of several erect, filiform, often ramous, — secund spikes, or spiked-racemes. Flowers in pairs; the hermaphrodite ones sessile; the neuter peduncled. Common rachis round, smooth; partial one undulated, jointed, com- pressed, woolly. | _ HermMapuropitEe FLower. Caly yt, glume one-flowered, two-valved, smooth, awnless, base surrounded with wool, Corol, exterior valve the length of the calyx ; inner short, bi-- fid, with a long twisted awn from the fissure. Neuter floret small, its pedicel woolly, length of the hermaphrodite flower, — frevalved, Corol none, ~ipnatey 93. hitehdmanak Rete. Obs. iti. N. 95, and v. . Erect-in all situations. Leaves sail ‘iov row}: neg is 7 Pantale ve ti cel : m ianety anil the name of the last; and Khuskhus the root. 266 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. = Andropogon. — Tam, Woetiwear. -Virana. Asiat. Res. vol. iv. p. 306. It is very common in every part of the coast and Benigeli ' where it meets with a low, moist, rich soil, especially on the banks of water courses, &c. ; Root of many perennial, long, spongy, brown fibres. Culms many, smooth, simple, rigidly erect; a little compressed at the base, jointed, smooth, inwardly spongy; from four to six feet high and as thick as a goose-quill. Leaves near the base bi- farious, narrow, erect, from two to three feet long, pretty smooth, rigid. Panicle from six to twelve inches long, coni- cal, composed of numerous spreading, short-peduncled, sim- ple, linear, verticelled spiked-racemes, Rachis of the spiked- racemes jointed, winding, naked, Flowers paired, awnless; one hermaphrodite, sessile ; the other male, and — insertions nearly naked. | Hermapnropite Firower. Calyx Hessel nearly equal, muricated. Corol three-valved, membranaceous, Nee- tary, two obcordate scales embracing the germ and insertions -of the filaments, Stamens three, Stigmas feathery. ‘Maze Frower. Calyx as in the hermaphrodite, -— two-valved. Nectary as above. Stamens three, Obs. The roots, ‘when dry, and then gently snoieeasil; : emit ‘a pleasant kind of fragrance; they are employed to make large fans, commonly ‘called Vissaries; and ‘also screen’ which are placed before windows and doors, which being kept moist during the hot winds render the air that’ ‘passes through them, both cool and fragrant, See Observation ¢ po Aristida setacea, The grass is often employed for thatch. Dr. Kénig was tooaccurate a Botanist to describe this very ‘conspicuous plant under two names,’ viz. A, squarrosus. Linn. sp; pl. Willd. iv. 908, and A. muricatus ; the former is evidently a very different species, and found by him in Cey- lon, ets on pools of water ; whereas A. murieatus (whieh | 1 fo , - Andropogon, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 267 ly aromatic, as mentioned by Kénig himself, and by Sir William Jones, particularly when moistened with water. . I am inclined to think Kénig’s A, squarrosus is my Pani- cum paludosum ; a species with thick spongy culms, which is ones found swimming on pools of sweet water. 24, Al glaber, R. | ALS Erect, ramous, smooth. Panicle ovate, verticelled ; ra- mification simple, two or three-cleft. lowers casa the hermaphrodite ones awned, with the calyx pitted ; the male ones neither pitted nor awned, with a two-valved corol. Beng. Gundha-goorana, Found thinly scattered on rather elevated spots ‘over Bengal. whe Root perennial. Culms sub-erect, very ramous, smooth, from three to four feet high. Leaves glossy, smooth in every part, _ Panicles ovate, verticelled ; ramifications simple, and two-cleft, or even three-cleft sometimes, Flowers paired ; the hermaphrodite ones sessile esis awned ; the male: ones pe- dicelled, and awnless. HERMAPHRODITE FLOWERS. | Calye Seesaival, aah, purple-coloured ; exterior valve pitted on the back, Corol one-valyed, a long awn occupying the place of the second. Maze Frowers nearly as large as the female. Calyx “not pet. Corol two-valved. ‘i 2D A. moutanus, R. : _Shrubby near the base, creeping. Leaves long and slen- der, Panicle sub-verticelled ; ramifications ramous ; i ACTA, ‘ vot m im nes to pi feet high, and as thick as : a sarge crow’s quill, Leaves Jong and narrow, a little bairy 268 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Andropogon, on the upper side near the base only ; mouths of the sheaths bearded. Panicle terminal, conical, from four. to eight inches Jong, composed of many, ramous, sub-verticelled spikes, or rather spiked-racemes; rachis winding, jointed, a little hairy. lowers as usual, in pairs, an tales oe one sessile ; and a neuter one pedicelled, Fisk manga FLowers. Calyx.two-valved, en terior one a little hairy. Corol one-valved, a twisted awn two or three times.the length of the corol supplies the place of the other. Veuter flowers like the hermaphrodite ones, but without arista, 26. A. bicolor, R. Rast Erect. Panicle diffuse, with useing saeabaip wl super-decompound. branches ; hewiophodite calyces. with smooth backs, and fringed nsbpiciay corol three-valved, and awned ; calyx of the neuter flower hairy, with a two-valved corol. Holcus bicolor. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 929, ; Beng. Kala-deodhan, ee ted » Hind. Kala-jooar. nef ~ Teling. Muka-janoo, and Muka-janoolar the grain, - L have only found it in a cultivated state. ' — Culms generally single, straight, round, rp to ten feet high, and as thick as the finger or thumb, mostly covered by the sheath of the leaves. Leaves from one to mouths of the sheaths bearded. Panicle erect, oyal, dense, composed: of many ramous, expanding, sub-verticelled branches, the various ramifications angular and very. hispid when the finger is drawn backwards over them, their flower- _ bearing extremities hairy. Flowers paired, and, as) in wee _genus, the sessile one is ee and the pedicelled “one neuter, iy Hage | pi vue ote Frowsns esi x Cals valeelts eat oe Andropogon, ‘TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 269 of a shining black, with many white hairs round the margins (ciliated.) Corol three-valved, fringed, the’ second or solita-_ ry valve ending in a short twisted arista. Seeds oval, brown, smooth, free, with an impression on the back near the base. Neuter Fiowers pedicelled. Calyx striated, hairy. Corol two-valved, awnless, Stamens none. Obs. This and the following species A. Sorghum seem to ‘me to possess more of the character of Andropogon than of Holcus. 1 have therefore changed their places from the latter to the former. 27. A. Sorghum. R. Erect, Panicle contracted, dense ; hermaphrodite wi Bs hairy. Corols three-valved, awned. — Holcus Sorghum. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 929. i ’ Beng. and Hind, Jooar. Es ’ Teling. Tella, or Konda (white): janoo - name of the plant, and Tella-janoolar the grain. Obs, This also I have only found ina — state. It differs from the former. — Ist. In having the P29 Southaited, very acu and less regularly verticelled. 2d. In having the glumes of the esti of a whitish Ms colour and very woolly, _ 8d. In having three valves to the neuter fisereite: There are two other sorts, which I take to be only varieties of the last; their names in Telinga are Pacha Gereea) J anoo ant: Fiore: (red) Janoo, ~. These last two with their varieties sinialiaasiaalila a rather elevated, good soil. Seed time October; and har- vest time, January. The produce in good soil is often up- wards of an hundred-fold. The grain ismuch used for food. It is probable that 1rough the whole of Southern Asia as many of the inhabitants live on the various kinds of dry or ‘small grain, as upon rice, and ‘they are reckoned oud as | ‘wholesome as that is, 270 YRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Andropogon. — All kinds of cattle are remarkably fond of the straw not- sarees its thickness, and solidity. | 28. A. cernuus. R. Erect, from five to fifteen feet high; lower half with ver- ticils of roots from the joints, Panieles oval, with numer- ous, long, compound, cernuous branches ; glumes villous and fringed. Corol three-valved and fringed, the inner scarce awned, Bileus cernuus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 930. ; This species, (or variety of Sorghum,) is the kind cultivat- ed by the inhabitants of the Menipoora, Koonkee, and other mountainous districts immediately east of Bengal. The grain is milk white ; some of it was sown in the Botanic garden, during the early part of the rainy season of 1812, and in No- vember the plants were from ten to fifteen feet high, several ramous stems arising from the same root, or grain of seed ; all the joints of the lower half of the original stems which are as thick as a slender walking cane, throw out copiously. verti- cils of roots from all the joints, the lower ones near the soil _enter it, and give additional support and nourishment to the plants, which are of two, or more years’ duration, if suffered to remain; the leaves are from twenty to forty inches long, by woven these broad, soft and smooth, the rib white on both sides, Panicles large, oval on. the more’slender branches, aki in those, while in flower erect ; but in such as terminate the primary stems, the form is obscure, from the drooping ha- bit of their branches. The flowers agree with those of Shor- ghum, except that the awn is so small and short as to be hid within the glume of the calyx ; the neuter flowers are very minute, and consist of only one or two'slender, villous, caly- cine glumes. The grain of this plant is the staff of life of — those wild savage mountaineers, who inhabit the above-men- tioned countries, where it is one of the few articles cultivated = | by on: Cattle are fond ot ten ii or rather canes. ee Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. | 271 29. A. saccharatus. R. Erect. Panicles verticelled, with. eaisiieahake pa Calyx hairy; corols awnless; hermaphrodite three-valved, neuter one-vavled, Holcus saecharatus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 930. _ Hind. and Beng. Deo-dhan. Is much cultivated over various parts of India during the ~ rainy and cold seasons upon land which is too high for rice. Root ramous. Culms erect, round, jointed, sometimes ra- mous, lower joints radicating from eight to twelve feet high, three or four inches in circumference near the base. Leaves - bifarious, sheathing, sword-shaped, margins hispid, the rest smooth, with a white nerve on the upper side, three feet long, and three or four inches broad. Sheath as long as the pani- cle is when young, afterwards the whole is completely bent down from the weight of the seed. Flowers paired, one her- maphrodite, sessile ; the other neuter, and pedicelled. _. HeRMApHRopITE Fiowers sessile. Calyx one-flowered, two-valved, both valves hairy. .Corol three-valved, the soli- tary valve precio dagger, shorter than the calyx, Seed oval, white. ’ ? NEUTER Reine Gatieelled, ishgs two-valved, pecs 5 Corol one-valved, awnless, Stamens none. bs. The only circumstance that renders me uncertain whether this is Holeus saccharatus of Linnzeus is the total want of the arista in the hermaphrodite flowers ; in other re- = they agree. 80. A, laxus. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 907... 272 TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA, - Andropogon. Grows in hedges, on banks of water courses, and on ap that has lately been in cultivation. Root somewhat woody, perennial. Culm near the base bending to the earth, and there rooting at the joints, the rest ” erect; the whole isofa firm ligneous texture, inwardly spongy, jointed, round and smooth ; below naked, above covered by ‘the sheaths of the leaves. In hedges on the banks of the ri- vers, &c, where the soil is good, it is often from ten to fifteen feet high; while on a barren dry soil, not more than one or two. Leaves long, smooth, except the margins, which are’ scabrous. Panicle very large, oval, often bowing, rather thin, composed of sub-verticelled, ramous, spreading branches, with woolly insertions; the branchlets of the branches are composed of four or six pedicelled, spiked racemes. Rachis of the spikes jointed, &c. Flowers paired, &e. as in the _— species, HERMAPHRODITE FLowers sessile. Calyx SS tactiedl valvelets equal, hairy, . Corol three-valved, membranaceous, margins fringed with hairs; the second one retuse, with a pretty long twisted arista; the inner one very small. Nee- tary as in the last species. Mate Frowers pedicelled. Calyx as in the =a Corol two-valved. 31. A, milaceus. R. Hherh | Erect, from six to ten feet hig ‘Panicle ample, lax ; : ra- : mifications verticelled, expanding, or drooping. — the: valved, in both hermaphrodite and male flowers, ~The seeds of this most beautiful stately grass were 7 Wieade | from Lucknow, by the late Gen. Claude Martin, under the name of hill grass, It being a native of the mountains north of Oude. It blossoms in this ‘garden during the latter = of : the rains, Culms erect, ramous, smooth, the largest of then wines as thick as the little finger, general height (in the rich soil of the anic garden) about ten feet, Leaves ensiform- ancet sof, and smooth, except the margins, which are a ee a Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 273 minute sharp bristles, pointing forward, general length from _two to three feet, and from one to two inches broad near the base, where broadest. Sheaths smooth, except at the mouths, and there bearded on both sides. Panicle very large, erect, with long, slender, smooth, elegantly drooping, verticelled, compound and decompound ramification, Flowers in pairs, as in the genus; one hermaphrodite, and sessile; the other male, and pedicelled. Calya two-valved, one-flowered, oval, rather obtuse, and hairy, but without the characteristic wool- ly, or hairy involucre round the base of the flowers. Corol in both sorts three-valved, membranaceous, and fringed, sometimes the hermaphrodite flower is awned. Nectary two, fleshy, broad, truncated, fringed scales, Obs. In habit this beautiful species comes near my Andro- pogon tumbackianus, from the Cape of Good pina but is more elegant in the panicle, SECT. 1V. Panicles foliaceous. 32. A, pumilus. R. Erect, twelve inches high; panicles composed of numer- ous axillary, and terminal, conjugate spikes, on long, joint- ed sheathed peduncles. Calyx of the sessile hermaphrodite, flower awned, cuspidate. A native of Coromandel, and one of the smallest of i genus, _ Culms ramous, s erect, smooth, Leaves rather small, particu- larly the floral ones, which are little more than large sheaths, Panicle composed of numerous, axillary, and terminal, con- jugate, hirsute,.secund spikes, elevated on slender, jointed peduncles, embraced by many delicate, chaffy | bractes at the base, and by a sheath from the joint upwards, lo in nteinints hairy rachis, one sessile and herma- led and male. Calyx two-valved, agian censpidates Corol one- ite flower. _ "you. _ : R 274 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Andropogon, 93. A. parviflorus, R i Ascending. Leaves linear. Panicle eakys thin; cable : solitary, with proper, jointed, leafy spathes; both flowers awned, the pedicelled one a rudiment only. A very beautiful most delicate species, a native of pe land up amongst the Circar mountains and also of the moun- — tains themselves. $ that Culms very branchy, ascending Alien iis a foot, ora foot anda halfhigh. Leaves numerous, stuall, linear, rather - obtuse, mouths of the sheaths stipuled. Spikes axillary, mi- nute, peduncled; generally one or two, rarely three. Rachis jointed and waved as in the other species, but here it is smooth, except at the insertions of the flowers. Peduncles most slender, jointed at the middle, from whence a small spathe ascends, which generally hides a part. of its spike. — Flowers in pairs; one hermaphrodite and sessile, the other merely the rudiment of a floret on a long clubbed pedicel. _ 34, A. Schenanthus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 915. ~~ Perennial, erect. Panicle sub-secund, linear, leafy ; spike- lets thereof paired, on a common, spathed pedicel, with pro~ per pedicels and spathes ; flowers of both sorts neniewys = male corol one-valved. adsl Sans, Malatrinuking, ee ' Beng. Gundha-bena, : Rameccion. Rheed. Hort. Mal, 12,. p 137. ty: Rp - Schenanthum amboinicum. Aomey Amb. ne pase 2. Je 2. Bice eer to Domeerrang'y alpen}; Schcenanthus, or of oy aden of ‘he Materia Mediogt On the coast I have only found this elegant valuable species: __ inastate of cultivation, few gardens being without it; Lhave but twice found it in flower and both times during tern Root perennial, young propagating-shoots issue: deci, the axills of the leaves that surround a short, sub-ligneous | ee a a a Colne from fyot to seven feet bakes Te o% E : j Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA, 275 ple, smooth, about as thick as a goose-quill. Leaves many, near the root bifarious, few on the upper part of the culm, | of a soft texture, pale, green colour, slightly scabrous on’ the margins when drawn backward against the fingers, other- wise smooth; from three to four feet long including: their sheaths, and about three-quarters of an inch broad. Floral leaves small. Panicle linear, a little bent to one side, compos- ed of many fascicles of spikes that are both terminal, and from the exterior axills; Spikes generally paired on a common pe- duncle, with a common boat-like spathe, or involucre at’ the division ; each has also its proper pedicel, and both spathe- shaped. « Rachis articulated, much waved, hairy. | #lowers in ‘pairs, one hermaphrodite and sessile, the other male and pedicelled ; the last hermaphrodite flower of each spike has. _ two males; below, only one male, as the rachis occupies the place of the other ; this is the case with most of ee of the genus. Hermapuropite Fiowers sessile. Glume girt at the base with wool, &c, as in the family. Corol two-valved, awnless, Nectary, two, broad, short, wedge-formed, ‘obliquely lobed, crenulated bodies embr: e the insertions of the filaments ah the forepartof the germ. ~ Maze Frowenrs pedicelled. Calyx, glumes as’in the her- voip lrbdite ones, Corol one-valved, awnless. abil as in the hermaphrodite. Stamens three. Obs. The fresh leaves are much used as a substitute for tea. The white succulent centre of the leaf. bearing’ culms is ohen’ Eel into curries, to give sig an — flavour. 35. A. Foittanbusa: Philosoph. Transact. vol. 80. _ Iwarancussa. Beak. e+ iv. 109. “R2 r 276 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Andropogon. A native of the skirts of the northern mountains of India. Dr. Blane found it between the river Raptee and the moun- tains, and Dr. Boyd about Hurdwar ; it is therefore probably a native of a very extensive tract along the skirts of that range of mountains which bounds the plains of Bengal, Ba- har, Oude, &c. Flowermg time the rainy season, It grows in large tufts, each tuft composed of a pumber of plants adhering together by their roots, Root perennial, the principal parts thereof are thicker than a crow’s quill, and marked with circular cicatrices, from these issue many small, firm, aromatic fibres. Culms erect, generally simple ; from three to six feet high, smooth in every. part, not hollow, but filled with a light spongy substance. Leaves, those near the root longer than the joints of the culm, margins hispid when the finger is drawn backwards over them, otherwise smooth in every part. Panicle axillary, and terminal, or the whole may be reckoned a long linear, erect, or drooping, intercepted panicle, composed of numerous, (ma- ny of them proliferous,) fascicles of slender, pedicelled, thin spikes of five joints; each fascicle is furnished with its own — proper boat-shaped spathe, besides many chaffy bractes within it among the insertions of the pedicels; and a proper spathe to each paix of spikes. Flowers on the body of the ra- chis paired ; one awned, , hermaphrodite, and sessile ; the other awnless, male, and pedicelled, the terminal “ising are three, one hermaphrodite, sessile, and awned ; the other ie male, pedicelled, and awnless. eect HERMAPHRODITE, Calyx one-flowered, Fo teaben girt with wool, as is also the rachis, and proper pedicels. Corol two-valved, and fringed ; inner valvelets two-parted, — with a short arista in the fissure, Nectary two, minute, leaf- lets embracing the germ laterally, Stamens, pistil, and seed, as in the genus. o- Maxe, Calyz as in the hermaphrodite, Corol. prom 7. and stamens as in the hermaphindiit no Pt | ip arte ‘9 Andropogon. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 277 Obs. This species comes remarkably near to A. Schoenanthus both in habit and taste. For the virtues of the roots of this plant, see Dr. Blane’s account thereof in the second part of the SOth volume of the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London ; also Asiatic Researches, iv. p. 109. The virtues seem to re- side almost entirely in the larger parts of the root, marked with annular cicatrices, the taste is agreeably aromatic, with some degree of bitterness. 36. A. Martini. R. Perennial, erect. Panicles linear, sub-secund ; spikelets paired, three-jointed, with common spathes only ; hermaphro- dite corols of one valve, and an awn; male awnless. A native of the high lands of Balla-ghat. General Martin collected the seeds while there with the army, during the last war with Tippoo Sultan, and has reared abundance of it at Lucknow. It is also now plentiful in the Company’s Botanic garden, raised from seed sent from thence by that gentleman, whose name I have applied as a specific one for this elegant plant. Root perennial, with long wiry fibres. Culms erect, from three to six feet high, often ramous, smooth, filled with a spongy pith. Leaves very long, tapering to a very fine point, smooth in every part and of a soft delicate texture. Sheaths shorter than the joints on full grown plants, with a membra- naceous stipulary process at the mouth. Panicles as in A, Twarancusa ; spikelets paired, but with only three joints. Flowers also paired, &c. as in the former species, only there the Wheels pair on the most sessile utes vil - R3 278 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA,” Paspalum. Obs. General Martin, who past me this grass from —— writes to the following effect :— “ | took particular notice of a sort of long grass which the cattle were voraciously fond of, which is of so strong an aro- matic and pungent taste, that the flesh-of the animals, as also the milk and butter, have a very strong scent of it. Of this grass I send you a small stalk, some roots, and seed ; if you taste the latter, though old, you will find it ofa very pungent aromatic taste.” \ PASPALUM. Schreb. gen. N. 31. _ it * Calyx one-flowered, two-valved, valvelets rounded, equal. Corol of two valves, and like the calyx. Seed — to the coro], 1. P. serobiculatum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, i. 330. Spikes axillary and terminal, sessile, alternate, erect, Flow- ers alternate, in two rows, or crowded, smooth, Calyces from three to five-nerved, Culms erect, two feet high; a mend round, smooth, Sans. Korudoosha, Saxe. + Ky & ohBhigl Koda, wile: ij a1 eat Hind: Kodacka-chouli2o& essl foe eho. thie aa” Telling. Aruga, en Ba Ss 36h Gee geet geod 4 ty ee ; Thisi is cultivated by the natives over sasily parts of India. ou Tt delig ‘in a light, dry, loose soil, but'will grow'in & Aa se battens whee - Time of cultivation the rainy season, © °° Root fibrous. Culms erect, ramous, jointed, smoollle ko about two feet high, involved in the sheaths of the leaves. ae Leaves sheathing, bifarious, longer than the culm, every part | se smooth, Sheaths longer than the joints, often embracing the — spikes like a spathe. Spikes axillary and terminal, from two to! four, alternate, sessile, erect, secund. Rachis broad, — i eous, with a waved keel on the inside. lowe te, , in 1 two Towa; in Toxuriant plate the owe Paspalum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 279 are crowded without order. Calyx ; exterior valve three- nerved ; interior valve five-nerved, Seeds brown, smooth, ‘size of those of hemp. Obs. The seed is an article of dict with the Bisidoos: par- ticularly with those who inhabit the mountains and most barren parts of the country, for it is in such countries only where it is cultivated, it being an unprofitable ste 4 and not ‘ ‘sown where others more beneficial will thrive. T have eaten of the boiled — “~ — it as palatable as Tice. 2, P. Kora. Linn. sp. pn ed, Willd. i. 332. | Spikes terminal, alternate ; ; flowers alternate, in two rows, smooth, Calyces from ilttos to five-nerved. Culms ive?! procunibent, from one to eight feet high, | P. orbiculare, Forst. pe N. 35. Hind. Kodu. Teling. Neer (i. e. water) Aruga.!" A native of the borders of water courses. - Root fibrous, annual. Culms resting on the puna near the base, above ascending, branchy, jointed, smooth ; from one to three feet long. "Leaves as in P. serobiculatum, but shorter. Spikes generally two, or three, though in very ‘luxuriant: plants: I have seen seven or eight, terminal, sessile, ‘horizontal, and erect, the rest as in the last described. ae Obs. Cattle are very fond of these two Fi _— or dry: a . Ae ds Hi capatheeer Lite. sp. a ed. Willd. i i. 332. nee Obs. iv. 15, pokes | -- Spikes paired, ‘terminal, horizontal. Cale oblon ; tuse, smooth, ‘Culms: creeping. Tagen Resende: Rheed, _ Mal: 12 ip. ‘shit, a4, o um. Retz. Obs. iv. p, 15. tive of low pastu pasture ground. Pe aeih P. tie. _tichum, Linn. p. ph. ed. Led. Willd. i, 322. 4 _ Root creeping. Culms creeping, with their extremities R4 280 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Paspalum. ascending six or eight inches high, jointed, smooth. Leaves sheathing, alternate, bifarious, short; mouths of the sheaths bearded, Spikes paired, terminal, sessile, spreading, secund, Flowers in two rows, alternate, oblong, somewhat paired, smooth, Calyx and corol without nerves. A, P, longifolum. R Erect, simple. ina as long as the culms. Eusiels of . many simple, alternate, diverging spikes scattered round a three-sided rachis. Valvelets of the calyx three-nerved. Seed oval, lucid, and marked with minute pits. Of what country this is a native is uncertain, It anpesred in the Botanic garden in 1807, in a place where plants from Sumatra had been planted, it is therefore more than probable that the seeds were in the earth, Culms several from one root, simple, etzpichs, jointed, nearly erect, round and smooth, height of the whole plant when in flower above three feet. Leaves long, viz. from one to three feet, sheaths included, slender, acute, smooth, except the edges when rubbed backward. Sheaths longer than the - joints of the culm, and smooth, except at the top, where there area few, long, soft hairs near the short scagiose ligula, Pa- nicle composed of from twelve to twenty-four, simple, diverg- ing spikes, scattered alternately round a three-sided rachis, — nearly a foot in length, Spikes sessile, with a few, long, straight, white hairs round their insertions, about three inches long. Rachis flat, with a waved keel on the underside, and coloured, waved 1 margins. lowers in numerous, alternate, imbricated pairs on the underside of the flat rachis, on une- qual, short pedicels, Calyx of two, very equal, oval leaflets with a nerve or rib round the margins, and one down the middle. Seeds oval, dotted with ane small nity shining. Panicum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 281 LAPPAGO. Schreb. gen. N. 131. Calyx from two to three-valved. Corol two-valved, re- supine, E L. biflora. R. Culms creeping. Pedicels two-flowered ; inner valvelets of the calyx armed with hooked bristles, Phalaris muricata, Forsk. descript. 202. Itis a small, prostrate grass, a native of the dryest pasture _ ground on the Coromandel coast. Culms pressing on the earth, and striking root from the joints, from six to twelve inches long, ramous. Leaves short, margins ciliate, and waved; imoullia of the sheaths bearded. Racemes terminal, simple, fet one to two inches long. Pe- dicels short, diverging, two-flowered, Flowers lanceolate, echinated on the back, or outside, diverging on all sides round the rachis, which is waved, angular, striated, and downy. Calyx one-flowered, two-valved ; the exterior valve ‘very minute, second or inner valve, (for there is no other,) lanceolate and completely embracing the corol on all sides, on the back and sides covered with many, strong, hooked bris- thes. Corol two-valved, membranaceous, Nectarial << large. Stamens, pistil, &c. as in the genus. doe __PANICUM. Schreb. gen. N. 107. Calyx, glume one or two-flowered, three-valved ; exterior ae minute ; seed i alee to the corol. iss a Wigge on ie SSEOT. EL Spikes single LP. indicum. Mant. 184. Retz. Obs. i. p. 9. Culms from four to eight inclies, ascending from a repent base. Spikes sub-cylindric, naked. Calyx smooth, no in- volucres, 282 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicunt, P. conglomeratum. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 341, does not agree with our plant in having cylindrical spikes with flowers equally disposed on all sides, This is a very small species, a native of Coromandel. 2. P. barbatum. R. as Culms from three to five feet highi very ramous at ‘tops Leaves lanceolate. . Spikes simple, aylitidaies Involucreis. simple, and bearded, surrounding on every side a single flower; seed smooth. This species, sprung up in beds, in the Botanic garden where earth had been thrown that came from Sumatra, or Amboyna. ‘Compare with P. ~~ Linn. sp. si ed. Willd. i. 835. * Root annual in Dedirstes Coulis erect, about. an foot hi, simple, till near the top, there very ramous, Leaves lanceo- late, often a foot and a half long, hispid on the margins, other- wise smooth; the sheaths about half the length of the joints, with a few single hairs at the mouth. Spikes terminal, and — solitary (though from the numerous ramification of the top of the culms the whole may be called alarge leafy panicle) sub- cylindric, about three or four inches long. | Involucrets of two sorts, the longest-about.twice the length of the flowers — with their lower half bearded, hence the specific name, which — for the same reason is also applicable to my Panicum hol- coides,) the innermost one is in this species about double the — length of the other five, six, or seyen; all are of a reddish ee brown colour from the bearded part to the point, The other sort of involucrets are simple and about the length of the flowers. The two Sorts surround on all sides a single flower. a Calyx one-flowered, exterior valve vor minute, Seeds sooth, ee slender and pointed. oF Obs. It differs from my P. holcoides in the catmblding * very en at the “id only, and in the leaves being wont ' Panicum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNTIA, 283 sorts of involucrets equally disposed round the owen and ip the leaves being puprecai and smooth, 2 3. P. spicatum, R. Erect. Spikes cylindric. Involucres hairy, surrounding from one to three awnless polygamous flowers. Calyces two-valved, both shorter _— the corol, the inner —_ and retuse, Holcus spicatus, Linn. sp ea ed, Willd. iv. 928, Gramen paniceum. Pluck. &c. alm. t. 32. f. 4. good. Hind. Bujera, or Bujra. Pedda-Gantee is the Telinga name of the plant, and Ganti- loo, the grain. — I have only found this in a cultivated state. It io sill about the beginning of the rains, viz. the end of —— beginhing of July, andi is ripe in Septembers) Culms several, if the soil is good, from the same grain ‘of seed, erect, with roots from the lowermost joint or two, round, smooth, from three to six feet high, and nearly as thick as the little finger. Leaves alternate, —— broad. and long ; mouths of the sheaths bearded. Spikes or rather ra- cemes, erminal, cylindric, erect, as thick as‘a man’s thumb, or more, and from six to nine inches long. Pedicels general- ly two-flowered, though sometimes only one and sometimes as many as four. Flowers surrounded with many, woolly, his- pid purple bristles or,énvolucres, about the length of' the flower. Calyx two-flowered, one hermaphrodite the other male, two-valved ; exterior valvelet minute, interior nearly — as long as the etek retuse, both awnless, Corol of the her- maphrodite flower two-valved, of the male one-valved. tyle ae. Stigma two-cleft, — Seed obovate, pearl-co- ' This species is ‘much cultivated over the higher lands on _ the coast of Coromandel, The soil it likes is one that is loose * 284 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum, and rich; in such it yields upwards of an hundred-fold, the same ground will yield a second crop of this or some other sort of dry grain during October, November, December, and January. . _ The Hindoo farmer knows four other varieties of this spe- cies, all of which he cultivates. Their Telinga names are 1sé. Pitta (birds) Gantee ; 2d. Munda-boda-Gantee ; 3d, Palla- boda-Gantee ; and 4th. Yerra-Gantee. Cattle are fond of the straw, and the grain is a very essen- tial article of diet amongst the natives of these parts. ‘ A, P. involucratum. R. Erect. Spikes cylindric, numerous, scattered, two-flower- ed, alternately longer and ciliate; shorter and smooth. Caly- ces two-valved, the exterior one minute, the inner one waniares than the corol, and emarginate, A native of mountains chiefly, where it grows wild, Culms as in the last species, from two to four feet high ; - joints woolly. Leaves, mouths of their sheaths bearded. Spikes as in P. spicatum, but the pedicels smaller, two-flow- ered. Jnvolucre, many bristles surrounding on all sides the’ flowers; they are of two sorts, simple ones awled, the longer ones with fringed margins. Calyx one or two-flowered; _ valvelets as in the last species. Corol when there is only one to the calyx it is hermaphrodite, when two, ee teem he dite, the other male, as in the last species. Stylestwo, Obs. 1 know of no use this is put to at present; it may bak Panicum spicatum in its wild state, though it is more a Panicum holcoides in its present wild state. 5. P. glaucum. Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. i. 335, oe Culms erect, from one to three feet high; involucel one bundle of hairy bristles, one-flowered. Flowers kane Ee. Palzgamous Seed samenneten regune: fe Panicum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, ° 285 _. This species is generally found on cultivated lands, grow- ing amongst the different sorts of small or dry grain. ~ Root fibrous, Culms sometimes near the base resting on the ground, and striking root; the rest erect, ramous, smooth, a little compressed ; from one to three feet high. Leaves sheath- ing, nearly bifarious, smooth ; mouths of the sheaths hairy. Spikes terminal, columnar, from two to six inches long, Flow- ers solitary, or jomed to the rudiments of one or two more, short-pedicelled, numerous, Jnvolucels longer than the flow- ers, consisting of one bundle of hairy bristles which issue from the middle of the underside of the pedicel. Calyx ge- nerally two flowers, in which case one is male, the other her- maphrodite, with its corol, as in the family. The male corol consist of one membranaceous glume between the inner.valve of the corol and inner glume of thecalyz, it has ns stamens only.- Obs. It. may probably be P. helvolum of the Supplenen. tum Plantarum, 197. In India we have two or sas seriees eatenalaiaieeinan: Can any pecianneetelIO S cus Peremer ronan one comes. nen near it, | 6. Prholeoides. R. Erect. Involucels numerous, scattered, one-flowered, alter- nately one longerand woolly, and another shorter and smooth ; flowers sometimes polygamous, Seed oblong, smooth, resem- bling a small grain of common. oats, | _ Beng. Swati. Grows, with the former, on celexa lands, but they up amongst the mountains. “Root fibrous. Culms erect, ramous, from. two eotoad feet high, round, smooth, Leaves sheathing ; sheaths half the length of the joints; mouths bearded. Spikes as in P. glau- cum, but larger. Flowers solitary, short-pedicelled, without order. Involucels numerous, bristles entirely surrounding the flower; of two sorts, the largest twice the length of the flow- _ 286 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum. er, and woolly from the middle down, the other sort are small- er, and: without wool or hair. Calyx one or two-flowered, as in'the last; exterior valve minute, the other two as long as the corol, of which the apex of the exterior one is somewhat three-toothed. Seed smooth, very like common oats, but smaller, i Obs, It differs from P. Polystachyon in having the invo- lucels scattered round the pedicels and flower. It may there- fore be Rumph’s gramen caricosum, vol. vi. t. 7. f. 2. Aco 7. P. interruptum, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 341. Culms above water erect. Spikes simple, cylindric ; —_ crowded, smooth, Cigar seed smooth, ack RY Benq. Nardula, ED Teling. Wolam. : econ Re A very large species, grows in deep lings water. - Culms ramous, those parts under the water swelled, as_ thick as the little finger, with many fibres from the joints; the parts above the water erect, about as thick as a common ‘quill, from two to four feet high, smooth, involved in the ~ sheaths of the leaves, Leaves, sheaths longer than the joints, smooth. Racemes or spikes simple, erect, columnar, from” four to six inches high, Flowers small, oval, pedicelled, nu- merous, generally many, from nearly the same place. Jn- volucre entirely wanting. Calyx two, inner glumes striated, _ a from six to seven-nerved. Corol, the small flower is a oa here. Seed oblong, smooth, — nape : 8. P. eurvatum. nian sp. pi = Willd. i. 952, Culms erect. Spikes curved; flowers crowded, smooth, a os hermaphrodite ; seed smooth. Grows about the borders of lakes, © Culms numerous, ramous, erect, as thick as a crcmtitgaily! oe frome to te feet high, smooth, » Leaves nUMerous,, Ee oe * -—* Panicum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, ae numerous, covering most completely every part of the ra- cemes, pedicelled, oval. | Calyx, two inner glumes striated, Corol no neuter, only one ee Seed smooth, shin- ing, white. Obs. This may be aly a variety of P. interruption, 9. P. dimidiatum, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 339. Spikes secund, jointed ; joints excavated, daggered on al- ternate sides of the apex, from one to five-flowered, Calyx two-flowered, one hermaphrodite, the other male. A native of the Peninsula of India, scarce. Culms short, oblique, smooth; whole height. from six to twelve inches. Leaves slender, omnaisths obtuse, rather broad toward the apex. Spikes solitary, secund jolbmeds smooth, from three to five inches long. Joints of the rachis from eight to twelve, rigid, excavated for the reception of the flow- er, except the lower one or two, which are longer ; in all ex- cept these a long sharp point or dagger proceeds from the apex, on the altemnnte sides of the articulation. Flowers lodg- ed in the concave joints of the rachis, on very unequal pe-_ dicels, the lowermost having each three or more, while those about the middle of the spikes have uniformly two, and the last two or three only one. Calyx two-flowered, two-valved ; flowers both sessile, one hermaphrodite, the other male; valyes unequal, the exterior one smalle? ; the inner one about as long as the valve of the corol, or it may be described with: three valves as in the genus; but then the male flower will have but one glume. Corols two-valved ; valves nearly equal, : those of the male flower much firmer, the sides of the. exterior 2 one (which may be called the inner valve of the calyx, ifit be allowed, to have three), with the sides bent a right an 20b0.Dr. Rotter, of tides an ilies Botnhiat ebliged 288 -TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum. me with the only specimens of this rare grass which I have yet met with, and had he not informed that this was consi- dered to be P. dimidiatum I should have been inclined to have taken it for an Ischaemum. SECT. II. Spikes paired. 10. P. conjugatum, R. Spikes conjugate, secund, lowers solitary, sessile, awn- less, Corol, with an accessary neuter valve. ‘Gee ~ A slender, soft, walls half creeping’ species; a native of Coromandel. It differs from P. distachyon in the number of the spikes being constantly two, and the flowers always soli- tary and sessile. To these marks of distinction may be added that the valves of the calyx are three-nerved, and the acces- sary one particularly large. 11. P. squarrosum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. ‘845. Retz. Obs. iv. 15. and vy, ¢. 1. Culms creeping, from ten to twenty inches long. Spikes | _ paired, horizontal, rachis articulate ; flowers in a fascicle on _the upper end of each joint of the BGS _ Cenchrus muricatus, Mant, 302. _ P. dimidiatum, Burm, Ind. 25. t. 8. f. 2. . A native of dry sandy ground pear the sea. 3 Culms branchy, creeping, with their flower-bearing extre- mmities sub-erect; from ten to twenty inches long. Leaves ses short, but rather broad, and covered with soft hair ; ‘sheath : large, downy, involying most of the culms. Spikes two, ter- minal, spreading, horizontal, or ascending like a pair of horns, secund, Rachis composed of from four toeight, oblong — joints, divided by a waved ridge; on each side of the ridge” membranaceous. Flowers collected in sessile bundles of from | four to eight, alternately disposed on the upper end of each — _ joint. Calyx, the exterior one minute, and lanceolate ; the second large, embracing loosely the corol, pointed, and tri- ated 5 the inner one nearly a8 stall asthe exterior, tapering Panicum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. a 289 from the base to a fine point, three-nerved ; margins fringed, : of a chaffy texture. Corol as in the genus, and rather longer than the inner glume of the calyx, here is a third neutral membranaceous valve, as in many species of this genus. SECT. III. Spikes fascieled. 12. P. Dactylon. Linn, sp. pl. ed, Willd. i, 342. Smooth, creeping. Spikes digitate, secund, corol gibbous on one side, and twice as long as the calyces. Agrostis linearis. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd, i. 375. Retz. Obs. iv. N.51. Sir W. Jones, Asiat. Res. iv. p. 248, _ Sans, Doorva, Shutupurvika, Suhusruveerya, Bharguvee, Onrvehe. Ununta. _. Beng, Doorba. Teling. Ghericha, Tam, Arugam-pilla. This is by far the most common and useful grass in India. It grows every where abundantly, and flowers all the year. __ Root creeping, Culms creeping, with their flower-bearing branchlets erect, from six to twelve inches high, smooth, Leaves small, and smooth. Spikes from three to five, termi- nal, sessile, filiform, expanding, secund, from one to two inches long. Rachis waved. Flowers alternate, single, dis- posed in two rows on the underside. Ca/ya mucli smaller than the corol, Corol, the large or exterior valve boat-shap- ed, keel slightly ciliate. Stigmas villous, purple. © Obs. This most valuable grass forms three-fourths of the food of our horses and cows in India. It is by the brahmens of the coasts held sacred to Ganerhe, Soe tims aad A Ses Pid ie, mnoath,. Flow rs paire | on unequal aie oleasiry St ee eae 290: . TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum, valve of the calyx minute or wanting, the other two very unequal, nerved, and ciliate on the margins only. Obs, Is rather a scarce grass in India, and grows in tufts. Cattle do not seem fond of it, whereas all are fond of Dactylon. 14, P. ciliare. Linn. sp, pl. ed. Willd. i. 344. Culms creeping at the base. Spikes sub-digitate. Flowers paired, one sessile, the other pedicelled ; inner two valves of the calyces equally long, and bearded with four woolly ridges; third minute, — | Hind. Makur-jalee. Teling. Shangali-gaddi. It delights most in newly laid down pasture ground, Culms creeping, with one or two feet of the extremities erect, these ramous, round and smooth. Leaves sheathing, short for the size of the grass ; margins ciliate near the base ; sheaths sometimes a little hairy, shorter than the joints of the culm, their mouths rise above the insertion of the leaf, stipule- like, as in Dr. Smith’s Erharta calycina, but here it is entire. Spikes or rather spiked-racemes, from four to ten, digitate, expanding, secund. lowers paired, one sessile, one pe- duncled, Rachis three-sided, waved. Calyx, exterior valve most minute. Interior two, many-nerved, four of the nerves _ are clothed with very long, white, soft hairs, ys . Obs, Small plants on a poor soil, have much the appear- ee ance of Sen radiata. Guide are very fond of this Brass pe jfiliforme. 1 Linn, sp, pl. ed, Willd. i, 343. 2 Creeping, filiform, smooth. Spikes, from two to four, sub- ‘ digitate, filiform, secund ; flowers paired, one sessile, the other pedicelled. Calyx with the accessary valve, minute ace inner one half the length of the corol or middle one; these last ‘two are divecinerecd and villous on the margin, a a oe it was broughr to the Botanic one, es o Panicum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, — 291 it thrives well, and bidwotis' the whole year, but chiefly dur- ing the rains, Culms ramous, creeping, very delicate, and smooth, a ee portion next the spikes erect, naked, coloured and filiform. Leaves soft and small, ciliate, with a few long hairs at the base, Spikes generally from two to four issuing from the same point, very slender, secund. Rachis flexuose. Flowers in a pair, one sessile, Calyx one-flowered, flower herma- phrodite; accessary valve exceedingly minute, but by careful observations may always ‘be found; second valve as long as the corol, the imer one only -half their length, which is one of the best specific marks; these two have three smooth nerves on the back, and their margins are slightly bearded, - Corol two-valved., 16. P. lineare. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 344. - Sub-erect, smooth, Spikes from two to six, digitate, fili- ferm. Flowers all hermaphrodite, awnless, and pedicelled, Calycine valves, the accessary one minute; the inner two equalling the corol, and three-nerved. P. lineare. Burm. Ind. p. 25. t. 10. f. 3, is a tolerable re- | presentation of this pretty delicate grass, - A native of China, accidentally introduced from thence into the Botanic garden, where it is in flower the whole year ; but like most other grasses most luxuriant during the rains. It has a great resemblance to P. dactylon, ciliare, filiforme, and aegypticum, but does not creep like them, The flowers are less regularly paired, more minute, smooth, and obtuse, the two inner valves of the calyx equal and as long as the corol, and the accessary one ~— Ne; or not to be fous. y sa 17. P. cimicinum, Linn, sp. pl. ed, Willd, i, 944. Culms erect, h nairy , from one to two feet high, Racemes peduncle¢ mbed ; flowers polygamous, in pairs ; exterior valvelets of ealyces fringed ; corol awned. -Milium cimicinun. Mant, 184, ; Vey | ye ane 292 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum, A rare plant, native of ground that has been nately in cul- tivation. * Culms from. one to two feet high, sub-erect, hairy. Leaves short and broad, hairy, and fringed round the margin; sheaths also hairy. Racemes from four to ten; when more than four or five, the rest are elevated on a common’ peduncle above the point from whence the first four or five issue; all are pedicelled, bowing, secund. Flowers in two rows and in pairs, scarcely ever single. Calyx, border of the inner valve fringed with red hairs, Corol, the arista is sometimes wanting, and its valves three-nerved ; in mine there is a se- cond, or male floret, as in many species of Panicum. 18, P. corymbosum. R, Sheaths of the leaves bristly. Spikes numerous, cory ed, Calyces two-valved, Seeds oblong, ees ont Teling, Cheepa-bora-gaddi, This species 1 have found only in the malian caine the Circar mountains; it grows to a great size in standing sweet water, ne Culms of great extent, creeping, or floating, with their ex- tremities erected above the water ; on dry ground I haye-also found it, where it is in general Gace one to four feet high. Leaves as in other grasses; sheaths covered with stiff white hairs, Spikes corymbed, numerous; from four to eight m- ches long, filiform, sub-erect, secund, level-topped. Rachis, common. striated ; partial three-sided. Flowers oblong, in two rows, paired; one very short pedicelled, the other longer. Calyx two-valved ; the exterior valve small, the other.as large as the corol, and striated, but no third or inner valve. - Corol as in the family. Seed oblong, smooth, white. 19. P. brisoides, Linn, sp. pl. el, Willd i. 338...» Culms eub-crect.' Leaves shorts: / Panicum. _ TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 293 ed. Flowers oval, solitary, polygamous ; inner two valves of the calyx equal; nectarial petals long; seed ovate, point- ed, rugose, i. P, flavidum. Linn. sp, a ed. Willd. i, . 339. Retz. Obs, iv. 15. appears to be the same plant growing on a barren soil; this was the opinion of Kénig. P. flacidum of the Bank- sian Herbarium seems the same, ora variety only. _ sx Teling. Oda, or W oodoo-gaddi. de oly lt is common. in every soil and situation, even in deep wa-.— ter; in one that is rich and moist, it is often two to four feet long, and again on one that is dry and barren only as many inches. It. grows in tufts, various nee of it are often tinged purple. ; Culms near the base ——- on the ground, and rooting above, regularly ascending, compressed, smooth, Leaves bi-. farious, smooth, their Lenertl ‘differs much; mouths of the sheaths bearded, Spikes compound, secund, their length ‘va- rious according to the size of the plant. Spikelets secund, number very various, alternate, erect, pressing on the com- mon rachis; below they are often two or three times their length from each other ; above less remote. Rachis common, somewhat three-sided, and a groove on the outside where the spikelets rest. Flowers always disposed in two rows, sub-globular.. Calyx two-flowered. Inner valve the size of’ the corol, middle valve rather shorter; all are striated with green nerves. Corol, one hermaphrodite, and one male, as in some of the species already described, always present, ex- cept in very minute plants, and even then the stamens of the second. floret are pall sometimes aes aclontes lager ; 20. P. finn, Ta op. pled. Willd. i398 - Oubme from two. to three feet high, creeping at the base. me. Spikelets numerous, approximate, longer than es, Flowers hermaphrodite, oblong, two exterior valvelets of the calyces minute; seed oblong. ae 294 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Panicum, Beng. Peti-nar, - Teling. Doosa. Delights in a moist rich soil, such as s the banks of water- courses, borders of rice fields, &c. Culms at the base creeping, above nearly erect, round, smooth, from one to four feet long, including the part that rests on the ground. Leaves smooth,except about the mouths — of the sheaths where they are bearded, and sub-ciliate. Spike compound, secund, exceedingly like that of P. brizoides, only here it is generally longer, with often as many as twenty-five or thirty spikelets; their distance from one another is not so - regular and is generally less than their own length, Flowers disposed in two rows on the outside of the spikelets, which are oblong. Calyx one-flowered, the two exterior valves very small. Seed oblong, pointed, rugose. 21. P. danceolatum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd.i. 337. Culms creeping. Leaves lanceolate, mouths of their sheaths _ elevated and bearded. Flowers hermaphrodite ; valvelets of the calyces equal, the exterior one awned, Seed smooth, ob- P. aristatum, of the same author, seems the same grass.) +. - Compare with P. compositum. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd.i. 346. In the Banksian Herbarium the same species is labelled ’ P. unguinosum, Grows under the shade of trees, s «Culms creeping, ramous, with their athealliees Geom, one to two feet high, sub-erect. Leaves lanceolate, waved, often tinged with purple; sheaths shorter than the joints, hairy ; mouths elevated, stipula-like, and hairy. Spikes composed, — secund ; from six to twelve inches long. Spikelets alternate, somewhat remote, secund, direction between expanding and adpressed. Rachis, common and partial three-sided. Flowers generally paired, one sessile, the other short-pedicelled ; inser- ae surrounded with hairs, when single there is an Panicum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 295 and ending in a long waved, purple awn ; exterior glume ra- ther longer. Corol no neuter, nor male floret. Seed oblong, smooth, slightly three-nerved. as Ole Caitle are not fond of it, : Be 6 P. Burmanni, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 339. Retz. Obs. iti. N. 16. ‘Culms creeping. Leaves lanceolate, holes flowers her- maphrodite; all the valvelets of the calyces hairy, and awned. Seed slender, smooth, pointed. P. hirtellum. Burm. Ind. 24, t. 12. f.1. Hippogrostis amboinica. Rumph. Amb. iv. p. 14, t. 5. f.3. » This species is always found on pasture ground, under the shade of large trees. : Culms creeping, branchy, with their extremities tect Leaves sheathing, lanceolate, waved, hairy ; sheaths half the length of the joints; very hairy. Spikes compound, secund, . erect, Spikelets from four to eight, alternate, secund, ad- pressed. Rachis, common and partial, three-sided.. Flowers generally paired ; one sessile, the other pedicelled. Calyx, the two exterior glumes are hairy, and have long awns, that of ects inner: is. shorter and smoother, 93.4 Pp. Henninen: Linn, sp. pl, ed, Willd. i. 337. J Culms from one to four feet high. Leaves weil Flow- ers polygamous, three-fold, sub-sessile. Calyces eaaneae and hispid; inner valvelets awned. ~ Beng. Dul. - Teling. Pedda-woondoo. Siete in wet, cultivated, paddy heel _- Culms, towards sev tiniliecldngieaciligce daceall- ing root above erect, which part is from one to foor feet high. Leaves smooth, soft, with only the mouth of the sheaths ciliate. Spikes compound, secund, erect. Spikelets alternate, sessile, secund, expanding: a little. Rachis, both ‘common and partial three-sided. Flowers, very numerous: 84 296 PRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Panicum, three-fold below, above in pairs, all sessile, or nearly so; their insertion surrounded with small bristles, involucre-like., Ca- lyx, only the inner valve awned, all striated, hairy and hispid. Corol complete; male florets, besides the usual hermaphro~ dite one, Obs, This is.a coarse species, Cattle are not fond of it. © 24. P. crus corvi, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, i. 337. Culms creeping at the base. Leaves downy. Spikes from six to ten, three times longer than their interstices. Ca- lyces downy. Corol three-valved. . Seed oblong, obtuse, smooth, ; wav A middle-sized, delicate, rare species, found on pasture ground. Culms filiform, creeping at the base, above nearly erect, Leaves soft, downy; sheath hairy. Spikes com- pound, secund, from one to. three inches long. Spikelets from four to twelve, alternate, adpressed, secund, about: three- fourths of an inch long ; sometimes there is a very small rami- fication at the lower part of one or two. Rachis common, two-furrowed ; partial, three-sided, downy. Flowers paired _ or single, in two rows; both pedicelled ; pedicels hairy, of | unequal length, but both short. Calyx striated, very downy. Corol, the neuter valve i is here, a Seed see smooth, shining white, SRR ee Sia 25,P. AcieotiniaEiadiapestieed aXdiden ate oe, Culms creeping at the base. \Spidansfdlokinia-scdeuiahaied Flowers three-fold, sub-sessile. Glumes of the calyces three- ’ nerved. Corol three-valved, Seed roundish, smooth, i<_ nerved. 9 . Beng. Shama. There is a reddish variety, called Latha ma, ling: Woondoo-gaddi. 4 e ig hts in rich pasture ground, | sass P Culms, below. resting on the ground, and ong ove sheet int ee ye Panicum. _ 'TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 297 little compressed, smooth, Leaves tending to be bifarious, short, smooth, tapering from the base toa sharp point. Spikes compound, secund, Spikelets, from six to twelve, alternate, somewhat remote, secund. . Rachis both common and partial three-sided ; the two sides from whence the spikelets issue concave. Flowers two or three from the same point, gene- rally three; all sessile, or very nearly so; sometimes a’ few small bristles mixed with them. Cadya: as in the genus, all the glumes three-nerved, a little hairy, and scabrous. Corol, the neuter valve is here present, but no stamens, Seed broad, oval, smooth, a little pointed, three-nerved. | Obs. Cattle are very fond of it, yet it is not cultivated in 26, P. grossarium. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willdsi 134965). VE - Culms creeping. | Leaves soft and downy. Spikes from six to ten; flowers solitary, sub-sessile: Coral estab Seed oblong, acute, transversely rugose. | 4 Loves fresh pasture ground. Culms, in a good soil PRO in a poor soil nearly erect. Leaves, tapering from the base to a fine point, somewhat downy, and very soft. Spikes compound, secund, Spikelets from four to twelve, alternate, secund, expanding on one side, most simple, in two rows. Calyx pretty smooth. Corol, the neuter valve is always present, Nectary a rugose gland between the germ and exterior valve of the corol, Seed oblong, white, slightly rugose in a rm verse direction, | Be: -Obs, The form and rugosity of the seed diane it from, P, colnet the flowers also. are > here Sirteges seete two Or Chin atthe hse eeping. oat anit Spies, from . _anemeigai Eat Mucol.thaete oe ie sin a * : ' “ is Fd 28 _‘TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum. valved. Seed ovate, longitudinally streaked, and transverse- __ ly rugose. This is also a native of pasture ground, but chiefly that which i is shaded. It is exceedingly like the last described species, Culms creeping, &c. as in the last. Leaves also the same. _ Spikes, the same as in P. grossarium. Spikelets or rather ra- cemes, the lower one or two sometimes branchy in luxuriant plants. Rachis; common, striated ; partial three-sided, and downy. Flowers, the inferior ones in pairs, upon a short, common pedicel ; besides, having their partial pedicels, one of which is nearly as long as its flowers; above they are often single, and somewhat remote ; hairs surround the insertion of all. Calyx hairy. Corol, the neuter valve is here present. Seed ovate, a little pointed, rugose, like that of the last species. . Obs. The chief character consists in the lower flowers of the racemes being paired on a common peduncle, with ped cels of very unequal lengths and hairy involucres, 28. P. cuspidatum. R. ieee? * Creéping near the base, wholly smooth. Leaves linear, without ligula. Spikes compound, secund ; spikelets adpress- ed, secund. Flowers from one to three, equally sub-sessile, — all hermaphrodite ; valves of a tages hed and eus- pidate. Seed cuspidate. rea Me - A native of si "Found in ich moist sol inflows and seed in April. Culms, namerous in luxuriant tufts, creeping near rae ori- ginal root, then ascending to about two feet in height, ramous, smooth, Leaves ensiform, smooth, with coloured margins. Sheaths shorter than the joints, smooth, and completely des- titute of ligula. Spikes compound, secund, slightly recur- yate, with the secund spikelets on the convex side pressing - on the common, three-sided, hispid rachis; often of adall rple colour. Flowers, from one to"three togethers equally sub-sessile, Calyz, all the glumes three-nerved, and | Panicum, -TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, | 299 cuspidate, and generally armed with a few minute bristles. Corol three-valved ; the third or accessary one metabrana- ceous, and neuter. Seeds ovate, smooth, cuspidate. SECT. V. Spikes alternate on all sides of a common rachis. 29. P. setigerum. Linn. sp. pl, ed. Willd, i. 338, his Culms, below creeping, sub-ligneous, Leaves with cordate base and ciliate margins. Insertions of the spikelets and flow- ers bristly. Corol three-valved, Seed oval, transversely ru= gose, et Paiagelagainis: P. setigerum. Retz. Obs. iv. 15. Grows amongst bushes or under the shade of tree Culms long; straggling, rooting when they rest on the ground, firm, almost woody towards the base, but small, and. very smooth ; joints downy. Leaves sheathing, broad-cordate at the base, tapering from thence to the point; margins cili- ate, and waved ; mouths of the sheaths bearded. Spikes com- pound. Spikelets from four to twenty, secund, spreading, disposed equally on all sides, Rachis, common four, five, or six-sided, partial three-sided. Flowers paired ; pairs alter- nate, in two rows, one sessile, one pedicelled, intermixed with many long strong hairs, like an involucre. Calya, the two in- ner glumes downy and striated lengthways with many green nerves. Corol, the neuter membranaceous, valve always pre- sent, but no stamens. Seed oval, transversely rugose, pb: Obs. When exposed to the weather, the leaves are of a smooth shining deep green, when Pai AAR 5 3 soft, and somewhat downy, which made me sities ink they were different eee Case: are i ale edd | 390..P. ei Ans Creeping. Leaves: ee aaa cea toto, ctemn clonp- ing ie Spi om = dispomed on Peed << 300 TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA, Panicum, ~ all’ sides. Flowers awnless; involucre merck Corol three- valved, “i3 P. repens. Burm. Ind. t. 11.f. 1. is like this, il the par- tial spikes are rather too long, and the leaves too narrow. - Common about the beginning of the rains on cultivated lands, in gardens, &c. near Calcutta. It is a er: — species which cattle are fond of, Culms, creepmg to the extent of from one to two Seti ge- niculate, smooth, often coloured. Leaves lanceolate, base cor- date, stem-clasping, and ciliate. Sheaths shorter than the joints, somewhat hairy. Spikes from four to ten, small, short, sessile, secund, equally inserted on the four or six-sided, vil-_ lous rachis, Flowers generally paired, and both unequally pedicelled, with an’ involucre of long soft hairs on the out- side of the pedicel. Calya ; exterior valve minute, and trun- cate; the inner two equal, five-nerved. Corol, haratl, neuter, valve. 3}. P. hirsutum, Kon. rh: - Leaves broad-lanceolate, with cordate, stem-clasping iiss nae ciliate, and hairy. lowers polygamous, mae ses- sile, Seed ovate, olathe rugose. Hind, oninpnigi Teling. Salla-woodoo, eee “Ke foun on the borders of ena lay on pst : ground, &e. Ze Culms, spreading at the base; seattocuinallsactiaiini ied | rooting ; above ascending; joints deowsigs Leaves broad, base cordate and embracing the culms, much waved, hairy, with the edges ciliate; sheaths also hairy with a thick beard-round the mouths. Spikes composed of six or twelve, simple, al- ternate, secund, expanding spikelets, surrounding a common, four or five-sided, hairy rachis, Partial, rachis three-sided, air) ele in “two seca single, patie ermine ae 3 cd ‘ Panicum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 301 calyx with the itiasins. ‘Seeds ovate, sth ru- gose, white, daggered. icon Obs. Cattle are very fond of it. inD@Deial tomentoanth, R, _ Culms sub-erect, Leaves hairy ;, spikes fei ten to twelve, oblong, from six to eight-flowered, intermixed with hispid bristly involucels, Seed ovate, transversely wrinkled. - This is a delicate, rare species, found growing in tufts, or dry* pasture ground over various parts of India, Culms ascending, compressed towards the base, branchy, from twelve to eighteen inches bigh. Leaves soft, covered with much, long, soft hair; sheaths half the length of the joints ; mouth bearded. Spikes compound, terminal, consist- ing of ten or twelve (generally alternate, though sometimes in pairs) spikelets of six or eight flowers, intermixed with hispid bristles, they are not placed on one side, but round the common rachis, which is generally three-sided. Calyx, the two interior valves five-nerved; the second, half the length of the corol, as in P. glancum. Corol has a third neuter valve. Seed transversely. wrikled as in P. glaucum, as, ). cagestiazen, pri sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 334, | Spikes cylindric, Spikelets quatern, ‘sub-verticelled, dn- volucels, backwardly hispid bristles, Seeds apn, three- nerved, and rugose. Hind, Dora-byara. . Feling. Chicklenta. i Delights in a rich soil in out of the way dheseincbbals &e. i a i ad bil ean hispid. when felt hocks wards; mouths of the sheaths hairy, Spikes columnar, com- — © 302 YRIANDRIA DIGYNIAL Panicum pound, from three to four inches long, generally matted toge- ther by means of the bristly involucels, Spikelets or rather racemelets, tending to be verticelled, generally four m the verticel, composed of three or four short pedicels, each bear- ing a few flowers; all intermixed with very stiff bristles (in- _ volucels) armed with short, stiff, recurved points, by which ' they adhere firmly to every thing that touches them. Calyx as in the family. Corol, a third neuter valve, but nostamens” to it. Seed three-nerved, and slightly waved across, Obs, Cattle will not eat it, so that it is reckoned a trouble- some weed wherever it is found. ie Plants reared from English seed, were not near so luxuriant _as those of India, but evidently the same species. Thun- berg’s large cultivated variety is certainly Panicum italicum. Curtis’s figure in his Flora Londinensis is represented with the leaves broader at the base than our Indian plant, or even than in plants reared in India from English seed. i 34, P. italicum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 336. | Culms erect. Spikes nodding ; spikelets scattered, ovate; pedicels from two to three or four-flowered, with smooth bristles intermixed. Seed ovate, three-nerved. Panicum, Rumph, Amb, v. p. 202. t. 175. f.2. _ Sans. Kungoo, Priyungoo, Beng. Kungoo, and Kungnee, Hind. Kora. -Teling. Kora ; Koraloo, the grain, a This is one of the plants called dry or sda grain, tt is” cultivated in many parts of India, and requires an elevated, . light soil, I never saw it wild, Culms several from one grain of seed, erect, from three to. five feet high, round, smooth; roots issuing from the lower joints, Leaves, margins backwardly hispid ; mouths of the — sheaths bearded, Spikes compound, &c. bervenee is more or : feof thie, w or neuter ese ae ees cell Panicum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, _ 303: Obs. Small plants have the spike more erect, and uniform, without vacancies between the the racemelets. : sed The seed is an article of diet with the natives. It delights in a light, elevated, tolerably dry soil. Seed time for the first crop, about the months of June and July; barvest time in September; produce about fifty-fold in a favourable season. A second crop may be had from the same ground, between September and the end of January. 35. P. strictum. R. Culms straight, from two to three feet high. Spikes com- pound, cylindric, straight, with numerous expanding spike- lets. Glumes of the calyx hairy, and acute, Corol. three- = valved, the innermost one awned. Beng, Gang-bena. : A native of Bengal, where it is found, though rl on dry barren spots. Culms straight, from one to three feet high, slander asa crow’s quill, hairy, particularly at and near the jomts. Leaves short, straight, broadest at the base, and from thence taper- ing to a fine point; a little hairy, particularly underneath. Sheaths more hairy, their mouths bearded with much long, soft, white hair. Spikes, (panicles) cylindric, straight, com- posed of numerous, one-ranked, expanding, short spikelets, Flowers paired, on shorter and longer pedicels which unite _ before their insertions into the rachis of the spikelets, Calyx, valvelets acute ; two exterior with a few straight hairs, inner one smooth; corol-like. Coro/ three-valved, the inner and — smaller one awned. 6 Ki Willd i346, 2 Sipe tentine Cains eet rom three to fe tis fee e thi sabacidleg F cabelas ef song bristly, t the middle-one _ \ 304 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum. daggered, the inner one awned. Corol bactinalie. Seed ovate, pointed, polished. | 7 Beng, Bura-Shama. Grows on the borders of rice lands, and rich moist places, Is never cultivated nor made any use of, Culms erect with a few erect branches. Leaves long, narrow, - fine-pointed, smooth. Spikes straight, panicled, composed of - numerous, secund, erect spikelets, surrounding the common four, five, or six-sided rachis.- //owers numerous, almost al- ways two together and equally sub-sessile. Calyx, all the three valves harsh with numerous sharp bristles issuing from the nerves of the glumes. The two exterior ones with sharp subulate points; the inner one ends in a pretty long, strong, hispid arista. Corol, with a third, membranaceous, neuter _ valve, Seed ovate, pointed, polished. == ss | Obs. It comes near my P. Sepninontss and -— spa se bly be the same in its wild state. re 37. P. _frumentaceum. R. Culms erect, from two to four feet high. “Panicle — spikes secund, incurved ; flowers three-fold, unequally pedi- celled. Valvelets of the es daggered, or-awned ; ite ovate, smooth, cd Sans, Shpoanhis Persty et ; i oO. poe : Beng. Shama. aes ©. ; 5 oat ae) pee _ Teling. Bonta-shama ; dmenbis aie perlaly wise _ This I have only found in a state of cultivation, it delights inva light;thtersbly dry, rich soil ; the same ground yields two crops between the first of the rains in June, July, and the end of January. Culms erect, ramous, a little compressed, smooth, from two to four feet high. Leaves large, margins hispid. Pa nicle erect, oblong, rigid, composed of numerous, secund, con- os densed, incurved spikes; they entirely surround the common — rachis and sometimes tend to be verticelled.. Resbioueine ee Panicum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 305 ed. Flowers almost always three from the same point, one sessile, the second short pedicelled, and the third a little long- er pedicelled. Calyx, with all the glumes three-nerved; the two large daggered, Corol, with a third neuter valve. Seed ovate, pointed, smooth. | _ Obs, There are several varieties of it sido to the Hindoo farmers. The seed is wholesome and nourishing, it is an ar- ticle of diet, particularly amongst the lower classes of thena- __ tives. It yields about ng in a good soil, Cattle are’ fond of it, = SECT. VI. Pdhiclea. BB, Pp. isipoecnin; Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. i, 352; Culms creeping. Panicle halved. Leaves stipuled. Pe _ dicels two-flowered. Inner valve of the wom vaulted. Corol three-valved. Seed, half round, smooth, | Feel Grows on pasture ground, under the shade of tron, &e. Culms creeping, filiform, from one to two feet long, with a few inches:of the extremities erect. Leaves lanceolate, soft, alittle downy; sheaths ciliate, with a stipule-like process, — Panicle halved, oblong, smooth, composed of from three to ten ramous branchlets, rising on one side only when the plant is small ; ; pedicels two-flowered. Partial pedicels unequal, Calyx, inner valve cucullate, obtuse; all the valves striated and hairy. Corol, with a neuter, but small valve. ‘Seed smooth, obtusely and obliquely three-sided. ~ 39. P. pace Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 352. Culms creeping. Leaves with a cordate base, _ Panicle posi foie one-flowered. The three: valvelets of the setOobie like those of. P. discos man sends with VOL, I. T oo 8 306. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, - Panicum, — cordate base, from thence tapering to a fine point, downy ; sheaths hairy, their mouths want the stipule-like process. Panicle small, about one and a half or two inches long, oval, ramous ; ramifications smooth. Flowers oval, solitary. Calyx, two-flowered, the three valves are nearly equal, all smooth but striated ; the inner one appearing more like a second valve to the male floret than one of the calyx, and the more. ‘so as it drops off with the seed, leaving the two exterior ones: behind. . Corol, one. male, or sometimes one neuter, and one» hermaphrodite, Seed oval, smooth. : “40. Pp, brevifolium, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Wiild. i. 353. ; Culms creeping, Leaves lanceolate, cordate. Panicle ovate, . very ramous; partly hid in the sheath of the exterior leaf, se- cond valvelet of the calyces bearded; corol three-valved. Seed ovate, smooth, ” Grows, with the two pase oN species on dade posure ground, and is very much like them. ‘i Culms creeping, as in the two last described species, 1 Paks rather more robust. Leaves broad, and somewhat cordate at~— “the base, waved ; margins of the sheaths ciliate. Paniele, the: lower part always confined within the sheaths of the extreme leaf, oval, from three to five inches long, composed ofnumer-' "ous very fine capillary ramifications, the common rachis and ~ larger branches very woolly. Flowers obliquely-oval, numer- ‘n,n very fine, long pedicels. Calyx ; the exterior valve the second boat-shaped, with the outside covered | we the third oval. ———e,€ 2 2 valve, but no stamen. Seed oval, smooth, white. . * ALP: fentllem Rs. ; fis Culms ascending, Leaves long. Panicles oblong, very » _ Yamous, Flowers svlitary, remote; second valvyelets of the calyces recurved, and pointed. Corol, three-valved, Seed Panicum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 307 . Culms many, branchy; near the ground prostrate, rooting at the joints, the rest ascending; from one to two’ feet high, and as thick as'a sparrow’s quill. Leaves soft with white hairs. Panicles oblong, generally as long as the rest of the plant, thin, composed of expanding, capillary, ramous - branches. lowers remote, oval, small. Calya:, the glumes striated, otherwise smooth. : Coro/, with a third neuter valve, Seed oblong, smooth, light-brown, Bve-streaked. A2. P. serrulatum. R. Culms erect, from two to four feet high. Leaves sword- shaped, with serrulate margins. Panicle, spiked valvelets of the calyces sharp-pointed. Seed smooth, oblong. A large erect, coarse species ; a native of moist vallies, ~ Culms erect, ramous, from two to four feet high, Leaves somewhat cordate at the base, from thence tapering to a point, margins ciliate; sheaths as long or longer’than the joints, smooth, Panicle erect, linear, composed of erect, linear, ramous ramifications, which stand somewhat remote, parti- cularly below, so that the panicle-appears to be a compound interrupted spike. Flowers lanceolate. Calyx, glumes lan- ~ ceolate, very acute, the two inner ones somewhat hispid on the back. Corol single, hermaphrodite, Seed oblong, smooth, white.) 9° jek 43. P. Koadindioinnt - Culms erect, from two to three feet high, Panicle erect, ovate, thin; ramifications few, three-sided, with sharp hispid ‘ angles; pedicel two-flowered ; valvelets of the calyces cus+ opm Corol three-valved, Seed et possess nt) ait pe and Kulws-nar. mt rT! It sows generally. in sweet water an ongst Culms’ erect]; from two a le swelled miler the water, and there emitting roots from the joints, Leaves T2 308 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum, erect, acute, retrorso-hispid; sheaths longer than the joints, with a thick bearded mouth. Panicle oval, diffuse, thin, com- posed of scattered, sub-alternate, ramous branches ; all near- ly triangular, the angles sharp, and armed with fine points. Flowers oblong, pointed, in pairs on a common pedicel with unequal partial pedicels, Calyx, exterior valve short, broad, involving the bottoms of the others. Coro/, with a small neu- ter glume, always without stamens. Seed oblong, smooth, brown. Obs. This grass is of a coarse nature; cattle are not there- fore fond of it, .When it grows on dry ground, the grass is much smaller, but the les larger. u, P. haan R. Culms erect, from two to four feet high, Panicle thin ra- mifications four-sided, smooth ; flowers pgs seca Seed oblong, smooth. Beng. Burunda, Teling., Gundru. A native of the moist borders of rice fields, in wet ground. _, Root fibrous, white. Culms many, ramous ; below resting on the ground and rooting ; above erect, a little compressed, smooth ; from two to four feet high. Leaves short and sharp, inside a little downy; sheaths shorter than the joints ; mouths bearded. In paludosum they are surrounded on ihe inside - with hair, Here the ramifications are compressed, and some- what four-sided, there triangular, and hispid, Panicle more — contracted than in paludosum. Calyx, the same. Corol, with a complete male floret, Seed oblong, smooth, Obs. To distinguish it from P. paludosum, attention ak a be paid to the leaves, ramifications a the ponsiss and male, a florets, 4. Le sarrmentosum. R, Panicum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 309. ry; calyces smooth and obtuse, containing one hermaphro- dite and one neuter floret, : Gea A native of Sumatra; and from thence introduced by Dr. Charles Campbell into the Botanic garden in 1804, where it grows luxuriantly, and blossoms throughout the year. Culms round, sarmentose, and of great length, inane, with nearly erect, frequently ramous, floriferous shoots of about two or three feet in height rising from the joints; every part. clothed with much soft hairy pubescence, particularly the runners, Leaves ensiform, soon becoming reflex, margins hispid, length from six to twelve inches, from half to three quarters of an inch in breadth at the broadest part. Sheaths rather longer than the joints, Panicle terminal, ovate ; com- posed of many, single, alternate, patent, compound, smooth. branches. lowers very numerous, awnless, smooth, solita- ry, pedicelled. Valves of the calyx three, obtuse, slightly marked with green nerves, the exterior one long, containing: a two-valyed hermaphradite flower, and a small neuter one. 46, P. miliare, Lamarck. Culms erect, ramous, from two to three feet x high, isiotte Panicle thin; flowers paired on a common pedicel, with un- equal partial aueevae corol three-valyed ; seed ovate, smooth, five-streaked. Teling. Nella-shama, Nella-shamaloo, the grain, - This species 1 have found only in a cultivated state, it is one of the sorts of dry or small grain which is generally cay tivated on an elevated, light, rich soil, oe Culms, many trom the same seed, erect, branchy, roux d, zs smooth, from two to three feet high. Leaves smooth. Pani- cle ct beautifully bowing with the ale of the ‘grain - ers ek, paired upon a common edicel, with tial pedicels. Calyces, glumes smooth, “‘Brinted lengthways with nerves. Corol, accompanied by a neuter valye. Seed : oval, striated, smooth, pany: brown. : 310 -'TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Panicum. “Obs, The seed is an article of diet with those Hindoos who inhabit the higher lands. Cattle are fond of the straw. 47. P. miliaceum. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 348. Culms erect, ramous, from two to four feet high ; the whole plant very hairy. Panicle oblong; glumes of the calyces cus- pidate. Corol three-valved ; adventitious valve two-toothed, Seed oval, smooth, five-streaked. ~ Sans. Vreehib-heda, Unoo. ~ Hind. and Beng. Cheena. * Teling. Worga; ; Worglo, the grain. - This is siusthier of the cultivated cerealia; the same soil suits it as is proper for the last described = Time of culture immediately after the rains, ~ . Culms many from the same seed, erect, ramous, very hairy ; from two to four feet high. _ Leaves large, with long sheaths, which involve most part of the culms, every part covered _ with much white hair. Panicle as in the former, only here ~ and there a few hairy. Calyx all the three glumes are much pointed. Corol the neuter valve is here emarginate, _Nee- tary two, triangular, emarginate bodies embrace the germ la- terally. Seed oval, mouth brownish, with smooth, i streaks lengthways, as in ete last. 48. P. tenue. R. iS A Se ~ Culms erect, ramous ; from one to six. el sighs nDieiiole ‘thin, flowers paired on a common hairy pedicel, eso ag partial pedicels, Corol three-valved. Seed — rans} ; ly waved. This is a wild species, which iba amongst the —_ mountains, Culms erect, sometimes resting on the ground, and vethioag root there, ramous, smooth, from one to six feet high. Leaves large ; upper-side hairy ; edges armed with very sharp points. Sheaths shorter than the joints,hairy, with their mouths beard- ed, Panicle erect, till the seeds are ripe, then, as inthe culti- Panicum. — TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 311 vated sorts last described, bowing from the weight of the grain, it is composed of alternate, compound, nearly secund racemes, Rachis; common from four to five-sided; partial three-sided, winding, and hairy. Calyx, glumes many nerv- ed, otherwise smooth. Corol, the neuter valve is here pre- sent, and in luxuriant plants, the stamens also. Seed oval, transversely wrinkled, which distinguishes it from all the other panicled species, 49, P. plicatum. R- _ Erect, herbaceous, harsh with stiff hairs. Leaves lanceo- late, plicate. Panicle lanceolate, ramifications compound, flowers paired, polygamous. Introduced into the ‘Botanic garden, from the Island of Sumatra. Flowering time the beginning of the cold season. Root perennial. Culms erect, or ascending, below as thick as a goose-quill, and then somewhat cbnlgprebeads every part - filled with pith. Leaves sub-bifarious, expanding, lanceolate, plicate, a little hairy; from six to twelve inches long, and from one to two broad, Sheaths about the length of the joints of the culms, armed with sharp, rigid hairs; mouth ciliate. ‘Panicle oblong, lax ; lower ramifications rather remote, above approximate, and composed of unilateral short spikelets. ‘Flowers solitary, paired, or threefold, when more than one they are on pedicels of unequal lengths ; sometimes there is a ‘single coloured bristle from the pedicels of the exterior flow- ers. Calyx three-valved, two-flowered, one of the flowers male, with a corol of one membranaceous glume; the other _ hermaphrodite, and having the usual two-valved coro. eet oe < — rugose on the convex side, — » Obs. Ip s'bf so codes a/tnetartt for élite outs its 6 feline ake i ranean the Be aloes iweotesenaal | BRS EY ; ied R55 28 i Etect] fron/thres: to four feet high. 2 Leaves hiclad: plait- ea. Sheaths longer than the joints, with the mouths bearded. T4 & 312 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Panicum. Panicle very thin, composed of long, simple, filiform, remote branches, Flowers generally single, with a neuter valve to the corol, / From Nepal Dr. Buchanan sent the seed to the Bobinis garden, where the plants blossomed in October, just one year from the time the seed was sown, Root perennial, Culms erect, slender, completely camel in the sheaths of the leaves, except from six to twelve inches below the panicle; height three or four feet. Leaves lanceo- late, plaited, a little hairy, particularly near the base, from six to twelveinches long, and oneandahalf broad. Sheaths long- er than the joints, a little hairy ; mouths bearded. Panicle very thin, and composed of long, simple, filiform, drooping branches. Spikelets remote near the base, secund, bearing a few alternate, generally single flowers, Calya three-valved, smooth, from three to seven-nerved, Coro, with a third neu- ter valve, but no stamens. Obs. In foliage this agrees very waactin with my Mica plicatum, but differs widely in the panicle. 51, P. costatum. R. ; Culms creeping. Leaves lanceolate, plaited, very hairy, as also their sheaths, which are shorter than the joints. Panicle composed of short ex panding, secund, aphptexeranes Flow- ers polygamous, _ Introduced into the Botanic garden from the Manito by Captain Tennant, in 1802. Culms creeping, = et out numerous aeong evils ae the joints; from three to six feet long. Leares lanceolate, plaited, hairy ; about six inches long, by one broad. Sheaths shorter than the joints, very hairy, Panicle oblong, smooth, composed of somewhat compound, secund, spiked-racemes, with here and there an arista-like coloured bristle. Calyx eve velred, smooth, from three to five-nerved, Corot three- _ Phleum. _TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, : 313 Obs, In the foliage this is portale like my P. nervosum Bat plicatum. seed) 52. P. montanum. R. _ Culms erect; smooth, from three to four feethigh. Leaves lanceolate, unequally divided by thenerve. Panicle oblong ; ramifications capillary, straight. -Corol two-valved. Seed smooth, oval, three-nerved on the back. A native of the Circar mouniains, Root fibrous, froma ligneous perennial head, Culms erect, smooth, of a firm woody texture, as thick as a crow’s quill, and three to four feet high. Leaves lanceolate, large, beau- tifully striated lengthways, somewhat hairy, lower margins next the mouths of the sheath ciliate; the nerve divides the leaf unequally, which is an uncommon circumstance in grass- es, Panicle linear, oblong, from twelve to eighteen inches long, composed of straight, sub-erect, capillary ramifications. Flowers small, oval, remote. Calyx as in the genus, Corol as in the family ; this is one of the few instances of the want of a male or neuter floret, | Seed smooth, brown, with three stripes, -_PHLEUM. Schreb. gen. N. 123. Calys two-valved, sessile, linear, truncated, with a bicus- pid tip. Corol inclosed, 1. P. crinitum, _ Grows in tufts, Culms ascending. Panicle linear, aa! : Ficoll whseriehceiteameanalts es _of the calyx awned wel ciliate, soueie re glume of -eorol awned, _ ee ‘rai re § Pa APs ct ee al paninn-ef Meek seaaiie di rtheri a of tisin. _ From the former country it was introduced into the Botanic garden by Dr. Buchanan ; and from the latter by Col. Hard- wicke. 314 . TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. . Milium. Culms numerous from a single root, ascending, length - from six to twelve inches, round, smooth, and involved in the sheaths of the leaves, which are longer than its joints. Leaves ensiform, from three to six inches long, smooth. Panicle li- near, oblong, dense, exceedingly soft from the immense num- ber of most delicate, pale-coloured awns. Flowers minute and numerous. Calyx; glume one-flowered, two-valved ; valves nearly equal, with a most delicate, long, soft arista from the apex ; hairy, chiefly on the back, and membranaceous ci- liate margins. Corol two-valved ; valves obtuse, much short- -er than the calyx, as in general a very minute awn issues -from the apex of the Lanier valve, Seed pews gam but ~ obtuse. Obs. In the cold season of 1802-3, L reared the same grass from seed sent from England - A. B. Lambert, Esq. = MILIUM. Schreb. gen. N. 10. Calyx, glume one-flowered, two-valved. Corot aroialeed Jess than the calyx. 1, M. filiforme. R. | Creeping, smooth. Leaves short, with a stipulary process at the mouth of the sheath. Racemes two or three, terminals _-erect, Flowers alternate, solitary, mmr Hind. Kanka juriya. HAAG a! - Grows on pasture ground, want, dicate specie ha med the appearance of Agrostis linearis. Culms creeping, except a small. fower-boaring. pevtidd fe which j is erect, round, smooth ; and from six to twelve inches high. Leaves small, smooth ; silat of the sheaths stipuled, Racemes two or three, terminal, sessile, erect, secund, Ra- chis membranaceous, a little waved. Flowers single, alter- ‘nate, imbricated in two rows, awnless, Calyx, glumes neat- ly, equal, . cu aesaies a hittle hairy. Corol, hase os y Agrostis. _ TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, » 315 ~ 2. M. sanguinale. R. ‘ T Culms sub-erect, smooth. Racomes susigitate : flowers three-fold, on unequal pedicels. - Panicum sanguinale. Burm. Flor. Ind. t..10.f. t. Beng. Ghiredhitn: A native of pasture ground. - Culms sometimes creeping near the base, the rest erect, smooth, and about a foot and a half high. Leaves long, ‘narrow, smooth in every part. Panicle racemed, sub-erect, Racemes from four to eight, secund, erect, rachis three-sided, Flowers generally in threes, though sometimes in pairs or in fours, all have pedicels:of unequal length. bene and corol as in the leat aaen 3. M. ramosum, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd.i. 361. » Smooth ; culms sub-erect, from two to four feet high. Pa- nicle six x eight, remote, with somewhat ramous branches, Flowers paired on common pedeeaed ‘acsieab penis foal. very hairy. Found growing in ries tufts, on moist, nich. dentine ground, Root creeping. Culms from one to four feet long, spread- ‘ing near the base, and striking root at the joints that rest on the ground, Leaves smooth. Panicle oval, very thin, com- posed of a few, from four to eight-compound, spreading, se- cund, racemes. Rachis of the racemes three-sided. Flowers below, on a common pedicel, besides which each has its pro- per pedicel, but of unequal length; above single. Calyx, valves equal, pointed, and very icsidee ites the ager sacd = sar: ese ie: a Bh isi? eda ia " AGROSTIS. Sehreb. _gen. N11 ee, — Ca ae one-flowered, two-valved, Corel. tvouvaly ed, larger than the calyx, 316 TREANDRIA DIGYNIA, Agrostis, 1. A. coromandeliana, Linn, sp. Ph ed. Willd. i. 374, Retz. Obs. iv. N. 52: Culms from four to eight inches high, Panicle verticel- _ led ; ramification simple, secund ; inner valve of the calyx as long as the corol ; exterior valve minute. Seed naked, obo- vate, rugose, Teling. Yellika-tungoo-gadi, _ A native of pasture ground. Culms spreading near the base, then ascending, from four to eight inches long, mostly involved in the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves rather broad, waved and slightly ciliated ;. mouths of the sheath bearded. Panicle oblong ; large for the size of the grass, composed of expanding, simple, verti- celled, secund racemes. Flowers awnless, generally in pairs, unequally pedicelled, Calya, exterior valve small, like that of the accessory valve in Panicum. Inner as large as the eorol, and gaping with it when the seed ripens, | Seed, it drops uncovered by the corol, leaving it andthe calyx in their places; it is of an oblique oval form, brown, and trans— versely rugose. 2 ~ 2. As tenacissima, Linn. sp. pl. ed, Willd. i. 374, ~ Smooth, creeping, Leaves minute, Panicle filiform ; ex terior valvelet of the calyx shorter wars aoe corol. a Teling. Toema-gerika. gh wet Lables RSA ad apion yeromingt tsi de, si, pasture ground, where it forms extensive plants of tenacious turf. Culms: ramous, creeping to a great extent, with from four to eight inches high of their flower-bearing extremities, erect, — smooth, filiform, and very firm, Leaves very small, and smooth, Panicle erect, linear; ramifications and flowers adpressed, from one to two inches long. Calyx, exterior valve smaller than the interior, Corol as large and long as the inner valvelet of the calyx. sein: GaAs SNe * Agrostis, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 317 8. A. Matrella. Linn. sp, pl. ed. Willd. i. 366. Creeping. Leaves pungent, Spikes terminal, solitary, few- flowered. : A native of the barren sandy lands, near the sea on the coast of Coromandel. ; 4, A, csialna. Linn, sp. pl. ed, Willd, i, 371. Retz. Obs. v. v. N. 37. Smooth. Culms erect, from one to three feet high. Panicle linear, branchlets short,ex panding ; flowers paired, diandrous, Calyx scarcely half the length of the corol, Seed naked, obo- vate, rugose, . ; Beng. Bena-joni. A native of moist pasture ground, in the vicinity. of Cal- cutta. : ; regaeeisad: Culms nearly erect, from one to three feet biiht obaitit co- vered with the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves narrow, tapering to a fine point, smooth; mouths of the sheaths slightly beard- ed. Panicle linear-oblong, bowing a little, often a foot long, composed of expanding, alternate, compound, seemingly sim- ple racemes. Flowers in pairs on a common peduncle, but unequally pedicelled, Calyx, valves equal, scarcely half the length of the corol, smooth, membranaceous, » Stamens two. Seed narrow-obcordate, dropping from the calyx and —— brown, obtusely rugose. ‘ah Bade eloneedt: it a isda _ Culms erect, from four to twelve feet high. Panicle: ovate, | capenading.:. Osiyces minute, exterior welailangs of hvieegy: This te ag pci knw itis mative of hl PO i ada ereruoeued slay an smooth, inside replete wit te a fibrous spongy substance, . Leaves smooth, from one to two feet long ; and from one to . 318 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, - Holeus, » two inches broad at the base, tapering from thence to a fine point. Panicles erect, oval, or oblong, from one to two feet long, composed. of alternate, ramous, filiform, expanding or bowing branches. Calyx, valves equal, four times shorter than the corol. Corol, exterior valve fringed: round. the margins, with long, soft, white hairs. Stamens two. Obs. The leaves of this plant are much more like those employed by the Chinese to pack up various articles with, | than any other I have yet seen. ’ HOLCUS. Schreb. gen. N. 1565. Polygamous. Calyx, glume two-valved, one to three-flow- ered. Corol; glume two-valved, the hermaphrodite awned. Siamina three. Styles two. 1. H. nervosus. R. ; Erect, hairy. Panicle oblong... Glumes three, and five- nerved, cuspidate, two-flowered. Flowers both sessile, one hermaphrodite and awned ; the other male and awnless, » A native of Coromandel, ot Culms erect, ramous ; long, wiry roots issuing from the low: er joints, Leaves and their sheaths papillose, hairy. Pani-— cles oblong; smooth. Ramifications alternate, simple. Flow-— ers paired; one sessile, the other pedicelled. Calyces two- — flowered, three to five-nerved, smooth, straight, cuspidate, — longer than the flowers. Corol in both two-valved, the oe terior floret male, large, and awnless, the inner minute, her-_ maphrodite, and awned. Stamens caine eee souk, inthe hermaphrodite. yarn 2. H. ciliatus. R. aan Erect, hairy; panicle linear, hirsute, : Ghana: papillose, ci- — Nate two-flowered, both’ flowers eee one hone . and awi » the: pecgicnsenlian dividinicin dtecie aii ' ne Ischemum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, . 319. Whole plant about a foot high, erect. The eudms with bearded joints. Leaves rather large, hirsutely papillose,as - are also their sheaths, . Panicles linear, shaggy with the nu-) merous hairs of the ealyces, . Calyx two-valved, two flower- ed ; valves nearly equal, considerably longer than the flower, backs covered with little warts, from each of which arises a very conspicuous hair ; apices cuspidate, and recurvate,. Co-. rol two-valved in both. Exterior floret rather larger, male or male hermaphrodite, and awnless; immer hermaphrodite and awned. Stamina three. , Styles two in the hermaphrodite, in the male hermaphrodite the rudiments of two, but no germ. ISCHEMUM. Schreb. gen. N. 1569. Polygamous. Calyx two-valved, two-flowered, ConolaSiess valved. 1. Laristatum. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 939. : Annual, Leaves sword-shaped, ciliate and hairy, with coloured margins, Spikes paired, secund. All the calyces two-flowered ; valves striated; exterior of the sessile flower with a bifid. Jasganvadasbouis hors round the anterior mar- gin; an awned hermaphrodite floret in each flower. A native of newly formed pasture land, in various parts of — India, appearing about the close of the rains. It isa searce grass, and does not appear to be fit for cattle. _ Culms at the base resting on the ground and there rooting, ramous; erect portions from one to two feet long, slender, | with woolly joints, Leaves length of the spikes, ensiform, broadest at the base and there cordate phairy, ciliate, with pid, coloured ‘margins, — Spikes two, terminal, secund, | m one to two inches long. Rachis flexuose, jointed, three-sided, with the. eagles nary: hairy, Flowers in pairs, one sessile, the edicelled. Pedicel three-sided, and ciliate. Calyx of the sessile flowers two-valved, two-flowered ; one floret her- . . maphrodite, the other male.. Exterior vinlias striated, with: 320 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Ischemum. its anterior margins and apex enlarged with a broad, mem- branaceous, bifid border ; inner valve boat-shaped, keeled, ci- liate, and sub-aristate, one floret male, the other hermaphro- : dite. Corol, glumes of each floret two-valved ; the exterior one of the hermaphrodite floret bifid, with a long arista in the fork. Calya of the pedicelled flower two-valved, two-flow- ered ; valvelets equal, boat-shaped, keeled, ciliate, and sub- aristate; one floret male, the other hermaphrodite, Coro/,as in the sessile flowers, and also awned in the same manner. _ Obs. 1am not certain that this is the original I. aristalum oh Lionzeus and Retzius. 2.1. rugosum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 940. Erect, ramous, Leaves lanceolate; spikes paired, both flowers awned ; calyces oblique, obtuse, hard, and transverse- ly rugose, Is generally found growing among rice, and isso much ~ like it, the inflorescence excepted, that they are not, till in flower, to be distinguished. Leaves large, smooth ; mouths of the sheaths crowned with a long, two-parted ligula, , Spikes ‘terminal, and from the exterior axills paired, erect, from two to three inches long. Racihis jointed. Flowers in pairs ; one ses- sile, the other on a short, thick, angular, clubbed pedicel. , Sessie Flower. Calyx two-valved ; ; vaivetets in size nearly equal, the exterior one tugose, and very hard ; one of the florets hermaphrodite, the other male, each with two : valves ; the i inner valve of the herr aphrodite flower had a long twisted awn issuing from the middle offi ite back. PrepIceLLep FLower smaller. Calyz as in the other, but containing two male flowers, one of which is also awned. sae L eS R. Ischemum. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 321 transversely rugose; hermaphrodite floret of the sessile Apwer awned. A native of newly formed pastire land in Bengal. It isa rare grass, appearing about the close of the rains. . Culms ramous, resting on the ground near the base, and there striking root at the joints, the sub-erect portion from twelve to eighteen inches, very delicate, firm, and smooth, Leaves short, broad-ensiform, or rather ovate-lanceolate, with a cordate base, and one of the lobes generally projecting con- siderably beyond the culm; margins slightly hispid, length oneand a half or two inches. Spikes two, terminal, sub-secund, ‘an inch and a half long. Rachis jointed, scarcely flexuose, three-sided ; anyles hairy. Flowers in pairs, one sessile, the other sub-sessile, both with their base bearded. Calyces of both flowers almost alike, two-flowered, two-valyed ; exterior valvelets obliquely-lanceolate and rather obtuse, the lower gibbous half transversely rugose, as in J. rugosum, upper portions striated lengthways; margins of the lower rugose portion notched ; of the upper striated part ciliate ; tmner boat- shaped in both, one floret is male, the other hermaphrodite. Corol ; glumes of each floret two-valved ; the exterior valvelet of the aeons floret bifid, with a long arista in the fork. Obs. It onkht to be compared with [, harbatuin. 4. 1, conjugatum, R. Partly creeping. Leaves short, acute, with broad cordate base. Spikes conjugate, seemingly united. Flowers paired, with the exterior valves of both calyces even, and rn on ag ly ; the sessile one hermaphrodite, awned. A native of pasture land in the vicinity of ( ale cu pearing in the cool season, | Eitei cheieienaen seikeas ¢ Ginebra, anccth, length from six to eighteen inches, generally purplish. Leaves with broad cordate base, from thence tapering toa fine point, ‘sheaths smooth. Spikes conjugate on a slender, clavate, pur- 01. 1. U : ta ,ap- ‘ 322 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA., Ischemum. ple peduncle; united at the base, at all times continuing close asifone, Rachis very hairy, and jointed. Flowers from four to eight pairs on each spike, one sessile, the other sub- sessile. Calyces nearly alike, two-valved, two-flowered ; the exterior valves even, acute, and uncommonly woolly on the back ; the inner boat-shaped, acute, and smooth, In each, one of the florets is hermaphrodite, the other male. Corols all two- valved, hyaline; the imer valve of the hermaphrodite floret in the sessile flower bifid and awned. Stamina three. reser ; twee 5. I. geniculatum. R. é Stems geniculate, creeping, smooth. Leaves ensiform. Spikes conjugate, apparently only one. Calyces two-flower- ed, smooth, and crested ; with the hermaphrodite flowers awn- ed.» A small species, a native of Bengal. Flowering time the cool season. Oi 1 Culms polished, from one to two feet long, very ramous, diffuse, geniculate ; joints large, emitting smooth, very brown roots, Leaves small, ensiform, smooth; sheath smooth, and shorter than the polished joints of the culm. Spikes terminal, - conjugate, generally so close as to seem only one, smooth, about an inch long. Rachis jointed, flexuose ; angles sharp, and sometimes hairy. Flowers paired, one sessile, one peduncled. -Calyces, both two-flowered ; one hermaphrodite and awn- ed, the-other male and. ae ee Exterior valve of the sessile flower enlarged with two, hard, serrulate crests, one on each side of the apex; nner mucronate, with a similar crest on the — back, under the apex ; of the pedicelled flower both are boat- shaped, mucronate, or sub-aristate, and the exterior one crest- ed on the back under the apex ; all are smooth and marked with green, longitudinal veins. Corols two-valved; the exte- rior valve of the hermaphrodite flowers bifid and avenibds aah) dschaemum, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 323 6.-1. tenellum. R. Creeping near the base, Leaves linear. Spikes aire Ex- terior valve of the sessile flower truncate, the rest cuspidate, hermaphrodite flower alone awned. A weak straggling species. Culms weak, creeping and ramous towards the base ; to- wards the heads erect ; the thicknessof a pigeon’s quill ; joints bearded, Leaves a little hairy near the base, mouths of the sheaths ligulate, and hairy. Spikes paired, &c. as in the last species. Flowers paired, &c. Calyx of the sessile flowers two-valved, two-flowered ; exterior valve retuse and border- ed ; inner. valve ending in an awled point. Flowers two, one — hermaphrodite with a two-valved corol, the exteriorof which ends in an arista, the other is male with an awnless two-valy- ed corol. Calyx, of the pedicelled flower both valves alike, and ending in an awled point; it contains a single flower, which is sometimes hermaphrodite, and sometimes male, with the rudiment only of the second flower, 7. i, repens: R. Creeping. Leaves short and acute, Spikes paired. Flow- ers all polygamous and awnless ; glumes of the calyces smooth and cuspidate, Rachis smooth. : A native of Pulo Pinang. Culms creeping, flexuose, smooth, from one to two feet long. Leaves bifarious, sword-shaped, short, rigid. Sheaths as long as the joints, a little hairy, with a aigalary process at the mouth, Spikes terminal, paired, uniting a little ae what seems to be their base. Rachis jointed, three-sided, _ smooth, Flowers about six pair, one of each pair sessile, th other peduncled, both the pedicelled and sessile one consist- ing of a two-flowered, two-valved, rigid, acute,smooth calyx, Flowers polygamous, one hermaphrodite, the other male, both awnless, each floret having a corol of two acute valves, v2 324 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA,. Apluda. 8. 1. cuspidatum. R. Floating on sweet water with a portion of the tops of the plant emerging. Leaves linear, smooth. Spikes three-fold. Exterior valve of the calyces with a long, waved, ensiform point ; all the corollets two-valved, and awnless. A native of Bengal, where it is found floating on pools of sweet water, and blossoming about the close of the rains in October, _ _ Culms appear. to “a perennial, a fathom or two long, Soil ed as thick as the little finger, floating. Leaves linear, acute, from one to two feet long, margins backwardly hispid, in other respects smooth. Spikesterminal, three in the only plant that has yet blossomed in this garden, each about six or eight inches long, a little compressed ; when the flowers expand about noon they appear like Chevaux de frise, at other times they appear smooth. Flowers in pairs, one sessile, contain- ing one hermaphrodite, and one male floret, the other pedicel- led and neuter, or with two male florets. Calyx two-valved; exterior valve rigid, with hispid margins and long, flat, wav- ed, hispid-margined, ensiform points ; «nner salve boat-shap- ed with a flat hispid keel. Corods of each floret two-valved. APLUDA. __ Polygamous. Involucre one-valved, teo-tlowered; one ses- sile, the other pedicelled « with a pedicelled neuter rudiment. Calyces two-fiowered, the sessile one polygamous, the pedi- celled one the same, or with male only. Corols two-valved. 1. A. aristata, Linn. sp, pl. ed. Willd. iv. 938. Perennial, creeping, or scandent, Leaves lanceolate. Her- maphrodite flower avied _ Beng. Goroma. Apluda. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, - Culms creeping, or climbing, as thick as a crow’s quill, jointed, coloured, the lower part naked, inwardly spongy ; from the joints spring erect, ramous, flower-bearing branches of from one to seven feet high. Leaves very elegant, some- what bifarious, sheathing, petioled, linear-lanceolate, back- wardly hispid; from six to eighteen inches long; sheaths smooth, mouths short-stipuled. Panicles terminal, and from the exterior axills, or, the whole may be considered, as one linear leafy panicle. Bractes three-flowered, boat-shaped, with an awned point. Flowers, one of the three sessile, or ra~ ther sitting on a globular receptacle, consisting of a common, two-flowered calyx, one of which is sessile, awned, and her- maphrodite ; the other sessile, male and awnless ; just without the calyx on each side, there is a bent, compressed pedicel, one of these supports a common calyx, with two male, two- valved, awnless flowers, the other only the rudiments of one e OF more florets. s) 2. A. geniculata, R. Perennial, creeping, or scandent, intricately geniculate. Leaves lanceolar. In each calyx one hermaphrodite, and one male flower, all awnless. _ Found on the banks of the Ganges in flower during the latter part of the rains and the cool season. Culms creeping, or climbing amongst bushes, reeds, &c, to an extent of many feet, ABs 5 and slender, bent at angles about aspan distance at the swelled joints, emitting numerous wiry roots, filled with spongy pith, the thickest about the size ofa crow’s quill. Leaves linear lanceolate, and smooth, but much smaller than in A. aristata. Sheaths shorter than is the joints. Ligula lacerate. Panicles terminal, compose numerous slender branchlets of distinct fascicles of flowers, each fascicle containing many short- pedicelled, ‘three-flower- ed, boat-shaped, cuspidate, smooth, bractes or involucres, Flowers one of the three sessile, containing one hermaphro- dite, and one male floret; the other two elevated or broad U3 326 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Melica. sulcate; proper pedicels, one minute and abortive, the other polygamous as in the sessile flower. Calyces of both the ses- sile and pedicelled flowers two-valved, two-flowered. Corol in all of them two-valved; valves unequal, exterior one thin and transparent. ~ Obs. The accurate Geertner, Carp. vol, ii. p. 466. t, 175. gives to the sessile flower of A. mutiea, one hermaphrodite, and one female floret, and to the pedicelled one two male ones, consequently this must be different, and a second awnless — Species. AIRA. Schreb. gen. N. 112. Calyx two-valved, —— without the rudiment of a third, A, filiformis. Kin, Mss, Smooth, erect, one foot high. Leaves ensiform. Panicles oblong, compound, of simple, linear, secund racemes, A native of pasture ground, : Culms erect, mostly naked, round, smooth, about a feck high. Leaves small, smooth ; mouths of the sheaths enlarged by a membranaceous, torn process, Panicle erect, thin, ob- long, composed of alternate, simple, one-ranked, filiform, ex- a racemes, somal in two rows: a eae tiewse : 4 eM E ee MELICA. Schreb. gen. No 113, | Calyx two-valyed, two-flowered, with the rudiment of a third. 1. M, digitata, R Culms from four to five feet high. Spikes terminal ‘iad : ing, = five-fold. Galye sie hemonil outer vakroletes of - Melica. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 327 A large beautiful species, a native of hedges, thickets, &c. Culms. near the base procumbent, but when supported by bushes erect and often from four to five feet high. Leaves upperside somewhat, hairy; mouths of the sheaths bearded, Spikes four to. five, digitate, secund, spreading, filiform, from six to nine inches long; hairy at the base, Rachis three- sided, Flowers in two rows, sessile, awned. Calyx one-flow- ered; glumes unequal, the interior being three or four times Jonger than the exterior, and short-awned, Corol, valves un-” equal, the largest has a long awn issuing just below its apex on the outside. Corpuscle, or neuter floret pedicelled, and awned, 2. M.refracta: RR. Perennial, ascending. Leaves lanceolate. Panicle ovate, with the ramifications refracted. | Petals bearded, with stiff _ refracted bristles, A native of the Moluccas, and from. ae stedaoed amongst other plants, into the Botanic sii where it blos- soms during the cold season. _. ' Root perennial. , Culms pee a Pry one to iets Sect long, round and smooth, Leaves lanceolate, smooth ; sheaths ~ smooth, scarcely bearded at the mouths, — Panicle terminal, ovate ; ramifications somewhat compound, and refracted like the drooping branches of some species of Pinus. . Calyx smooth, two-valved, two-flowered, with an abortive third, or the rudiment of one. Corol, exterior glumes, chiefly of the second flower, bearded with. refracted, sharp, stiff bristles which ix to cEary sich that touches them, iad 3. M. np Be R. Smooth, Culms from two to four feet high. iste ilicso. Jate. Panicle of long, ae tes Paani, racemes ; — awnless,. diandrous.. - Poa malabarica, / cg Willd. i, 394. UA native of mountains on the Coromandel coast, U4 eee 328 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Chloris. Culms ascending, from two to four feet high, firm, smooth, — about as thick asa fine quill. Leaves bifarious, lanceolate, striated, smooth; margins waved, unequally divided by the nerves, about an inch and a half broad, and six inches long ; mouth of the sheaths projecting above in a membranaceous process. Panicles Jarge, thin, oblong, bowing a little, com- posed of sub-alternate, simple, spreading racemes, Flowers awuless. Calya two-flowered, with the characteristic corpus- cle, which is also here pedicelled, but awnless. Corol, exte- rior. valve of the inner one has its margins and keel ciliate. Stamens two, ; 4. M. latifolia. R. - Perennial ; culms erect, simple, from four t to eight feet high. ; Leaves Lanse tates Panicles large and _— wile alternate, — compound drooping branches, A native of the Garrow hills, from thence it was ienia to the Botanic garden, by Mr. Robert Kyd, where it blos- ft soms in March, at which period and indeed at all times it is one of the most elegant plants in the whole order. ‘Stems very numerous from the same root, erect, straight, — and always without branches, more or less invested in the sheaths of the leaves ; very smooth, texture remarkably hard, — and filled with firm pith, generally about as thick asa goose- quill, and when in flower from six to eight feet high. Leaves — sessile on their sheaths, lanceolate, smooth ; from six to twen- ty inches long, sid Rech WAS te ea? broad: They aremuch like the leaves employed by the Chinese to put between the boxes and lead canisters in which their teas are packed. Seed ventricose-oval, smooth, both ends rather pointed, CHLORIS. Polygamous. Calyx two-valved, from two to six-flower- eee ee ae eee ed ee ~ Chloris. - ‘'TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA, 329 dieidlesk Corol of the hermaphrodite flower ey of the male, or neuter one-valved, all of them awned, aia 1. C. tenella. R. 4 Spikes solitary ; spikelets with diner: or four wrtiagecaidel dite awned florets, and a neuter rudiment, _ A native of the Peninsula of India. Culms delicate, erect, smooth, about a foot high. Leaves rather large in proportion to the rest of the plant, smooth, and soft. Spikes solitary, secund, scarcely two inches long. Spikelets alternate, and alternately pointing two ways. Flow- ers of the spikelets, or to each calyx, three, four, or five, all hermaphrodite, (at least in the rather imperfect state in which I have found this rare species) except the innermost one which is a one-valved corpuscle or rudiment, as in Melica, Calyx from three to five-flowered, two-valved ; valvelets un- equal, broad lanceolate, smooth, acute, permanent. Corol of. the hermaphrodite two-valved; exterior valvelets obcordate, cucullate, awned; margins smooth, but with three hairy nerves on the balk and sides ; interior phdonsie with meee ci- eae i and esi awnless, — 2. C. montana, R. Spikes digitate, secund, united at the base; hermaphrodite — flower ciliate, and awned ; neuter of three awnless valves, This is‘ native of mountainous tracts only, It differs from C. barbata only in the following respects. 1st, The spikes are in number from four to six, and united into a common — flower-bearing rachis near the base, 2d. The neuter floret we a a third awned valve and the awns areal tremesentnitle pe “B.C. barbata, Linn. op. ple eds Wille it. 926. pees Spikes digitate, secund ; J be corel Gilinte, and awned, neuter of two. jawied-vilven’: °° Andropogon barbatum, Linn. Mant. 302. 588. Konda-pulla. Rheed, Mal, 12, p, 95. t. 51. 330 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, . Chloris, Grows in large tufts on pasture ground, &c. very common — every where. - Culms, below creeping, and ramous, the joints perfectly smooth, Leaves near thé base bifarious; margins near the base and mouths of the sheaths ciliate. Spikes terminal, from six to twelve, sessile, secund, expanding, from-one to two inches long. Rachis striated, not hairy, nor jointed. Flowers pedicelled, alternate, in two rows on the outside of the spikes. Calyx two-flowered, two-valved, membranaceous and awn- less. The lower flower is sessile and hermaphrodite, its co- rol consists of two unequal ciliate valves, the base of which is surrounded with hairs, the exterior one ending in a long, coloured awn. The other floret I have always found neuter ; it stands on a short pedicel and consists. of two obcordate, awned valvelets ; awn and margin of the valvelets coloured. Obs. Cattle eat it till in flower; after which I never:saw . any animal touch it. nih! began. (span A, C, polystachya, R: bid Spikes from ten to twenty, fascicled. Exterior glume of the hermaphrodite flower with ciliate margins ; neuter florets’ two, with single smooth valves. A native of the Peninsula of India. Culms below procumbent for a little way, then erect, and _ about two feet high, Leaves as in other grasses, and smooth. _ Spikes about sixteen, in. a terminal, sub-fastigiate umbelli- , form fascicle, secund with the alternate spikelets, or flowers pointing to opposite sides, from two to three inches long. Calyx of two, unequal, lanceolate, boat-shaped, smooth, per- manent awnless valves, which contain one two-valved, her- maphrodite, awned flower; and two peduncled, one-valved, awned, neuter florets. The exterior valvelet of the —_ phrodite flower has its margins ciliate, Poa, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 331. POMMEREULLA. Schreb. gen. N. 97. Calyx, glumes two-valved, from three to four-flowered ; valvelets four-cleft, awned on the back. P. Corucopiae, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 314. Vahl. en. pl. ii. 393. R. Corom, pl. ii. M. 131. A very singular, small, rare grass’; growing under bushes on dry uncultivated ground. Root, culms, and leaves, as described by Konig, but mine has the spike compound and secund, the rest as he says, alba base abyolluta folia sub-spatheformi. Spicu/is distichus, each having an involucre of two, lanceolate, acute, membra- naceous valves. Within these two valves, is a short, clubbed, downy pedicel supporting the partial spikelets of four flow- ers, with their common calyx, it is joined to the involucre by an articulation and drops off most readily, particularly when _ dry, leaving the involucre attached to the rachis, Calyx, corol, and stamens, are as Konig describes them; but the germ is obcordate, and there are always two styles with fea- thery recurved stigmas. Seed as he describes it. POA. Schreb. gen. N. 414. Calyx two-valved, containing many flowers of two unequal valvelets disposed alternately on distichous spikelets. 1. P. bifaria, Vahl, symbol, ii, 19. Linn, sp. ie ed, — i, 401. be ~ Smooth, Cuties stinight; from one to two feet high. pikes terminal, straight, secund. Spikelets sessile, alternate, bifari- ous, mia aneatior cd four to eigen ane a eae ed. HG: - Teling. Wodde-talin, : I believe Konig called it Poa sabe: ' Grows on mountains and other dry situations, er 332 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Poa. Culms straight, simple, from twelve to twenty-four inches high, a little compressed, smooth. Leaves small, smooth. Spikes straight, secund, from four to eight inches long. Spike- lets alternate, sessile, lanceolate, in two spreading rows, though issuing from one side of the common rachis. Calyx below, from four to six-flowered ; above many-flowered. 2. P. chinensis, Linn. sp. pl.ed. Willd. i. 395. Smooth, from two to four feet high, Panicle of many, al- ternate, simple, expanding, secund ramifications, Spikelets alternate, short-pedicelled, from four to six-flowered. —__ Beng. Bitra-pini-nuti. A large, beautiful species, growing on the borders of water courses, and places where there is much moisture. Culms ramous, creeping near the base, above expanding, from two to four feet high, every part smooth, and a little compressed. Leaves as in other grasses, smooth ; mouths of the sheaths bearded. Panicle large, oval, composed of long, alternate, filiform, simple, expanding, secund branches, Spike- lets alternate, from four to six-flowered, short-pedicelled, ex- panding in two rows from one side of the simple branches. — 3. P. procera. R. Smooth, erect, from eres: to five feet high. Ligula large; ramifications of the panicle simple ; spikelets eeieailent ra- ther remote, linear, many Powered: «crite Haceciti ag Teling. Rewa. ce Delights in a moist rich soil. em Culms nearly erect, branchy, from three to ae feet rig D round, smooth, much covered by the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves long, slender and smooth. Sheaths longer than the e joints, with their mouths crowned with a long ragged mem- branaceous process. Panicle large, from nine to eighteen. : aaehes long, ome bowing a little, composed of numerous, = ng. racemen amir rae e - Poa. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 333 mon rachis; which is filiform, waved, three-sided, and hispid. * Spikelets alternate, pedicelled, linear, remote, many-flowered. 4. P. cynosuroides. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 393. Smooth, straight, from one to three feet high. Leaves long -and acute, Panicle straight, sub-cylindrical ; ramifications horizontal ; spikelets depending, from six to twelve-flowered, Uniola biphninan, Linn, sp. pl. 104. Sans. Koosha, Kootha, Durbha, Puvitrung. . -Cusa or Cusha, Asiat. Res, iii. 255. and 490. and iv, 249. Beng. Koosha. Teling. Durbha, Dubha, or Durpa. A strong coarse species, a native of dry barren ground. Root creeping, perennial. Culms straight, rigid, round, smooth, from one to three feet high. Leaves numerous, very long, chiefly about the base of the culms, rigid margins his- pid. Panicle erect, linear-oblong, often tending to a conical form, composed of many somewhat three-fold, verticelled, ho- rizontal, short, rigid, secund ramifications, Spikelets many- flowered, depending, in two rows, from the under side of the ramifications. Corol, valves pointed, the inner one rather the largest, Obs. It is employed by the brahmuns in their religious ceremonies, Cattle do not eat it. Can this be Gramen ca- pillaceum ? &e. Pluck, Alm, p. 176. t. 34. Fig. 2. Cusa, or Cusha, the Sanserit name of this much venerated grass, was given to it at a very early period, by the Hindoo Philoso- phers, and believed, by Sir William Jones, to have been con- secrated to the memory of Cush, one of the sons of Ram. See Asiatic Researches, vol. iti. p. 490. If, $0, we — here'a "5, P. ciliaris, Linn, sp: pl. ed. Willd. i. 402. - Smooth, sub-erect, from one to two feet high. Panicle 334 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Poa, - contracted, linear, with the lower ramifications remote. Spike- - lets from six to twelve-flowered ; inner valvelets of the corol ciliate. Delights in the same soil and situation with the last de- scribed species. Culms near the base procumbent, above erect for one or two feet. Leaves as in the last. Panicle linear, from three to six inches long, the ramifications short, those of the lower part stand at some small distance, their insertions are not hairy. Calyx from six to twelve-flowered, not ciliate. Corol, only'the inner valve ciliate. Seed as in the last. 6. P. cylindrica. R. Erect, slender, from twelve to eighteen inches high. . Leaves slender. Panicle cylindric, crowded with short, tl pressed, ramous, alternate branches. Spikelets from six to twelve-flowered, Flowers diandrous, inner valve of the corol : ciliate, From Canton in China the seed was received into the Bo- tanie garden, where the plants grow freely and —— a. ‘ing the rains and the cool season. ts P. ciliata, R. Smooth, sub-erect, from one to two feet high. Panicle co- lumnar ; spikelets from six to twelve-flowered ; margins of all the aly eles of the se and corols late. Bel TE a bular.* ae : As inca fend on a poor “iy boils * Root perennial, Culms erect, rigid, smooth; from one to three feet high. Leaves smooth ; mouth of the sheaths’ dow- ny. Panicle columnar, from two to four inches long, branches thereof crowded, insertions hairy ; spikelets from six to twelve- flowered. Calyx, margins ciliate. Corol, the margins of both valves much ciliate, the exterior one has three nerves and i oe pointed, the inner one two-nerved. - —— mooth, — brown, dropping from the corol when ‘ripe. - Bone: Poa. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 335 8, P. interrupta, Kon. Mss. Erect, smooth, from one to three feet high ; negotiate: of the linear panicle short, and collected into remote fascicles, Spikelets from six to twelve-flowered. Seed obcordate. Teling. Nakurnaral. _ Grows about at the borders of rice fields. - Culms generally erect, from one and a half to three feet” high, round, smooth. Leaves narrow, long, sharp, and smooth. Panicles erect, from six to twelve inches long, linear ; ramifi- cations sessile, nearly erect, remote, particularly those of the lower part, where they are often twice their length asunder; one, two, or more from the same point, which makes it ap- pear verticelled. Spikelets minute, pedicelled, from. six, to -twelve-flowered. Corol, valves smooth. Seed as in the'last two species, 9. P. nutans. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd, E 395. Retz. Obs. iv. 19. Erect, smooth, from three to five feet high, ein con- tracted ; ramifications adpressed, fascicled, and approximat- ed. Spikelets from eight to fourteen-flowered. Seed oblong. Teling. Urenka. Delights in a rich, moist soil, such as the banks of water- cone borders of rice fields, &c. Culms erect, from three to five feet high, pate eile round, smooth. Leaves narrow, long, sharp, and smooth, Panicle linear, from one to two feet long ; ramifications fili- form, peduncled, adpressed, one, two, or more from nearly the same place, but seldom so far asunder as their own length. — Spikelets pedicelled, from eight to fourteen-flowered. Calya and corol smooth, Seed oblong,smooth, brown, ss Obs. The best mark. to distinguish it from the Jast species is the form of theseed. which i in that is oboyate, in this oblong. . Cattle are not fond of any of these tall, erect, coarse species, 336 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Poa. 10. P. diandra. R.- : _ Erect, smooth. Leaves long, fine-pointed ; ana linear, half the length of the whole plant ; ramifications scattered, compound, expanding, smooth. Spikelets from four to eight- flowered. Flowers diandrous. A native of Bengal, where it blossoms during the cold sea- son. Culms erect, growing in tufts, with few branches, smooth ; height of the whole plant in a good soil, from three to six feet. Leaves from one to two feet long, smooth in every part, taper- ing to a long fine pot. Panicle linear, half the length of the whole plant; ramifications thereof scattered, expanding, smooth, compound, from two to three inches long. Spikelets lanceolate, small, smooth, from four to eight-flowered. Corol with both valves smooth, and rather obtuse. Stamens two. Anthers purple. - 11. P. viscosa. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 398. Retz. Obs. iv. p- 20. Culm ascending, from nine to eighteen inches high, clam- my. Paniclelinear-oblong; ramifications verticelled, short, spreading ; spikelets from three to twelve-flowered ; imner glumes of the corol ciliate. © — ; This species grows in tufts on dry simile seed, Culms numerous, spreading, with their extremities ascend- ing, ramous, from nine to eighteen inches long. Leaves — ‘small,marginsinvolute ; sheaths shorter than the joints, with their mouth surrounded with long, slender, white hair, Pa- nicles linear-oblong, from two to four inches long, composed : e of short, sub-verticelled, sessile, expanding ramifications. , Calyx from three to four-flowered. Corol, inner valve eili- _ ate, . e Obs. Every part of the — is conaea with tenaiout zg iy Pee : Poa. TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 337 12. P. tenella. Linn, sp. pl, ed, Willd. i. 395. - Erect, smooth, from one to two feet high. Panie/e linear- oblong, sieberiana Spikelets pedicelled, from four to six- — flowered, smooth. _A native of pasture ground. Culms erect, round, smooth, from one to two feet high. Leawes smooth, mouth of the sheaths much bearded. Panieles linear-oblong, composed of verticelled, filiform, expanding, ramous branches, having always at their insertions and sub- divisions a few fine, long hairs. Spikelets pedicelled, from four to six-flowered. Calyx and corol smooth,’ Seed oval, brown, smooth, falling from the corol when ripe, as do all the other species of this genus that I have yet seen. Obs. The anthers shine through the valves, as in P, nl tata, and indeed in most, if not all the Poas. - 13. P. plumosa, Linn, sp, Phe ed, Willd. i, 403. Retz. Obs. ‘iv. 20. Sub-erect, smooth. Panicle ovate-oblong ; semiifitision scattered, horizontal; insertions hairy; ramuli depending. Spikelets pedicelled, oe four to eens inner valve- lets of the corols ciliate. — Tsjama-pullu. Rheed, Mal, xii. p, 75, t. 41. Gramen fami. Rumph. Amb. vi. p. 10. t.. 4. f. 3. Is found growing in tufts on pasture ground, Culms filiform, many, ramous, spreading a little at the base, above erect, from one to two feet high, round, smooth. Leaves, ‘mouths and margins of the sheaths fringed, with long, deli: cate white hairs. Ditepsb: bles aenmpoadisbaaant pilla-— ry, alternate, horizontal, ramous branches, their insertions and sub-divisions are fringed with a few fine, white hairs, Spike-— Bris minute, ee Scam eee onto to six-flowered. 338 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Pods: 14. P. punctata. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 395. Erect, smooth, from six to eighteen inches high. Panicle oblong ; ramifications simple, expanding, lower ones verti- - celled. Spikelets from twelve to fourteen-flowered, smooth, Seed obliquely oblong. This species grows in tufts on pasture ground. Culms erect, generally simple, round, smooth ; from six to eighteen inches high. Leaves small, smooth ; mouths of the sheaths bearded. Panicle oblong ; ramifications simple, ex- panding, the lower ones collected ‘into one verticel ; above alternate. Spikelets pedicelled, rather remote, binioat from twelve to fourteen-flowered. Calyx and corol smooth, thin, showing the unexpanded anthers and — through yee _ Seed oblong, smooth, brown. 15. P. elegans. R. . Sub'erect, smooth, from one to three feet high. Panicle oblong, nodding ramifications solitary, ramous, ad pressed. Spikelets from eight to twelve-flowered, Seed globular. ise — elegant, tall, delicate species, a native of moist phe Culms snipe! at the base spreading for a few nico, the remaining part is erect, round, smooth ; from one to three feet high. Leaves few and very small, Skitvoei in every part, ex- cept the mouth of the sheaths, which are bearded. » Panicles linear-oblong, nodding, composed of erect, ad pressed, distinct, — somewhat remote ramification, each of which forms a small, but-similar panicle. Partial rachis with the angles hispid. Spikelets pedicelled, linear, from eight to twelve-flowered, purplish, Corol, outer valve three-nerved. Seed globular, smooth, and brown. ; 5 Xt ~-162P. multiflora. R. vie ole Sub-ereet, smooth, from six to eighteen inches ih. Po - than the rest of the plant, nodding. \ Spike crowd ad Set of cha Seed globular. Poa, TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA, 339 As found on dry elevated places. EP - Culms nearly erect, naked, except at the as from six'to twelve inches high, round, and smooth, . Leaves one or two near the base of each culm, short; mouths of the sheaths a little hairy.. Panicle oblong, bowing ; ramifications sub-ses- sile, short, filiform, simple, the lower collected into one or two remote branches; the upper ones alternate. Spikelets pedicelled, very long, linear, from fifty to seventy-flowered, i Calyx smooth, obtuse. Corol smooth, outer valve three-nerv- ed. Seed round, smooth, brown. 17. P. unioloides. Linn, sp, pl. ed,.Willa. i. 393. Retz, Obs. v. 19. Erect, smooth, from-one to two feet high. “Panicle ovate; ramifications short, simple, below fascicled ; above solitary, horizontal ; spikelets long-pedicelled, from sixteen to’ i ai flowered. Seed oblong. +» Beng. Konee... - | A most elegant species, a native - ied dlevoted situations, . Culms, below ramous, with a small portion resting on the pains the rest erect, and from one to two feet high, round and smooth. Leaves few, small, and smooth ; mouths of the sheaths bearded. | -Panicles half as long as the whole plant, erect, oblong, thin ; ramifications peduncled, filiform, dispos- ed as in multiflora, Spikelets ovate, from sixteen to twenty- flowered, generally of a bluish purple colour. Corol, outer valve three-nerved, as in P, multiflora, Seed oblong, smooth, 48 P. flexuosa, Ro . " Sub-erect, East, nodding ab tiee from a eigen’ to. twenty-four inches high. Panicle ovate, crowded 5 ramifi- ee ep AON insert oxhineea A prety large species, growing i in tufts on old wally 80 340 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Poa. exactly resembling P. unioloides as to be easily mistaken for it, It has much the habit of Briza Eragrostis, 3 Culms sub-erect, winding, round, smooth ; from one and a half to two feet high, Leaves much larger sig in the last species, and the mouths of the sheaths more hairy. Panicle ‘oval, very large, generally more than half the length of the whole plant, branches alternate, nearly horizontal, ramous, with a brown, hairy gland in the axill of each division of the panicle, Spikelets white, or pale green, lanceolate, large, about twenty-flowered. Seed globular, brown, and smooth. 19. P. paniculata. R, Erect, smooth, from two to four feet high. Leaves long; mouths of their sheaths bearded. Panicle oblong ; ramifica- tions most numerous, filiform; insertions hairy. Spikelets from four to sixteen-flowered ; valvelets of = calyces ciliate, Seed globular. | Culms sub-erect, round, and smooth; length from one to two teet high to the panicle, which is shart the same length, making the whole height from three to four feet, Leaves Jarge, mouths of the sheaths very hairy. Panicle oblong, very large, composed of numerous, ramous, filiform, expand- ing branches, their insertions and sub-divisions involved in fine, long, white hairs. Spikelets long-pedicelled, linear, from four to, sixteen-flowered, Corol, outer valve round at the Ape, and Shres-nerveds inner one neligiely ciliate on the 20. P. gangetica. R. Grows in very dense tufts. Panicle thin. Spikelets linieer, from thirty to forty-flowered, ee A native of the banks of the Ganges, but scarce. _ Culms numerous, and ramous, growing in crowded tufts, _ Smooth in every part, general length about a foot. Leaves few, small, and smooth. Panicle ovate, composed of a few, remote, alternate, mb dinenie jabs each . Erect, iapoilisdends icin bight toctyrslve Seah las : 3 silt tone, verticelled. Calyces, from three to four-flowered exterior glume of the corols three-nerved, and daggered. _ Sans. Nuda, Nula;, siscibiae — Beng. Nal, Nur. 2 » Teling. Naga-sara maitantos, 348 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, , Arundo, Is a native of similar places with the last described. Culms erect, ramous, from eight to twelve feet high, and as thick as the last, round, smooth, entirely covered: with the sheaths of the leaves. Leaves approximate, sword-shap- ed, smooth, from twelve to twenty-four inches long, and one or one and a half broad ; mouths of the sheaths bearded, Pa- nicle bowing with the wind, but if not disturbed erect, oblong, composed of many filiform, erect, (in luxuriant plants droop- ing) sub-verticelled, ramous branches. Rachis of the branches angular and hispid. lorets alternate, on a longer common woolly pedicel than in A. bifaria, within the calyx. Calyx from three to five-flowered ; glumes unequal, the larg-. est shorter than the exterior valve of the corol. Corol, ex- - terior valve three-nerved, tapering into long fine subulate points, inner valve scarcely half so long, Stamens often only two, and the pistil is frequently wanting. Obs. It does not agree with Retzius’s description of A. Karka im the number of flowers in the. calyx. Pipes are made of the culms, particularly those used by the people who carry about the dancing snakes, In Bengal it is more luxuriant than on the coast, _ The common Durma mats of that place are made of the stalks split open. Vessels from the be of Calcutta are snore ee PH-Ay Hea satho As henge, Linn drew -y Wit 455. ‘Retz. Obs. v. 20. Culms, fica: dix to-ee-feekdig, fletsileuis'é yates hidart- ous, sword-shaped, drooping. Panicle lax ; valvelets of the ealyx equal, from two to three-flowered ; exterior valve. of the corol woolly, daggered, and dobeaiertedi yaeed. Fs Beng, Gaba-nul. é _ This elegant species is found growing in ditches sal low places in the vicinity of Caleutta, where it bloshents, ons the months of October and November. | | Culms erect, Gan i tatglbmahahichetelanlhs ie Aristida, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 349 very numerous, approximate, bifarious, drooping, sword- shaped, from one to two inches broad at the base, from thence taper to a fine point; smooth on both sides, and in the mar- gins. Sheaths also smooth, with a long membranaceous margin round the mouth, Panicle oval, lax, from one to two feet long, erect; ramifications alternate, ramous, drooping a little. Fiower’ pedicelled, scattered. Calyx two or three- flowered ; valves nearly equal, and of the length of the flow- ers, Coroi exterior valve three-nerved, and woolly on the back, with a very fine, long, taper point. Jnner valve small and smooth. Nectary two, cuneiform scales embrace the on the two sides. _ Obs. The wool which girds the base of the corol, in most of the species, is in this species found growing on the back of i its exterior valve. ARISTIDA. Schreb. gen. N. 125. Calyx two-valved, one-flowered. Goce ompxnined, wits thrpe awns at the top. | ae © A. setacea, Retz. Obs. iv, 22, Linn, sp. pl, ed. Willd. i, 460 5 Erect, smooth) from two to four feet high. Panicle linens oblong, composed of fifteen to twenty subyaltemnate, erectish ramifications. : Teling. Shipur-gadi, Grows in a dry, barren, binding soil. _ Root perennial. Culms straight, generally simple, from two to four feet high, and about as thick as a crow’s quill at the base, solid, and of a very firm ligneous tex re, round and smooth, Leaves few, narrow, margins inyolute, nerve- less, smooth. Panicle bowing with the wind, linear, from six to twelve inches long, composed of sub-sessile, remote, adpressed ramifications, Calysx, corol, &c, as in the family, except that the three awns are erect. ah 350° TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Aristida. Obs. Cattle do not eat it, yet it is very useful. The Telinga - paper-makers construct their frames of the culms ; it also serves to make brooms and tooth-picks. It is employed in . preference to other grasses for making the screens called Tat- ties, for this purpose it is spread thin on bamboo frames, and tied down; these placed on the weather side of the house, during the hot land winds and kept constantly watered dur- ing the heat,of the day, renders the temperature of the air in the house exceeding pleasant, compared to what it is without. The thermometer in the outside exposed to the wind, but not to the sun, will then be at one hundred, or one hundred and fifteen degrees, or even more; and within if the Taéties are properly disposed and well watered, they will keep it down to from eighty-five to ninety, with two or even three rows of Tatties, made very thin, and all kept well watered, the thermometer, when it blows hard, may be brought down to eighty, but then it is absolutely chilling, and disagreeably cold. The difference between the open air and this refreshed air, is to the feeling inconceivably great. The thermometer in the sun, at this season rises to from one hundred and ‘thir- ty to one hundred and forty, This contrivance we received from Bengal, and by it the hot season which used to be so. much dreaded, is now rendered to those who can keep with-. in doors tolerable, I have never observed any had effects from this cool moist air; however the — is a i . healthy of the whole year, , ‘Hostris. Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd: 459. y Culms diffuse, about two feet long. Panicle oval, late . thin ; ramifications spreading, two-forked, 5 = Teling. Shil puroo-kalli, : ais species is a native ofthe same sil with dhe last de : Manisuris, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, - 351. verging, generally two-cleft peduncles and. pedicels, — giposie corol, &c, as in the genus. . basfoig Obs. This species is of no use that T_ know of. ‘ 3, A. depressa, Retz. Obs, iv. 22. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. Ascending, ramous, from twelve to eighteen inches long, Panicle linear, of six to eight alternate epeaiiseticnns sive: of the calyces keeled. Teling. Nalli-pootiki. | Is found upon the same kind. of land with the two last species, Culms below depressed, ramous ; above ascending, filiform, round, smooth, solid, rigid; from twelve to eighteen inches high. Leaves as in the former, Panicle smaller, and with. fewer ramifications than in A. sedacea, Calyx, the glumes have a large green keel. Corol, &c. as in the genus. Obs. This is also so far as I know, perfectly useless, MANISURIS. Schreb. gen. N. 1570. -Polygamous. Rachis jointed. Hermaphrodite calyx two-valved, one-flowered. Corol two-valved, less than the calyx. Male, or neuter calyx two-valved, one or two-flower- ed, Corol two-valved. . 1. M. Aijicrass. Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. iv, 945. Corom, oi 2; N. 117, Culms creeping, from nine to eighteen inches high. Spikes solitary ; exterior valve of the hermaphrodite calyx panduri ; form and emarginate ; male calyx wee ciay cba - Teling, Nalla-punookoo, a eet? i Is a native of dry sesiieb acaismeanalys bef ics4 Culms several, ramous, diffuse near the base, lace te joints, extremities ascending, from nine to eighteen inches long, as thick as a crow’s quill, compressed, warieoab; not pip- ed; Leaves small, and smooth ; mouths of the sheaths increas- 352 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. Manisuris. - "ed by a lacerated membranaceous border or stipule. Spikes solitary, terminal, and from the exterior arils peduncled, se- cund, jointed, smooth, a little compressed, from one to two inches long. Peduncles articulated, and bracted at the mid- dle. Flowers, the hermaphrodite ones occupy a waved row of pits on the four sides of the spike, while the male ones pos- sess two sides, the back is naked. . HERMAPHRODITE FLOWERS, Calyx two-valved, one-flow- ered; the exterior valvelet has a broad ‘coloured margin, which is emarginate, and deeply indented at the sides, like a fiddle; inner valvelet oblong, lodged in a pit of the rachis, Corel two-valved, membranaceous. Nectary two obcor- date, crenulated scales embrace the germ. Stamens three. si deg two. MALE FLowERS. Calyx two-flowered, two-valved, vabvbs lets nearly equal, boat-shaped. Coroé with two membranace- ous valves. Stamens three. Pistil none. 2. M. granularis, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. iv. 945, Corom. pl. 2. N. 118, Ramous, sub-erect, hairy, from one to two feet high ; spikes fascicled. Hermaphrodite calyx oval, and Eugor?> male or neuter one-flowered. : Grows among bushes. = | Culms very ramous, nearly erect, filiform, hairy, from one totwo feet high, Leaves numerous, very hairy, stiff and sharp. _ Spikes terminal, and axillary, peduncled, several together, small, compressed, from half an inch to an inch long. Pani- cles as in the former. Rachis jointed, much waved and ex- cavated as in Rottbeellia, Flowers from four to ten of each sort, their situation exactly as in the last species, viz. the her- maphrodite occupy the forepart, while the male, or neuter aare Placed on the sides, the former are globular, — the latter _ Hermapnropite rrowers. Calyx one-flowere ; he o- raved setae saloorene hye sashes rugose ; it Rottbeellia. TRIANDRIA DIGYNTA, 353 SS a EF oe three, Styles t two. - Maze or neuter Fiowers. Calyx two-valved, one-flow- ered. Corol two-valved. Stamens three or none. -ROTTBELLIA. Schreb. gen. N. 1572. Rachis (generally) jointed, variously excavated for the recéption of one, or two flowers in a two-valved calyx, in each excavation. Be R. glabra. R R. : ~ Near the base creeping, with extremities erect, smooth, Leaves bifarious, all hermaphrodite. Calyx one-flowered ; co- rot three-valved. Beng. Buksha. A native of Bengal, where it grows on pasture lands, the borders of rice fields, and other moist places, Cattle are fond _ of it. Culms jointed, ‘ER, compressed, filled with’ pith, creep- ing near the principal root for a foot or more, the remaining part” from one to two, or even three feet, erect, Leaves al- ternate, ifarious, approximate, short, spreading, ensiform, smooth, Sheaths shorter than the joints of the culm, smo Spikes axillary, solitary, or in pairs, with’a solitary jirinitia? one, subulate, three-sided, smooth, short-peduncled, the pe- _ duncles with generally a part of the spikes hid in the sheaths _ of the leaves; general length from two to three inches. Flow= ers opposite, in general all, or the greatest part. herma yhro- dite, and as long as the joints of the rachis. a flow: ered, irre. valyeds money pire 354 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Rottbeelha, 2, R. compressa. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. 465. Corom, pl. ii, N. 156, Retz. Obs. iii. 12. 3 Culms climbing, from five to twenty feet high, smooth, compressed ;_ spikes axillary and terminal; rachis jointed ; flowers opposite, hermaphrodite calyces Ode how srea: Corol - three-valved. Beng. Pansheroo, Teling. Shervoo, 7, e. lake panookoo. -It is found on the borders of lakes, amongst other roots of long grass, and brushwood. “Culms several, creeping or climbing, ramous, compressed, from five to twenty feet long, piped, smooth, about as thick as a common quill, and very hard. Leaves numerous, bi- farious, small for the size of the plant, smooth and. soft; sheaths short, compressed, and smooth, Spikes peduncled, terminal, and from the exterior axills, generally from two to five together, compressed, a little smooth, from two to four inches long. Peduncles articulated at the middle and there ‘bracted, lanceolate, chaffy, bractes also surround their inser- tion. Flowers all hermaphrodite, opposite, decussated, lodg- ed in the excavations of the jointed rachis. Calyx one-flow- ered, two-valved, valves nearly equal ; ; the flowers have al- ternately their valves pointed and somewhat longer than. the. excavation in the rachis, both cartilaginous; and obtuse, equal to the pits in the rachis, with the exterior one only car- tilaginous, Corol three-valved, valves membranaceous, Nec- tary, two triangular | bodies embracing the base ofthe stamens G and germ. Stamens three. Styles two ; stigmas plumose, a5 3. R. exaltaia, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 466. Corom. pl. 2. HN. 157, Polygamous, Culms erect, hinsie from six to ten feet high, with neuter ones on the sides, _ . Beng. Bura-swooate. pes —_ Secon Spikes solitary, secund. Polygamous flowers on the front = Roitbeellia, TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, 355 _ A native of mountains, :, WEEN e ‘Root consisting of strong woody fibres. Culms erect, ra- mous, a little compressed, inwardly of a spongy nature, from six to ten feet high, and as thick as the little finger near the base, where they are armed with strong and short, white hairs. Leaves large and numerous, smooth on the outside, and hairy on the inside; margins hispid ; sheaths very hairy ; hairs elevated on glandular points, -very stiff and sharp. Spikes terminal, and from the exterior axills, generally solitary, cy- lindric, &c. Flowers of three sorts, hermaphrodite, male, and neuter, the first and second occupy alternate pits or one side of the spike, while the neuter stand-on each side of them, so that the spike may be called secund. Calyx of the herma- phrodite and male floret two-valved, © Corol as in the last. , Stamens &c, as in the genus. Calyx of the neuter flower two- valved, valvelets oblong. Corol, glumes two, membrana- ceous, | ALR. corymbosa. Linn, 7: pl. ed, re i, 443, Coron pl.ii, N. 181, - Polygamous, erect, ‘smooth, ue fhvea"t to five feet high, Spikes fascicled, terminal and axillary ; rachis jointed ; flow- ers alternate, on opposite sides of the spike. Calyces gener- ally two-flowered. _ Priaih a coiees Teling. Pedda inndbkob: -R. punctata. Retz. Obs. iii, 12. Aegilops eraltata, Retz. Obs. ii. 27. ‘A native of low rich pasture ground, grows in erect tufts, Ba vies Coals straight, mostly paket, the sheaths of he ind and smooth, from three to Rete nd ethos | of the last species, very firn eaves from six to twelve inches long ; margins with a few hairs; sheaths short and smooth. =r fei and from the exterior axills several, peduncled, Peduncles’ 3 a, curved, jointed near the base and there bracted, be- Ww2 - a TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA, Rottbeellia, sides there are chaffy, filiform bractes at their insertions. Flowers alternate in two rows ; one row on each side of ‘the — spike. Calyx two-flowered, two-valved. Corol, one herma- phrodite within, and one male without, each has two valves, _sometimes there is only one hermaphrodite floret, in which case it has three valves. | 5, R. perforata, Bocce ‘pl. ii. N. 182. ~ Culms erect, smooth, from three to five feet high. Spikes solitary, below the flowers are opposite, and the rachis) per- forated, Calyx generally two-flowered ; oue flower siti the other hermaphrodite. 3 Beng. Kurki. ‘a2 ac toa bi kay Teling. Panookoo. # This species is rather scarce, it grows. on, low ek none ground, Culms many, erect, camble: Fouad , smooth, jointed, but not, piped; from three to five feet high, and about as thick as a crow’s quill. Leaves small for the size of the grass, slender and smooth ; margins hispid ; mouths of the sheaths and a:lit- tle way up the base of the leaves woolly. Spikes terminal, and, from the exteriorarils,solitary, peduncled, round, see as thick as a crow’s. quill, and from three to six inches long 5, where the flowers are opposite, there is an 2 obhang Sates | of the rachis, so that the backs of the inner : glumes of ‘the _ ealyx touch one another. Renee onan ate ‘on the lower IalPor ators i jhe sokossbarsais nate;some- mixed, Calye one or -two-flowered, tw. regaled, ean = simple ; the exterior one rigid, the interior one firm. and) white, both obliquely linear-oblong. Corol, when, si agile hermaphrodite, and. three-valyed ; hin double the exterior, , one, is male, i in which case the two » have four valrese Vite oe Rotibeellia, _ ERIANDRIA DIGYNIA, a GR, setacea, Corom., pl. ii. N. 132. ‘ah Erect, setaceous, smooth, from two to six inichlig high, Spikes solitary, termjnal, unilateral ; rachis not joined, Caly- ces one-tlowered,. Corols two-valved, — Hey Grows on old walls. _ : - Culms many, erect, ramous, filiform, smooth, fron two.to six inches high. Leaves, inside a little hairy, in size propor- tioned to the plant. Spikes terminal, solitary, awled, secund, about aninch, or an inch and a halflong. Rachis excavated on ote side, but uot joined, Flowers, they are all hermaphro- dite, imbricated transversely on the excavated side of the ra- -chis, Calyx one-flowered, two-valved ; valvelets equal, ment branaceous margined, Corol two-valved, membranaceous, seaaebi Stamens three, Styles two, ses animes 7. R. Thomea, Linn. sp. pl. ed. ie i. “464, Coram. yi N, 132. af _. Erect, compressed, we two. sitched hich, Spikes solitary terminal, two ranked, Rachis not joilited, sings one-flow- ered. Corol two-valved. _ R. Thomwa and pleas Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd, i. 464.5. are, I suspect this very species, : _ Grows, with the last species, on old walla, a . Culms minute, erect, compressed, about an denon dears of the spike, and two with it, Leaves bifarioiis, nu merous, Spikes terminal, solitary, subulate, distichous, com- pressed, Rachis waved, excavated on the opposite side, not articulated, Flowers all hermaphrodite, disposed anahilily in the excavations of the rachis. Calyx one Rips od, two- valved; exterior valvelet rigid, lined nterior b at-sha and less rigid. Corol Ciao es Setaccous Spikes simple, pile ee not grit | W3 * 358 FRIANDRIA DIGYNEA, Hordeum. but bifariously excavated for the reception of the two-flow- ered spikelets. | A native of the ancuaahe of India; and im size and ap- pearance very like R, Thomea and edinets ; and were they not two-flowered in the same cal yx I should no doubt have | taken it for R. axeurvata, Linn, Culms scarcely more than may be ealled the seapes of the spikes, the whole plants being but two or three inches high. Leaves many, filiform; rachis rigid, and with the sheaths somewhat pilose. Spikes terminal, solitary, subulate, about two inches long. Rachis not jointed, but alternately exca- vated on the opposite sides for the reception of the flowers. Calyx two-valved, two-flowered ; valves very unequal, the exterior being many times leseeciban the imer one, which is a minute scale in the botiom of the excavations of the ra- chis, and not readily detected, .Florets two in each calyx, both hermaphrodite, one sessile and the other short pedicel-_ led, each with a corol of two equal membranaceous, smooth valves, : _ HORDEUM. Sckhreb. gen. N. 129. Calyz lateral, two-valved ; valves narrow, acuminate, dis- tant, altogether forming a six-leaved ceria one-flowered, a threes at each toothlet of the. machin... hahadaabon kine aks oe Willd. i473. ‘All the flowers hermaphrodite and awned, placed re eg ly in six rows, Sans, Yuva, Situshooka, shee: Beng. Juba, : | seine Arab. She-eer. #.. This species.is much cobeeedad d in most of the tamperate = ff HieMoosten during ¢ the cool season... 5 3 . Mollugo. TRIANDRIA TRIGYNTA, 359 . TRITICUM. Schreb. gen. N. 130. Calyx two-valved, solitary, generally three-flowered. 1. T. estivum. Linn. sp. pl.ed. Willd. i. 476. _Calyces four-flowered, ventricose, smooth, imbricate, awn- cts Godhooma, Soomuna, Beng. Gom. : Hind. Gioon. Pers. Gundum. Arab. Burr. ~ "Two varieties are very generally cultivated in the interior and northern parts of Hindoostan during the cool season. : 2. T. hybernum. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. AT7. i Calyces four-flowered, ventricose, even, ‘imbricated, with little or no awn, Two varieties of this species are also cultivated in the north- ern parts of Hindoostan during the cool season. ‘TRIANDRIA TRIGYNIA. MOLLUGO. Schreb. gen. N. 139. Calyx five-leaved. Corol none. Capsule superior, three- celled, three-valved, many-seeded. Hmbryo annular, and far- nished with a perisperm, 1. M. pentaphylla, Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. i. 492. ae _ Annual, diffuse. Leaves verticelled, cuneate-lanc re Veri. Shadrasi hs Se ee ie f} A common weed in gardens a a ag wa 360 ~ _ -PRIANDRIA TRIGYNIA. Molluge. 2. M. triphylla. Lour. Cochin Ch. 79. Annual, diffuse ; branches angular, smooth. Leaves sub- verticelled, lanceolate, unequal. Panicles of long dichoto- mous racemes of alternate flowers, Seeds dotted. Beng. Jul-papara. Alsine multiflora. Pluck, Phyt. 21. t. 259, f. 2. good. Mullugo stricta. Linn. Syst. 129. is probably the same plant, if so, the specific name is a very improper one, It is also a weed in gardens all over India. 3.M. verticillata, Linn. sp, pl. ed. Willd. i, 492. Annual, diffuse, dichotomous, smooth, Leaves suib-verti- celled, sessile, cuneiform peduncles inserted amongst the leaves, one-flowered. Seed turrowed along the back, Obs. Found over most parts of India, and a common weed . in our gardens during the dry seasoncbiely. = = =. CLASS IV. ! TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. : RHOPALA. Schreb. gen. N. 144. Calyx none. Corol four-petalled, bearing the stamina above the middle. Nectury four-scaled. Germ one-cell ovula two, attached to one side of the cell. US Ae R. moluccana, Brown. ‘Linn. Trans, x. p- 191. 8 Leaves alternate, sub-sessile, oblong, entire, racemes isi. lary, and from the branchlets, longer than the leaves. _Nee- tarial scales naked, A native of Pulo Pinang. ty As my description is taken from dry specimens I cannot, say whether it be a tree or shrub, but the large woody speci- mens evidently show it to be perennial. Leaves short-petiol- ed, alternate, obovate, oblong, obtuse-pointed, entire and smooth on both sides, six or more inches long and less than three broad. Stipules none. Racemes generally solitary, from the naked woody branchlets below the leaves, very long and completely clothed to the base with numerous — beautiful, diverging, pretty large, delicate flowers. .Bractes minute. Calyx none. Petals four, very long and slender, near the apex they expand into a concave lanceolate shape — __ for the reception of the stamens ; they. first open in the middle — then at the apex, and soon after become revolute. _ Nectary, four scales embracing the lower part of the germ. Filaments four, short, inserted into the petals above the middle. An- thers linear, curved in an opposite direction to the petals. Germ above, ovate, style long and slender, Stigma clubbed, 362 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Rhopala, 2. R. serrata. Brown. Linn. Trans, x. p. 192. Leaves alternate, sub-sessile, oblong, serrate. Racemes ax- — illary ; pedicels two-flowered. Nectarial scales ciliate. A native of the Malay Archipelago, My description and drawing being from dry specimens, I cannot say whether it is a tree or shrub. Young shoots cloth- ed with ferruginous down, Leaves alternate, short-petioled, _ oblong, acute, tapering at the base, serrate, firm and smooth * on both sides; from four to.six inches long, and from one to three broad. Spikelets none. Racemes axillary, solitary, shorter than the leaves, clothed with ferruginous down. ° Pe- _dicels two-flowered. Bractes minute, cordate, one at the base of each common pedicel, Calyx-none, Petals few, long, slender, clavate; from the middle downwards, their sides touch, and forma ‘betider tabe, Nectérial scales four between the base of the petals and germ, obcordate, ciliate. Filaments four, inserted on the petals, about onéthird below” their apices, Anthers ovate. Germ superior, very hairy. Style as long as the corol. Stigma clavate. Seed vessel not “seen, us BR. excelsa, R. sidan: io Leaves ‘alternate, short-petioled) cuneate-oblong, obtuse, pointed, smooth, with afew large blunt serratures near the apex, Racemes axillary and terminal, as long as the lgpite downy. Nectarial scales four, distinct, and naked. we A large timber tree, a native of —— hittagong, where it*flowers in March and April.’ 197 tafe Trunk of the full-grown trees about reek fet th sire . ence, covered with dark-coloured, scabrous bark ;' branebés- numerous, spreading far, and dividing: much ; young Shoots | clothed with ferraginous down, Leaves aleereians) ae tioled, cuneate-oblong, obtuse-pointed ; interior margins gene- rally with one, two, or three large, blunt serratures'on each bl Hedyotis, |. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 363 but chiefly the former, one, two, or three together, nearly as the leaves, straight and simple, densely clothed with ferru- ginous down. Pedicels short, two-flowered. Bractes, a small oval one at the base of each common peduncle, and one about the middle of each pedicel. Flowers numerous, crowded, small, yellowish green. Calyx none. Petals four, linearly spatulate, revolute. NVectarial scales four, rounded, smooth -and distinct, Filament short, inserted on the petals. Anthers ’ rior, oblong, smooth, o linear. Germ oblong, very completely covered with long, reddish brown hairs, one-celled, and containing two ovula at- tached a little to one side of the bottom of the cell. Style fi- liter pone clavate, entire, 7h LR. pola. |R : a Leaves iimeoniin sessile, cuneate-oblong, smooth, remotely serrulate, Racemes axillary, and below the leaves, seneth: Nectary a smooth four-toothed cup. Pais Joweea, the vernacular name in Silhet where iti is indigenous, and grows to be a large, stout timber tree. Flowering in June. Young shoots smooth, Leaves alternate,sub-sessile, cuncate- oblong, obtuse-pointed, remotely and acutely serrulate, smooth on both sides, about twelve inches long, by five or six broad. Racemes axillary, and below the leaves, one, two, or three together, about half the length of the leaves, smooth. Pedicels short, two-flowered, Bractes smooth, one at the base of each common pedicel, and one about the middle of each of the proper ones, Flotvers numerous, pale, greenish yellow, and fragrant. Calyx none. Petals four, linearly spauleme smooth, revolute. Nectary one-leaved, cup-shaped, obtusely dscdlled +! sovala twos: attached ta sidg;ahcthe coils oer filiform. Stigma clavateenties ote HEDYOTIS. ‘Shee gen. ON. 153. Cale fout-ported: Corol one-petalled, Finda giad i 364 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Hediyotis. Capsule inferior, two-celled, many-seeded, Receptucles ad- hering to the partition their whole length. Hmbryo centri- * me and furnished with a perisperm. | ii H, hispida. Retz. Oba, Botwiv. p- 23. Linn. sp. pl. ed. i, 565... _ Diffuse, four-sided, rooting at the joints. Leaves dusiies lanceolate, with hispid margins. Flowers axillary, crowded, It sprung up and blossomed in December in the Botanic garden, amongst plants introduced from the Molictas in 1798-9, ‘ Stem none, but sexvecal square, creeping ieatahices witli their floriferous extremities ascending. Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, lanceolate; margins hisiils and entire, sniodth, from two to three inches long ; the connecting membrane di- vided into many subulate portions. Flowers axillary, sessile, © small, white. Capsule roundish, two-celled... Seeds numér- “ae. eg EL, geniculata, R, Weak, straggling, jointed, round, ameail Joaeia guile onic, lanceplate, smooth. Flowers sub-verticelled, short- " Annatve of the Malay, Islands, lates Petia aa pe oR i ero heed the corol and apex of the style bearded. _ Gujee, the vernacular name in Silhet, where it isi nous; flowers and ripens its seed during the. hot au aaa seasons, cca > ans Stems and branches perennial, round, ualeill Leas. ze. ghost. petialed, broad-lanceolate, smooth, entire. Séi- 2s cup-shaped, connecti iin Joven SHAS shoes . Hedyotis. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 365 nal, diijeglobiitar; throughout trichotomous, al} the ramifica- ‘tions a little villous.’ Bractes linear, spreading. Calyx four: toothed, Corol with the tube longer than the calyx, its mouth and the base of the four linear segments of the borders of the corol very woolly, Germ oval, tid colbell ovula namerous, attached to the sub-globular receptacles, rising from the mid+ dle of the partition. Style longer than the corol ; apea woolly; stigma two-cleft. — ovate, two-celled, many- seeded. ’ 4. Hi, lineata. R. Annual, diffuse, hairy. Leaves sessile, ventricose lanceolar, longitudinally marked with simple, parallel veins. Peduneles axillary, two or three together, pretty long, many-flowered: Capsula round, hairy. Ce EE Ie Native of Chittagong, where it blossoms during the rains. 5. H. Auricularia, Linn, ; . Sub-dichotomous, diffuse, soe villous. Leaves lanceolate, sub-sessile, smooth above; many-nerved below. Flowers sub-sessile, densely whorled. Capsules villous. ~ Mariguti. Rheed. Hort, Mal. x. pl. 63. t. 32. _ A native of Silhet and Nepal, where the plant blossoms during the hot and rainy seasons, From the former place the plant was introduced in 1815 in the Botanic garden near Calcutta, by Mr. Smyth, Beng. Muttia-lata. * | Root fibrous. . Stem short, woody, divided into many slen- oe der generally once or twice dichotomous roundish or-slightly) our-si ded:branches, er are gg ee msely = E Sepals afaocsd dng half , 1 even above, vith several obliqna) villous nerves under- neath; margins scabrous; pairs approximate and exceeding inmlength their: interstices. " Petioles very short, the uppermost: _ somewhat longer, hispid; uniting into a. membranaceous, vil) 366 _ TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Spermacoce, lous, stipulary membrane, which is terminated by long hispid ciliee, Flowers small, crowded into sessile, globose, axillary, copious, villous, verticils, concealing, but scarcely. longer than the petioles and rendering their stipules reflexed. Laci- © nie of the calyx linear. Tube of the corolla scarcely longer than the calyx. Lacinie lanceolar, acute. Throat pubes- cent, Stamina exserted, erect, shorter than the limb of the . corolla, with pubescent filaments. | Style barbate. Stigma oblong. Capsule small, round, slightly furrowed. Pd x | SPERMACOCE. Schreb. gen. N. 135. Calyee four-leaved. Corol funnel-shaped. Capsule inferior, ebandl two-celled, two-valved. Seed solitary, longitudi- nally furrowed on the inside, ’mbryo erect, and farnishetd with a perisperm. e opis “ 1. S. sumairensis, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, 571 apnea Obs. iv. 23. Shrubby, erect, four-sided. Leaves’ lanceolate, bbmsbit short-petioled, Corymbs terminal, decompound, — opening from the base, A native of moist places amongst the — mountains. Flowers during the rainy season, petty _ Siem erect, woolly, obsoletely four-sided, ssaouhel op- posite, four-sided. Leaves opposite, “spreading, ee oled, lanceolate, downy ; size very various. » ing, membranous, two or- three-toothed. Umbel cumnpoth . terminal, Flowers white, very small. \ Calyx four-leavéd.’ Corol with short, gibbous tube. Capsule oblong, two-celled, two-valved, two-partible from the base. Seed solitary. gue Obs, This species ought to be carefully compared with’ Hedyotis fruticosa, Rezt. Obs. ii, 8; andthe capsule of the! Sanit, Species in Linn, Flor, Zeyl. N. 63. <— be wel pole ey amined, eterna ened: tn ny pee ‘Spermacoce, ‘TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA,, 367 _ Knoxia corymbosa, Linn, sp, pl. ed. Willd. i. p.582, which he considérs as Geriner’s K, stricta, appears to me to be this plant. Indeed the two genera Spermacoce and Knoxia differ so little from one another as to induce me to think one of them mighighe: spared, | - tie sie BTS POS % (eet 2.8. posi ee} ate { ae _ Shrubby, erect, ahd: villous. edie opposite, remote, Ra scclate: entire, villous. Corymbs terminal, decompound, _ alternate ; divisions becoming spikes when in seed, Stamens erect, but hid in hairs. Style twice the length of the corol. Knoxia umbellata, Banks. Herb. _ Found by Dr. Buchanan in the woods of Koorg, from whence he sent the seed to the Botanic. garden, where the plants thrive well, and blossom during the rainy season, Stem erect, perennial, round, while young villous. Branches opposite, a little inflected, round and villous, height of the whole plant about three feet. Leaves opposite, short-petiol- ed, lanceolate, downy, entire ; length from two to four inches high... ( : samleneds with. several erect, filiform di- Visions ; . when, they, accompany the divisions of the inflores- cence, they are more numerous, and may be called an involu- cre. Corymbs terminal, brachiate, with the ultimate divisions lengthened into short spikes by the time the seeds are ripe. Corol, mouth of the tube shut with much long white hair, which entirely conceals the large, erect anthers lodged. amongst it, Style erect. Stigma two-cleft with divisions ins plate, 2 Obs, This has much the habit of Hodgetts frac, but e tube of the corol is smoo ] ied heer here cylin- dric, and shut with helis; ; finally the capsule is there biparti- ble, opening from, the base, with oblong brown seed, in wee e 368 TRIANDRIA MONOGYNT RAT Spermacoce, ty it is that of a Knoxia; here it aves not open ere ly; and has black round seed. ) eS. exserta, R. ‘ ’ Shrubby, straight, tender parts villous. Leaves remote, op- posite, petioled, lanceolate. Corymbs terminal, decompound. Stamina and the bifid stigma exsert: Capsule oval. - — of the Circars, where it blossoms in October and — Obs. fis. aieity allied'to S. teres; farther examination ~ prove them the same. sal A, S. glabra. R. ee Shrubby, round, smooth, erect. Leaves ning donee, smooth. Corymbs axillary, compound ; ‘styles _— gies clavate. Capsules globular, smooth. ; A native of Pulo Pinang, has much the habit woe strong grass or slender bamboo, the situation of the leaves excepted. ~~ Branches round, smooth, straight, jointed, in’ the dry spe- cimens fistulous, Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, linear-lan- ceolate, smooth, entire, length from four to six inches; | con- necting membrane with unequal awned’ processes’ from ‘its mouth, Peduncles axillary, bearing several ‘cross-armed, mi- nute umbellets or headlets of small cream-coloured flowers. Bractes minute. Oorol bell-shaped; mouth of the tube hairy. Style longer than the corol, hairy. Stigma’clavate, grooved. Capsule globular, smooth; size of — penis 6. Se laviss Ree ASE SHEE: 4 ~ Biennial, straight, round, smooth. Leaves sub2 ‘ceolar. Corymbs terminal, Anthers mes in the yard moet of the infundibuliform corol: _A native of the interior of Bengal; in the: Botanic csi - Spermacoce. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIAy 369 opposite, and like the stems, whole height about three feet, Leaves opposite, sub- sessile, lanceolate, smooth, entire; from one,to three inches long. Connecting membrane divaded into several subulate segments. Corymbs terminal, compound and decompound. Flowers numerous, large, pale pink. Bractes small, and at the divisions of the corymbs chiefly. Calyx one of the four segments large, all the segments per- manent. Corol funnel-shaped, before expansion the apex is large, with four horns; after expansion these projections form a conical knob under the apex of each segment. Mouth of the tube bearded. Filaments short; anthers linear, just within the tube. Germ two-celled, with one seed in each, attached to the top of the partition. Style longer than the tube of the corol, Stigma bifid. Seyments revolute. Capsule ob- long, crowned, two-celled, two-valved ; valves keeled on the back. Seed solitary, longitudinally ¢ grooved on the middle of the inside, Obs. It may be readily distinguished from S. teres (the only species known to me that it can be mistaken for) by its ~ smoothness, greater size of the flowers, and the segments of their borders being enlarged: with a conic ksob on the outside ier cca * s. Sabie: R. Rian Erect, ramous, hairy. eaves short-petioled, lanceolate, acuminate; linear. Stipules triangular and shaggy. Heads axillary on trichotomous short peduncles Stamina protrud- ed. ae A native of the Moluccas, The lineate, hairy, very acute, tapering leaves, long shaggy triangular stipule, and small _peduncled heads of axillary flowers, readily distinguish this pyaar all eerie Lion pei nn tome ae wee eee oe att 4 ie _ Goheegiass te ect simple, nearly round and on leaves patinlet shee EO Tess x Pe © 370 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Spermacoce. lanceolate, entire, smooth, Flowers axillary and terminal, ses- sile, crowded. : » A very small species, less than six inches high, a native of ° the Island of Honimoa. 8. S. stricta, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i, 573. Annual, erect, four-sided. Leaves sessile, linear-lanceolate. Flowers in dense, globular, axillary verticils. Capsules scab- - rous, gaping at the apex. Teling. Sookukada. An annual, a native of wet rice fields, appears and flowers during the rainy season. : _ Stem erect, branchy,; four-sided, about a foot high, angles acute and scabrous, » Branches decussated, stem-like, but slenderer, Leaves opposite, sessile, lanceolate, entire, a little scabrous, Stipule, a connecting membrane, ciliate. Vertictls globular. Involucres leaflike. Flowers most numerous, minute, white. Tube cylindric. Stigma globular. Capsule two-celled, opening at the apex. Seed solitary. 9.8. costata. R. , Diffuse, very downy. Leaves broad-lanceolate, or oblong, ribbed. Flowers crowded on little exiliery, ssaspige um- bellets, Stamine protruded. — _ Hedyotis Auricularia, Linn. agve Supposed to be a native of the Mibwesens as the wpteit sprung up in” ‘the Botanic garden, from some earth brought with the spice plants from those Islands in 1800. It blossoms and ripens its seed during the greatest part of the year. Root biennial, if not perennial, Stems or rather branches many, diffuse, round, from one to three feet long, clothed with long, soft diverging hairs. Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, broad-lanceolate, entire, ribbed with numerous large, simple, . parallel veins ; downy on both sides, from two to three inches éng,and about one broad ; ; connecting membrane with gener- ally three, unequal, seniees subulate divisions, Flowers axil- | Spermacoce, § TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 371 dary, numerous, pale pink, very small, crowded together into small round heads, on short peduncles, and pedicels, the whole forming little, proliferous, villous umbels, Jnvolucre and in- volucels annular, villous, from three to six-parted, Calyx, di- visions equal, acute, hairy. Corol funnel-shaped, hairy on the outside, and in the throat of the tube; divisions of the border recurved, Stamens protruded beyond the mouth of the corol. -Germ beneath, broad-turbinate. Style about as long as the tube of the corol, Stigma two-cleft, villous. Pericarp with two seeds, 10.8. semierecta. R. ._ Stem variously bent, but ascending, square. Branches brachiate, alternately smaller. Leaves ovate. Flowers in ‘small, compact verticils, Stamens and style inclosed. oie psule turbinate, hairy, | A native, I suppose, of Sumatra, as the oe from; Sch this description is taken, sprung up in a bed, where earth from that Island had been thrown, and in one ve was shont a foot and a half high, ae The lower branches brachiate ; the superior often sec rt they are all very exactly four-sided with angles sharp and somewhat hispid; in other respects they are very smooth, Leaves opposite, with smaller ones in their axills, short-peti- oled,.. acuminate, entire, very slightly scabrous, particularly the margins, with nerves and veins on the underside, Conect- ing membrane divided into several filiform portions,.. F/ow- ers numerous, very smal), white, sessile, collected into small compact, round verticils. Corol, divisions of the borde bearded in the centre, Anthers within the tube. | hs scab, Liam pple Willi 57 sag isifi | pov: : 2 inves epnsccptetpeaanl ll what Cnladc Flowers axillary, sessile, Stamens and style 2 372 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Spermacoce, »Tardavel. Rheed. Hort. Mal. 9. p. 149. t. 76. The leaves however are a little too sharp for our Coromandel plant...» Stem short and generally annual. Lower branches oppo- site, superior alternate, round, coloured, very hairy, some- what scabrous, weak, spreading and variously curved. Leaves opposite, sessile, round, obovate, or nearly oval, some- what acute; hairy on both sides, edges recurved and more or less curled. Connecting stipule with three, four, or five fi- liform processes. Flowers axillary, generally in pairs, though often several together, but expanding in succession, sessile, small, purple. Calyz, the four divisions or in this species ra- ther leaflets, lanceolate, nearly as long as the tube of the co- rol. Corol sub-campanulate, half four-cleft. Stamens as long as the segments of the corol. Style as long as the stamens. ‘Stigmas two, two-lobed, segments revolute. Capsile oval, two-celled. Partition membranaceous. Seed solitary, oval, equally obtuse at each end, 12. S. articularis. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 72. Annual, diffuse, four-sided. Leaves opposite, sessile, broad- lanceolate; connecting stipules from three to five-bristled. ‘Flowers verticelled, Corol infundibuliform, four times _ er than the calyx. Stamens and style erect. A native of ‘the sandy soil on the coast of Coromandel near the sea, and in flower the greatest part of the year. — Root generally annual, Stem scarcely any, but many dif- fuse straggling, four-sided, alternate, hispid branches from one to two feet in Tength. Leaves opposite, sessile, lanceolate, ea little hairy ; veins simple, from one to two inches oe and half an inch broad. Connecting stipules cup-shaped, with from three to six bristles from each side. Flowers axillary, sessile, two, three, or four, expanding in succession from the — same axill. Calyx with slender, linear’ divisions. Corol infundibuliform, | Tube slender, three or four times longer ‘hin te nee) ‘Stamens erect. ae masts mY Whisks Jae ‘23. tig tet ae Hydrophylax, | TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 373 broad, and revolute. Capsule two-celled; partition membra- naceous, Seed solitary, oval, furrowed on the flat side, 13. S. hispida, Linn. Mant. 558, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 572. ~ Annual, with diffuse, obsoletely four-sided, hairy branches. Leaves obovate, cuneate, waved, scabrous. Flowers verti- celled, two, three, or four in each axill. Tube of the corol twice the length of the calyx. Stamens and style erect. - Teling. Madana-bunta-kada. Galeopsis zeylanica. Burm. Zeyl. 20. f. 3. agrees pretty well with my plant except in the numerous pedicelled flowers. ~ Common on the sandy lands near the sea on the coast of Coromandel. HYDROPHYLAX. Schreb. gen. N. 159. _ ie Calyx four-parted ; corol campanulate, Germ two-relled, one-seded, inferior.. Capsule inferior, angular, two-celled. Seed solar Sci erect, and furnished with a perisperm.. as H. maritima. ions sp. pl. ed, Willd. i. 581. Sarissus anceps, Gert. carp. i. p. 118, t. 2. f, 4, Diodia orientalis. Kon, Mss. A native of the sand hills along the shores of Consisaiell: and Malabar, where it is in blossom most part of the year. - Root perennial, Stem none, but many. long, slender; vari- ously bent, striking, round, coloured branches running over: the sand and often striking root from the joints. Keenet posite, approximate, short-petioled, from a deep, stem~ : ing, dentate cup. Flowers axillary, sub-sessile, one or two i ofa pale pink colour. Calyx above, four-parted ; | divisions ensiform, permanent, Corol campanulate, tube hairy on: theinside near dee bottim,, the four divisions of the border. ovate, spreading, with their apices somewhat revolute, Fi-_ laments four, erect, shorter than the corol, and inserted on x3 374 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Rubia, the mouth of its tube, opposite to its fissures. Anthers pur- ple. Germ oblong. Style length of the corol. Stigma of two round lobes. Pericarp when ripe a dry berry, of a lanceo- late shape, crowned with the remaining calyx, two-celled, with a single linear oblong seed in each, as detailed and figured by: that very eminent and most accurate botanist Geertner, | RUBIA. Schreb. gen. N. 164. - Calyzx scarcely any. Corol one-petalled, from fons to five- pevted . Berries inferior, twin, Seeds solitary. Embryo erect, and furnished with a perisperm. . 1. R. Manjista, R, Perennial, scandent. Leaves four-fold, long-petioled, cor- date, acute, from five to seven-neryed, hispid, Corol flat, five-parted, pentandrous, Fleming in Asiat. Res. xi. 177, — Sans. Munjistha, Vikusa, Jigee, Sumunja, Kalumeshika, Mundooku urnee, Bhundeeree or Bhundiree, Bhundee, Yo- zunuvullee. Beng. Munjit or Munjistha. tts A native of Nepal, and other mountainous countries, soit and north-east of Bengal. It grows in the Botanic garden at Calcutta, but requires uncommon care to keep it. alive during the:rainy sendom ¢uid'Thns never: blomoined there. - - Root | al. Stems woody, scandent, ic over trees and bushes. “Branches cross-armed, from the axill of the large pair of leaves, jointed, swelling at the joints, hairy _ for a little distance below them, four-sided; angles sharp and armed with small, recurved prickles; the exterior cortex, which forms these angles, drops off by age, leaving the long=: er branches and stems round, and covered witha soft reddish : somewhat downy bark. Leaves four-fold, petioled, one of. the pairs always much larger, viz. about double the size iat the ees all are cert cordate, | Lxora, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 375- entire, acute, pointed, generally five or seven-nerved, though in the largest there are sometimes nine, and in the smallest three, or even sometimes obliterated ; these nerves are armed _ with small recurved prickles, like those on the angles of the branchlets ; both sides channelled. Panicles terminal, oblong, composed of numerous, opposite, small, sub-globular, tricho- tomous panicles from the axill of the floral leaves. Peduncles and pedicels four-sided, smooth. Bractes opposite, sessile, long, cordate. Flowers numerous, minute. Calyz, if any, so minute as not to be visible. Corol flat, five-parted ; divi- sions lanceolate, acute, with points inflected. Stamens five, shorter than the corol. Germ beneath, twin. Style scarce- ly any, stigma large, two-cleft. Berries two, or one; the second not always coming to maturity, globular, size of a small grain of pepper, smooth. Seed single, round, Se iattl e with a deep pit on one side. Obs, It differs from R. cordifolia in: being ited: The roots, stems, and larger branches are used to dye red with, : e IXORA* Schreb. gen. N. 167. "Calyx four-toothed. Corol one-petalled, funnel-shaped. Tube long, with the stamina in its mouth, Germ two-celled, one-seeded, lateral. Berry inferior, two-seeded. Embryo . erect, curved, and furnished with a perisperm, 1.1. coccinea, Linn, sp. pl. ed, Willd, i. 609. Shrubby. Leaves oblong, cordate, sessile, acute, smooth, entire. Segments of the corol ovate-lanceolate, acute, Berry crowned with the shut segments of the calyx. Schetti, Rheed, Mal. ii. p. 17.4. 12. is isa pretty good figure - © Sir William sale observes: (Ada: Red! ‘iv. 251), that no Indian god was ever named Ixora ; he adds at the same time that Iswara, which is indeed a title of Shiva, would be a very impro- per appellation of a plant which has already a classical name. : x4 376 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNITA, | Txora. of it, but the description of. the colour of aoe flowers. he not so well agree. Jasminum flore tetrapetalo. Burm. Zeyl. 125. t. 57, good. In the Tanjore country and in China I have found. this most beautiful shrub in great abundance in its wild state. In a cultivated state it flowers all the year round, I have had it eight years in my garden, and it is not more than three -or four feet high, with many erect branches, but scareely any thing like a trunk. Leaves opposite, sessile, approximated, dicimaties shia, pointed, entire, smooth, shining, from three to four inches Jong, and one and a half broad. Stipules within the leaves with an awled process on each side. Corymb terminal, three-forked. Bractes small, rigid. Peduncles and pedicels short, coloured. lowers numerous, pretty large, bright scarlet, inodorous. Calyx four-toothed; divisions acute. Corol, stamens and pisiil as in the genus. Berry size of a small cherry, red, juicy, two-celled, Seed = convex. on one side, and flat on the other. Obs, Flamma sylvarum. Rumph. Amb. iv. p. 105. t. 46, is a very bad representation of this species, and much more like my Ixora fulgens, 1 have therefore doubtfully, quoted it for that plant. od Ee & Bandhuca. R. : erie: spreading. Leaves wands sedges Tepes crowded. Segments of the corol cee obsuse.!1 apes _ crowned with the open calyx. oats a Stee Sees Asiat, Res, iv. p. 250. 5 eel roo Sans, Ruktuka, Bundhooka, or Bundhooka, Bandar vuka, Beng. Rangun, Rujuna. _A very elegant, uncommonly. ramous, Sule rae native of Hindoostan, Sir: William Jones observes that the flower is often mentioned by the best Indian Poets. It isin Tzora, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 377 flower the whole year but chiefly a the oe it is highly ornamental. eal girlie: Stem none, but branches innumerable, which divide ach and spread close on the ground, forming a large hemisphe- rical bush, Bark of the large branches dark brown, and ra- ther scabrous; that of the young shoots, smooth, and green: Leaves opposite, stem-clasping, oblong, obtuse, with a small point, entire, firm, smooth on both sides. Stipules interfoli- aceous, annular, with a subulate process on each side. | Co- rymbs terminal, crowded, divisions many, but short, Flowers numerous, when they first open scarlet, changing afterwards to crimson, | Bractes opposite, conic, acute, Calyx superior, four-toothed, coloured, permanent, Corod with a very long slender. tube ; segments of the border four, ovate, rather ob- tuse, spreading. Filaments four, short, inserted without the mouth of the tube, spreading, anthers linear, spreading. Germ two-celled, with one seed in each, attached to the mid- dle of the partition. Style length of the tube of the corol. Stigma bifid, Berry spherical, size of a large pea, smooth, fleshy, when ripe purple, two-celled, Seed solitary, oval, convex on the outside flat, with a deep pit on the inside. In- teguments two; exterior nuciform; inner membranaceous. Perisperm conform to the seed, cartilaginous. Embryo erect, curved, nearly as Jong as the perisperm. Cotyledons reni- form, cordate. Radicle cylindric, longer than the eotyledons, inferior. _ Obs, This species is nearly allied to I. coccinea, but differs in the following respects : Ist. This is a toa ramous eee 98 ot ne 0 so, and nearly erect. - =’ 2d. In this the leven aro nem claaping, and obtuse ‘in that sessile and acute. ? 3d. In this Adrsogmenniol: the bore eof uceiel are ovate, and rather obtuse 5 in that ovate-laniceolate, sadestaieds we lastly, 378 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. TIxora, 4th. The calyx on the fruit is open in thin species, in that shut intoa qunichs point. 3. 1 sileens R. - Shrubby. Leaves sub-sessile, lanceolate, acute. Cor sepals terminal, highly coloured. Segments of the calyx cordate. Tube of the corol long and filiform, with smooth contracted mouth; segments lanceolate, and larger than the erect sta- mens. Berries two-lobed. . _ Flamma sylvarum. een Amb. iv. 105. t. 46% prety good, » This elegant, highly nvinioel shrub is a native of the Moluceas, and from thence was introduced into the Botanic garden, where it blossoms most part of the year. - aids Trunk short, soon dividing into many straggling .weak branches, covered with seach dark-brown bark, . Leaves opposite, short-petioled, lanceolate, entire, acute, smooth on both sides; from six to eight inches. long, and from ‘one to. three broad. Stipules connecting, with an acute point on each: side. -Corymbs terminal, composed of short, decussate, high- ly coloured branches, and branchlets, supporting numerous, short-peduncled, long-tubed, pretty large, scarlet. flowers, with the four segments of their border acute, and broad-lan- ceolate, stamens erect, Berry two-lobed, size of a marrow-— fat pea, smooth, when ripe of a deep purple, two-celled.. Seeds solitary, nearly round, convex on the back, with a deep cavity on the inside, and from thence attached by a thick — short cord to the centre of the partition, _Integuments two, the exterior corresponding with what Geertner calls the aril-— lus in Coffea, ash-coloured, and firm like parchment; the in- ner membranaceous, and darker coloured. . Perisperm con- form to the seed, pale blue, and of a soft cartilaginous con-. sistence. Embryo erect, one-third shorter than the perisperm, - curved, Cotyledons two, cordate, Radicle sub-clavate, in- ’ Ixora, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 379 A, I. stricta. R. : Sadteiy _ Shrubby, straight, Leaves sub-sessile, oblong. Corymbs dense, compound, hemispheric. Lacini@ of the corol round, | spreading. Anthers bristle-pointed. Ixora coccinea. Lourier, Cochin Ch. 95, Curtis’s Botanical Magazine, No. 169. - Flamma sylvarum peregrina. Rumph. Amb. iv. 107. t. AT. This beautiful plant was brought to the Botanie garden ‘from the Moluccas in 1798, where it is in constant blossom the whole year round ; but rarely ripens its fruits. The plant, when in flower is highly ornamenta® though by no means so gaudy as I, coccinea and Bandhuca, which are certainly two of our most showy Indian shrubs. ‘Trunk scarcely any, but a few perfectly achiaks branches, covered with dark-brown smooth bark ; height from three to four feet. Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, chalaes entire, smooth — on both sides, _ Stipules interfoliaceous, long, taper, acute- pointed. Corymbs terminal, very dense, sub-hemispheric, primary divisions brachiate, and short, extreme divisions trichotomous; all smooth and of a bright, deep red colour. Flowers numerous, colour at first a lively orange approach- ing to scarlet, becoming deeper and deeper from the time of expansion, Calyx bright red, fleshy ; divisions short and ob- tuse, Corol, tube, cylindric. Border of four round, spreading segments, Filaments without the tube, short, spreading, flat, with their linear acute anthers over the divisions of the border of the corol. Stigma two-cleft, elevated a little above the - mouth of the tube. Berry spherical, smooth, succulent, red, two-celled, with a single rugose seed ineach, - Obs, In the Botanic garden at Calcutta PEE mous variety of this charming plant introduced from China, where it is called Hong-mou-tang, with a: — flowers ae ne Ais ott . EWE gh es 5. I. alba: Linn. sp. zh ie i. 906: Leaves sessile, broad-lanceolar, Corymbs decompound, 380 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Lxora, dense, sub-hemispheric; /acinie of the corol obovate and re- _ . flexed. Until I came to Bengal I had not an opkeiatpaity of seeing this elegant plant. I have found it only in gardens, Flower- ing time the hot and rainy seasons. The shrub itself is much like Ixora coccinea, Ramous, erect, and smooth in every part, Leaves. oppo- site, sessile, broad-lanceolar, smooth, a little waved, from three to six inches long. Stipules within the leaves. Corymbs terminal, compound, or decompound, dense, often bemi- — spheric ; divisions or sul@divisions hy threes, Flowers every numerous, inodorous, white, with a straight, rather longer and more slender tube than in Jxora coccinea; divisions the border reflexed, obovate. - Obs. This is probably nothing more thie a irasiedip of stricta, or that of this. It was originally eae from snags where it is called Ta-mou-tang. 6. I. euneifolia, R. i Shrubby. Leaves broad- cuneate, lanceolate, pointed. Co- rymbs terminal, long-peduncled. Flowers crowded ; — ments of the calyx oblong, conic. A native of the-country about Dacca, from aite die ise Colonel Peter Murray sent seeds to the Botanic garden, where the plants grow freely, blossom in ee aut — their seed in August and September. — Trunk short. Branches opposite, saieaheiiincas ats avena with smooth brown bark ; young shoots smooth, and: green, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, broad, cuneate, lan~ ceolate, recurved, entire, taper, obtuse-pointed, firm and po- lished, somewhat bullate ; length from four to six inches, by. one and a half or two broad. Stipules tapering, subulate, pointed. Corymbs terminal, long-peduncled, trichotomousy alternate divisions ending in fascicles of sub-sessile, creme "pure white flowers, with a slight tinge of pink on the outsi 3 Bractes in opposite ps atthe vaio divin fhe Frora. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 381 rymb and under the calyx subulate. Flowers very numerous, pure white, fragrant. Calyx four-cleft to the base, divisions ~ long, natrow and acute, Tube of the corol cylindric, very slender, three quarters of an inch long; the four segments of the border oblong and obtuse. Filaments trom the inner edges of the fissures of the border of the corol. Anthers nar- row, sagittate. Germ oval, two-celled, with one seed in each, attached to the middle of the partition. Stigma of two linear - Jobes, elevated considerably above the mouth of the tube. Berry round, turbinate, size of a small cherry, when ripe bright red, and smooth, two-celled, Seed solitary, round, oval, convex on the outside, with a large deep pit on the inner. Integuments two; exterior nuciform; imner membranaceous, and greenish. Perisperm conform to theseed. Embryo erect, curved like the convex seed. Cotyledons reniform, esnectel cylindric, length of the cotyledons, inferior. | Obs. Vahl’s figure of I. parviflora, Symbol. Bot. iii. t. 52; is much like this plant; his description however agrees bet- ter with what I have always considered to be his parviflora, and which is so labelled in Sir Joseph Banks’s herbarium, They differ in the following respects. That (1. parviflora) is a tree, this a shrub; in that the leaves are linear oblong with a cordate base, of a much firmer texture, and more polished ; in this they taper for two-thirds of their length to the base, (hence the specific name cuneifolia.) In that the segments of the calyx are short and obtuse, in this long and acute. In _ that the berries are round and black; in this short, turbinate and red. The corymbs also differ exis ley In both hans = seg are pwllsito; but i in tale much estes! ii 1: BO ! Cae Pete P se £) me L rughiant re pbereivnbn: is Eset Leaves: shia wtipeioted lanceoar, Panictes in chiate, with remote, diverging branches. - oA stout shrub, a native of» Da Rikiatel Boog. In the Botanic garden it flowers in March, and the seeds ripen in = Mies 382 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Txora. Trunk erect, Branches opposite, spreading much, but they ’ are not so numerous as in I, parviflora, Bark brown, and pretty smooth. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, lanceolar, ob- tuse, smooth, of a hatd texture, from four to six inches: long, by less than two broad. Stipules triangular, acute. Panicles — terminal, brachiate ; ramifications few, remote on long, round, smooth peduncles. Flowers numerous, minute, much small- er than in I. parviflora. Calyx small, deeply four-toothed, coloured. Corol with a filiform tube; segments of the border obovate, emarginate. Filaments none. Anihers linear, at- tached by their backs to the bottom of the fissures of the bor- der of the corol. Germ turbinate, two-celled, with one seed in each, attached to the partition, Style scarcely longer than the tube. Stigma large, two-lobed. Berry the sizeof a large pea, smooth, succulent, dark brown purple, two-celled. Seeds solitary, round, convex, on the outside concave, with a pit on the inner. Integuments two, exterior white, hard, thin, and elastic; inner tender and thin. Perisperm ‘acetabuliform, amyedaline, Embryo erect, curved. Cotyledons cordate. Radicle cylindric, curved, inferior. ip Obs. A handsome shrub, and nearly allied to Vahis I. pervrfiora, though very different from the plant so labelled _ in the Banksian herbarium, white bores in abundanessin this garden, scieein cunt - Ist. In the shape of the real which i in that species are sub.sessile, and generally have a broad stem-clasping base; in this the petiole is about half an inch long, and the leaves taper more towards the base than at the exterior end. ~ 2d. In the thinness of the panicle, (though of the same con- formation), and the size of the flowers, which in this species are much smaller, and every way more delicate, and also in their shape, which in that — is oblong before _! sion, but in this round, : aren = ths th shes re sein that hey have sort txzora. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 38 8. I. villosa. R. , teak : - Shrubby. Leaves broad-cuneate, lanceolar, villous under- - neath. Corymbs super-decompound to the sixth or seventh | degree, divisions trichotomous, villous; Calycine segments oblong and ciliate. Beng. Choonaree. This species is a native of Silhet, where it grows to ra an elegant middling sized shrub with large crowded corymb sof fragrant white flowers, which appear in May and June. - Young shoots straight and villous. Leaves opposite, short- petioled, broad-cuaneate, lanceolar, entire, acuminate, under- neath soft with very short down; from six to ten inches long, by from two to four broad. Stipules downy, with the ends subulate. Corymbs terminal, from four to eight times tricho- — tomous, all the divisions downy, and the last three-flowered, Bractes opposite, downy ; two slender small ones pressing the base of each calyx. Calyx four-parted, segments oblong, — ciliate, Corol with a very long, smooth, filiform tube ; seg- ments of the border four, oblong, aoping’ in the ne chien bad sae are imbricated. ; | ae 9. ek acuminata, i Shrabby. Leaves petioled, Giascini: acuminate, smooth ; floral pair stem-clasping, and broader. Corymbs magerlis compound, much crowded, and smooth. ne segments ensiform, - A very charming shrubby species, a native of the Sate near Silhet, where it blossoms during the hot season, and per- fans the air with the fora of its o lowers, wie “10. L Ligarbilenic Vahl. Symbol il. t, 52. Linn. sp. plied. Willd. i. 609. the | A “Leaves sub-sesile, blong: aa 'Panicles long, decussatec -Laciniae of the corol ovate. Style Beng. Genial rages. 384 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Txora, . Teling. Tadda-pullu. Among the mountains of the coast of Coromandel this spe- cies grows to be a ‘pretty large tree; in the low lands it is much smaller, seldom exceeding fifteen or twenty feet in height. Flowering time February and March. Bark dark-coloured, scabrous. Leaves opposite, short- petioled, linear-oblong, pointed at the base, often ‘cordate; smooth, shining, firm, entire, from three to four inches long, and from one and a half to two broad. Stipules as in I. coe- einea. Panicles ovate, terminal, erect, cross-armed ;\ divi- sions always three-forked. Bractes at the principal divisions stipulaceous, with four subulate processes ; the rest are small, one below each ramification. Flowers small, white, fragrant. The style is hairy. Berry generally two-seeded, somewhat two-lobed, size of a pea, black. 11. I. barbata. R. ny Tube of the corol long; mouth bearded. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, entire, smooth, shining ; floral leaves, round cordate, sessile. Panicles open. __ This elegant, densely ramous, large shrub, or small tree, I have found only in the Botanic garden. Flowering time the. hot season, | . te Trunk scarcely any, branches numerous, opposite. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, entire, smooth, and shining on both sides, from six to nine inches long. Stipules within the leaves as in the other species. Corymbs, or rather pani- cles terminal, decompound, large, diffuse, always trichoto- “mous, smooth in every part. Bractes, the lowermost pair em- — bracing the base of the common peduncle, large, and cordate, (they may be called floral leaves ;) the rest gradually de- crease in size till they become very minute at the ultimate divisions. Calyx as in the genus, with acute divisions, Tube _ of the corol long and slender, its mouths crowned with long ‘White haee.. Styl the length of the col Stig : ® Txora. _ ‘TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 385 just without the mouth of the tube, apex slightly bifid. Berry red, smooth, size of a pea, two-seeded. : Obs. Bem-Schetti, Rheed. Mal. ii. p. 19. t. 13, is a toler- _ able representation of this plant, but a bad one of what I con- sider to be Lxora alba, 42.3%; undulata. R. Leaves opposite, broad-lanceolar, acute, much waved. -Panicles terminal, open; divisions of the calyx acute. Fila- ments as long as the anthers, Stigma two-cleft. Berries © * transversely oval. Beng. Paluka-Jooi. A ramous shrub, a native of forests in Bengal, flowering time the hot season. ae Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, spreading, broad-lanceolar or oblong, pointed, margins much waved, smooth on both sides but not shining. Stipules within the leaves, with a long awl- ed process on each side. Corymbs or rather panicles termi- nal, decompound, &c. as in I. barbata, but much smaller. _ Bractes as in the other species, Flowers numerous, small, white. Calyx, divisions acute. Corol, divisions on the border | _ reflexed, rather shorter than the tube. Filaments from the fissures of the corol, pretty long, spreading and variously bent, Andhers as in the genus, Style rather longer than the tube. Stigma two-cleft ; divisions recurved, 13. I. Pavetta, R. . Shrubby. Leaves short-petioled, smooth, entire. Panicles fastigiate, axillary, and terminal. Style twice the Be of the corol, Stigma entire. Berries globular, _ — Pavetta indica, Linn, sp. pl. ed, Willd. i, 610. _ Pavetta, s, Malleamothe. ness. si es Mat. + v.19. 1, 10,i is cota this sgesiie e 386 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Txora. A middle sized shrub, common on road sides, hedges, un- cultivated lands, &c. where there is a good soil. Branches cross-armed, ascending. Bark ash-coloured. Leaves opposite, petioled, oblong, entire, pointed, always § smooth or both sides, which ana the chief difference be-. tween this and the next species; from four to six inches long, and two, on two and a half broad. Stipules as in the aS | species, Corymbs compound, terminal, large, nearly level- topped, cross armed, Peduncles and pedicels round, and smooth, Bractes as in the former species. Flowers white, somewhat fragrant. Calyz, divisions obtuse. Style twice the length of the tube. Stigma clubbed, Bary globular, size of a ss one or or two-seeded, 14, I, tomentosa. R. Shrubby. Leaves oblong, ventricose, entire, tomentose, Panicles lax, sub-globular, tomentose ; style twice the length of the corol. Stigma entire. Berries globular, Beng. Jooi, | pieces Teling. Nam-papoota. A large shrub, native of the same places, butnot so common. is as the last described. Flowers the beginning of the hot season, . _ Branches cross-armed, _ascending. _ Bark ash-coloured, Leaves opposite, petioled, ovate, pointed, entire, both sides. very downy, from four to eight inches long, : and from three to five broad. Stipules as in the former species, Panicles ter-_ +s minal, globular, cross-armed, divisions always three-forked. els round, downy. Bractes as in the -for- Peduncles and p mer species, Flowers numerous, white, faintly fragrant. bie twice the length of the tube, Stigma clubbed. Berry gener- ally two seeded. Obs. In all the foregoing species the berries are [eg ed, though it often happens that but one comes to perfection, : I never met with any that had three or four. I do not find that the inhabitants of these pares, make use 2 of fhe es 5 eK ral > i: 2 . Txora, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, > 387 15. tenuiflora. R. oath piag. bs Leaves short-petioled, oblong, obtuse, smooth. Panieles t minal, corymbiform, contracted, Segments of the calyx « cor- date, and obtuse, tube of the corol long, and most slender. Segments of its border oblong, obtuse, ‘tind longer than the erect style,.or stamina, — A native of the Moluccas, and with flowers infinitely more delicate than I. fulgens which it most resembles, | #16. I; congesta, R. : Shrubby. Leaves short-petioled, oblong, strongly veined. Corymbs terminal, short, dense. Flowers sub-sessile. Seq- ments of the calyx obscurely reniform; those of the border of the corol oblong, and obtuse. A native of the Moluccas, and differs from I _fulgensin the firm somewhat coriaceous leaves, with sgehin a veins, , 17. I. lanceolaria, Colebr. Shrubby, smooth; branches slender, penile wads chotomous, Leaves: in appeexeents pairs, very long, linear- lanceolate, acuminate, short-petioled. Corymb terminal, sub- sessile, small, with coloured sealy, crowded peduncles, Tube of the corol filiform; lacinie linear-oblong. Anthers ek with deeply bifid iets: he A native of Travancore. Introduced into the Botanic faci den by Dr, A. Berry in 1803. Time of blossoming the hot season ; the fruit ripens towards the close of the rains, An erect shrub, five, six, or even more feet high, with di- _ chotomous, very little spreading, ash-coloured branches, 2 Branchlets very slender and twiggy, hanging, green, ' with: — numerous compressed widened joints, like all the other parts’ of the plant smooth. Leaves spreading, from five to seven inches long and almost as ‘many times exceeding their in- terstices, an inch or less broad. a little above their acute base, from thence tapering into a sharp acumen, opaque and some- what glaucous above, pale beneath, with a slender white rib> Y2 388 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Pyrostria, and very fine sub-opposite nearly transversal nerves which communicate with each other in sub-marginal arches, Pe- tioles about two lines long, channelled, Stipules adpressed. lanceolate, as broad as the interstices between the insertion ) of the two opposite leaves, tapering into a subulate point which generally exceeds the petioles in length. Corymb small, supported by a pair of very short leaves, consisting of twice or thrice trichotomous, reddish, pubescent peduncles, with opposite linear, subulate bractes under each division, having a stipuliform, fimbriated process between their _ bases. Pedicels ternate or fascicled, two or three lines long, with three pairs of reddish fleshy subulate scales, the upper- most adpressed to the calyx. Calyx very small, oblong, reddish, with erect subulate teeth; at the bottom, within, there is a series of fleshy, subulate, withering and sphacelat- ed cilie as in the family of Asclepiadee and Apocynee. © Corolla white ; tube slender, half an inch long ; limb spread- ing, equalling the tube, with linear oblong-faleate, slightly pubescent lacinie. Anthers linear and long, the base bifid and ending in two whitish processes, Filaments short, exsert-) ed, Style clavate. Stigma two-lobed, subulate, spreading, elevated above the mouth of the corolla, Berry as large as a marrow-fat pea, red, smooth, crowned with the four subu-- late, erect teeth of the calyx. Seeds cup-shaped, hemisphe- bighe veel ¢ Sie ak ag Ss ae. " PYROSTRIA. uss. gen. ed. Us 190, Cage firur-toothed, Corol with cylindric tebe, and fouls cleft.border. Drupe inferior, with as far as eight, pes ed nuts, 1. P. hevasperma, R, | Me as ee Leaves pppoe short-petioled, oblong, pay entire. Corymbs axillary, and nine within, the on idate, hairy, sti Salvadora. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 389° t A native of the Island of Honimoa. Tender shoots clothed with brown hairs. Leaves Senos, approximate, short-petioled, oblong, acute, entire, a little hairy; from three to four inches long. Stipules within the leaves cuspidate, hairy. . Peduncles opposite ; with the sti- pules many times longer than the petioles, each ending in a small twice dichotomous, corymbiform, panicle of recurved secund spikes, Bractes subulate, one-flowered. Flowers rather small, hairy. Calyx four-toothed. Corol with a slender, cylindric, villous tube, and contracted, four-parted border. Filaments none. Anthers linear in the mouth of the tube of the corol, and aftixed to it by their backs., Germ - beneath, ‘Style shorter than the corol, Stigma simple. Dripe round, six-ribbed ; size of a pea. Seeds or nuts regu- larly six, sub-cylindric. Geet: SALVADORA. Schreb. gen. N. 220: - Calyx four-toothed, Corol one-petioled, patente. Style none or ahioets x meaty cee one-seeded, | ¥ os: s. persiea, Ein! sp. pl.ed. Willd. i. 695. R. Coromy pli N. 26. Rivina paniculata. Syst. nat. x. p, 899. Yeling, Pedda-warago-wenki. A middle sized tree, a native of most parts of the Concent though by no means common ; it seems to grow equally well in every soil. Produces Sonvers and ripe fruit all the fone round, | Trunk generally crooked, PRT UG SMP the branches, and one in diameter. Bark very scabrous, and deeply cracked. Branches exceedingly numerous, spreading, with theie extremities perfectly pendulous, like the weeping no, Leaves opposite, petioled, oval or oblong, entire, very 4 cat and shining on both sides, without veins ; from one to two inches long, and about one broad. Stipules none, ¥3 t 390 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Callicarpa, Panicles terminal, and from the exterior axills, Flowers minute, very numerous, greenish-yellow. Bractes minute, Calyx inferior, four-toothed, permanent. Coral one-petalled, Tube short, border four-cleft; segments oblong, revolute, Filamenis four, inserted into the tube of the corol under its fis= sures, and rather shorter than the border, Anthers oval. Germ globular, style none, .Séigma scabrous. Berry very minute, _ much smaller than a grain of black pepper, smooth, _ jniey Seed one... : - Obs, The berries have a strong aromatic smell, ert taste tages like garden cresses. The atk of the root is remarka- bly acrid, bruised and applied to the skin, soon raises blis- ters, for which purpose the natives often use it. As a stimu- lant it promises to be a medicine esis of ny consider- able powers, Rrthes i 2 the “CALLICARPA. Schreb. gen. N. 175. Calyx four-toothed. Corol one-petalled, tubular, fin parted. Germ four-celled, cells one-seeded ; ovula attach- ed to the middle of the axis, Berry fount etded: pers erect, and furnished with a perisperm. 1G. elon RIE TNR al -Arboreous. Leaves Tong. petioledy valle wiheciecivss ta- _ pering much toward both ends, entire, hairy: ee. eeniatis: illary, sub-globular, throughout dichot _ A stout tall tree ; a native of Chittagong. ‘Fidwers at wari: ous times through the year. : HHS Trunk nearly erect, and in trees nine years old, shite “tae in circumference four feet above the surface ofthe soil. Branches spreading. Brachlets obtusely four-cornered, and -mealy. Leaves opposite, long-petioled, oblong, ventricose, _ tapering equally at each end, entire, smooth above, hairy Callicarpa, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA: _ 391 which may be reckoned one-fourth of the whole. Panicles axillary, solitary, or paired, the largest on a peduncle as Tong as the petioles, sub-rotund, from six or eight times dichoto- mous, all the ramifications somewhat four-cornered and mea- ly. Flowers small, very numerous, lively purple, or lilac, small, rather offensive. Bractes minute. Calyx campanu- late, obscurely four-toothed, mealy on the outside.” Corol with the tube much longer than the calyx, one of the seg- ments of its border smaller. Filaments twice the length of the corol, Anthers brown. Germ superior, round, four-cell- ed, with-one ovulum in each, attached to the middle of the axis, Style as long as the stamens, and bent in an opposite direction. Stigma headed. Berry superior, round, polished, lively purple, succulent, size of a small grain of black pep- | per; one-celled. Seeds four, convex on the outside, with two flat faces on the inner, rough; interior integument hard like the shell of a nut. Perisperm oval, soft, amygdaline. Em-. bryo straight, erect, nearly as long as the perisperm. Coty- tedons oblong. Radiele usin we Ate soap the cotyledons, ni ee ee eee eee - 2.C. lanata. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 620. Arboreous, all the young parts mealy. Leaves opposite, a entire, downy. Corymbs axillary, i iar ‘ Corols oblique. teint: tomentosa. Flor. Zeyl. N. 59. A pretty large’tree, a native of the sivas bnieree and ‘of the vallies between them. Trunk perfectly straight, and of a considerable’ height ‘Bark smooth, ash-coloured. Branches few, and near the top, forming but a'small head for so large'a trunk.” Young _— epsretibasina! sea ci and covered with gray fariia, : és y dled, ovate, tapering to a point, entire, stibebioys “yelow'' whitish with much down; from nine to ten inches long, and five or six broad. Petioles round, two or three inches long, covered with down, Corymbs axillary, . ae 392. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Callicarpa, erect, two-forked throughout; every part covered with gray farma. Bractes small. Flowers very numerous, small, pur- ple. Calyx short; border four-sulcated, permanent, Corol, iube bent to one side, The other parts:as in the ‘genus. Style- descending, - Obs, The wood of this tree is white, spongy, and of course not fit for much use. | 3. C. cana. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Wiild. i. 620. Shrubby, downy. Leaves ovate, chindedatehessategeahiiis downy underneath. Panicles aillarys saleeinbulat? sana bifid. Berries purple. Caliicarpa americana, Louriero, Cochin Ch, in Witt, hy p. 88. This shrub was ‘atradiaees] into ae Botanic tana from the Moluccas in 1798, and in three years had attained to the height of from four to eight feet high, considerably ramous, with the young parts downy, and the ligneous ones cover- ed with smooth, pale ash-coloured bark, They are in blos- som in March and April chiefly, though more or less the whole year. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, from broad cordate to oki long, reticulated with margins glandular-dentate-serrate ; up- per side soft and of a deep green colour, but very downy, and. pale underneath, Cymes axillary, dichotomous, scarcely longer than the petioles, villous. Flowers numerous, small, pale red colour. Bractes subulate, caducous. Calyx woolly, four-tooth- ed. Corol campanulate ; divisions sub-cordate. Filaments longer than the corols, and: inserted into the base of its tube, ascending, Style declined, length of the filaments, Stigma two-cleft. Berry smal, round, smooth, deep penne Seeds four. a Obs, It differs from C. americana, Willd. in sani a oe ly, toothed calyx, two-lobed stigma and in the form of the Calhearpa. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 393 4, C. ineana, Ry » ubocleo tet oe ae young ahesie hoary. © Seats io heel ieee ly serrulate, fine and entire-pointed, hoary underneath, » Mashandaxi, Asiat, Res, iv. 238.0 4) | Beng. Muttura, Muttrunja. » A stout shrub, with all the tender Sa cases under sur- face of the leaves densely clothed with long, soft, white, stel- late pubescence ; common in the vicinity of Calcutta, where it is in flower and seed nearly the whole year. . I long considered this to be Vahl’s macrophylla, but .on rearing what I also took for the same species from Silhet and Chittagong, in the Botanic garden, I could plainly observe a striking difference when growing near each other, and as the Chittagong and Silhet sort agrees much better with Vahl’s figure and description, I must consider it to be his macrophyl- la. In the Calcutta plant, which I now eall ineana, the leaves ave never so broad in proportion to their length, more round at the base; much more pointed, with the Jong taper points entire ; all the rest of the margin, except what may be called the base, obtusely serrulate. In macrophylla, the leaves are crenate, more obtuse, and the margins cut to the very apex ; the two are however very nearly allied, though I think suffi- pci distinct to authorize their being considered as dif- “ C. macrophylla, Vahl, Symbol, iii. 13, t. 53. fj Shrubby, downy. Leaves opposite, ovate lanceolate, ser- rulate, reticulate, hoary underneath. Corymbs a di-. chotomous, rather dJonges than the packs, Berry minute, white. eRe Hiss sed Bg een uh: shite al, Slade Chibaesant es _ A shrub, from four to eight feet in length,. 2 Fem, scarce- ts ‘any, but. several, round, erect. branches, covered with white down. Leaves opposite, petioled, lanceolate, or oblong lanceolate, fine-pointed, finely serrate, wrinkled, above soft, and a little downy, below covered with much whitish soft * 394 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Callicarpa, down, from six to nine inches long, and two or three broad. Stipules none. Petioles about an inch long, downy, many times shorter than the leaves, Peduneles as long as the pe- tioles, round, downy. Bractes lanceolate, one under each di- vision of the corymb. Flowers very numerous, small, rose- coloured, ~_— woolly, the four divisions distinct and acute. » 6. C, acuminata, R. “Shrabby, tender parts hoary with a vests pinned ‘ Leaves broad-lanceolar, acuminate, remotely repand, denti- culate. Panicles axillary, long-peduncled, —r shorter than the leaves, A native of Silhet, flowers in May. In this species tie pa- nicles are elevated on longer peduncles than in the other species, the leaves and young parts hairy, except the upper surface of the former when fully expanded, which is then nak- ed and reticulate ; from four to five inches a two broad. seared 7. C. longifolia, Linn, sp. pl, ed. Willd. i. 621. Shrubby, with erect weak branches, Leaves rather long- petioled, broad-lanceolate, serrulate, smooth above, downy underneath, Panicles axillary, re —_— of the ae Berries white. - A native of Prince of Wales’ Island, — it {blossoms i in a = ~— ps rs ges Tia a Aba: Ble ae % feng tL apy oss apres peitececs Shrubby, all the tender parts, ‘ied ion miien diehice of di: short-petioled, elliptic, dentate, cuspidate leaves woolly, Co- rymbs axillary, their division and the calyces clothed with minute grains under the wool, A native of the Moluccas; the leaves are uiwafi pai et za: end i in a ne: taper, 8 tte i ‘ugha ELH ae 4b 29005) re Sa ais * Bo ize — Callicarpa, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 395 » 9. C, lanceolaria, R. oh Shrubby, hairy. Leaves lanbeolar; icoilietsfd ecwntinain! Buthibien —— ——— sub-globular. Berries white. H. ocala A pretty, shrubby species, with narrower: econ than any of the other species I have yet met with in India, they taper most toward the base, are nearly smooth on the upper surface, but very hoary underneath ; as are all the other tender parts, Flowers numerous, minute, purple. A native of the forests of Silhet, where it is in flower most _ “ the Sit eat 10. ©. pinata R. isacemiateai dished, tender parts mealy,’ Leaves opposite, with an lacdnchl one between, oblong, entire, cuspidate,’ Corymbs axillary, Flowers pentandrous, Stigma from three to four- lobed. : PMOL A native of the Moluccas. wor C, purpurea, Juss. » Shrubby; branchlets and younger parts slightly scaly, Leaves sub-sessile, lanceolate, acuminate, . serrate, with sub-entire cuneate base, smooth above, glandular-dotted be- low. Corymbs axillary, very small, dichotomous, Flowers glandular. _ Porphyra dichotoma, Lour, Cochin Ch, ed, Willd, i. 87. A native of China. Ilitroduced in 1812, into the Botanic garden, at Calcutta, where it thrives extremely well, has at- tained a height of from four to six feet, and blossoms from _ April. pests tera 48 a —— at the close of the — season, © / Shrabby,sprending, cilities ai with sabrous gray bark. Branchlets very slender, slightly scabrous, and beset with ferruginous stellate and somewhat ‘scaly pubescence ; new shoots almost mealy. Leaves from , 396 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Buddleia, lanceolate to oval, two inches long, tapering at both ends, but more so at the base, and only there entire : the rest of the margin serrulate ; without any hair or down, but scabrous below, from a great number of minute brown shining glan- dular dots which impart on being rubbed, a faintly aromatic smell; nerves and ribs elevated and slightly scaly. Petioles very short, Corymbs axillary or rather supra-axillary, small, round, two or three times dichotomous, many times shorter than the leaves; peduncles short, divaricate, beset with mealy pubescence, with minute lanceolate scales under each sub- division. Flowers fragrant, purple, marked with glandular dots, Calyx turbinate with very small obtuse teeth. Corol about three times longer than the calyx, infundibuliform ; lacinie oval, obtuse. Filaments almost twice as long as the corolla, purple ; anthers large, orange-coloured, covered with many glandular dots. Stigma sub-capitate, elevated about the anthers, Berry very small, purple, at last red, wath one or two fertile seeds. “BUDDLELA. Schreb. gen. N. 184. Calyx four-cleft. Corol four-cleft. Capsule het bisul- cate, bilocular. Reademnencenin: 1, B. Neemda, Rachel > Arborescent. Leaves lanceolate, ale aes schasnie under- neath, Spikes terminal, lengthening, with flowers three-fold. _Nimda the vernacular name at Chittagong, where the plant is indigenous, and from thence introduced into the Botanic garden by Dr. Buchanan, where it begins to blossom about the close of the-cold season, Seeds ripen in March and May, — Trunk erect; branches numerous, opposite. Bark of the » longer woolly parts ash coloured ; young shoots covered with — bead down. sliviobtesd of the aes in two hye about fifteen” jaar ‘from four to eight inches Jo : , thei a ‘ Exacum. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ~ 397 bases joined by a connecting membrane. Spikes terminal, generally three-fold, there being a larger, and longer in the centre, with a smaller on each side; long, slender, hairy, lengthening, and blossoming for three months, # lowers ge- nerally three-fold, sub-op posite, sessile, very numerous, small, pure white, and of a pleasant smell. Bractes lanceolate, one under each flower. Calyzx inferior, four, rarely five-toothed, villous. Coro! one-petalled, hypocrateriform. Tube the length of the calyx; mouth villous, border of four, rarely five, rounded, equal segments, Filaments short, inserted near the base of the tube of the corol. Anthers broad, sagit- tate, hid in the tube. Germ conical. (Style short. Stigma large, oblong, bisulcate, even with the tops of the anthers, Capsule ovate-oblong, two-celled, two-valved. Seeds meee numerous, imbricated, compressed, . Obs, The whiteness of the leaves, and pou sdoal of this plant, independently of its numerous, beautiful, small, fra- grant, pure white flowers, makes it highly ornamental, parti- cularly amongst plants with darker foliage. eylicr _ EXACUM. Schreb. gen. N. 185, “Calyx Iba lesvod. Corol salver-shaped. Capsule supe-: rior, two-celled, two-valved, Seeds many. | 1. E, bicolor, R. Annual, erect, four-sided. Leaves sessile, ovate, five-nerv- ed, Flowers axillary ; apices of the segments of the anne blue, the rest white. Anthers erect, 4 A native of shaves: where it appeere daring the oo se f ‘son, Root almost seisins tia aia ieawies ‘Gasided' 3 an- gles somewhat winged, from one to two feet high, Leaves” sub-sessile, opposite, oval, five-nerved, smooth, size very vari- ous, Floral leaves small and narrow, Flowers pee 398 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Exacum. litary, seein large, of’ a ben ntif ul white and blue — — S35: biiajioesim: R. ‘Annual, simple, erect, four-sided. Leaves sessile, lanceblate, five-nerved. Flowers numerous, terminal. Stamens and style declinate, Beng. Koochiri, A native of Bengal, where it grows among long grass ; and — flowers during the rains, 4; Stem erect, simple, exactly four-sided, smooth ; from two to three or even four feet high. Leaves opposite, decussate, ses- sile, lanceolate, five-nerved, smooth and shining, from two to four inches long. Flowers terminal, numerous, large, of a most beautiful blue colour, inodorous. Calyx divided near- ly to the base into four, daggered segments, Corol, segments — oblong, acute, spreading. Filaments on the tube of the corol, _ short. Anthers linear, bending to one side, with two pores at the top, for the discharge of the pollen, as in Cassia. Germ) oval. Style projecting obliquely with the stamina; stigma enlarged, Capsule two-celled, two-valved. Seeds numerous, _ Obs. This is one of the most elegant plants I have met with, the flowers being not only numerous, large, and beautitul, but retaining their beauty and expansion for many days ree is a rare circumstance in an Indian Plant. : isaac ee Cask Libeaed oS ae - Annual, cere aes Sapeley Db de janceo- late, three-nerved, Flowers five-cleft, Calyx with five, ze broad membranaceous wings with subulate points. eee Chironia trinervia. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i.1065, Lysimachia folio sinuato, acuminato trinervio, flore coeru- leo, amplo calyce carinato, alato. Burm. neni p. 145. t. 67 ie -~ native © of Ceylon. y : et Exgcum. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, — 399 sides, three-nerved, from one to three inches long. Racemes terminal, and opposite from the exterior axills, the whole form- ing an expanded corymbiform panicle. Peduncles and pedicels four-sided, smooth. lowers numerous, large, of a violet co-. Jour. Calyx five-cleft ; divisions with a broad membranace- ous wing, on the hot. and a long subulate point. Corol ;” tube gibbous, length of the calyx, some short filaments. amongst the insertions of the stamina crown the mouth of the tube. Border of five, obovate, beautiful, violet-coloured di- visions. Filaments on the mouth of the tube, erect, Anthers linear, with two pores at the top, and also opening onthe — sides, Style declining, rather longer than the filaments. Stig-, ma headed. Capsule potions. two-celled. - Obs. The anthers remain straight, and hard, with two. ; pores at the top, and also bursting by two longitudinal open-. ings on the sides, I have for that reason remoyed this plant. from the genus Chironia, the essential mark of which spree in its ‘spiral anthers, A Ez. ‘carinatum. R Annual, erect. Leaves sub-sessile, lanceolate, Deeniceed - Corols four-cleft, Calyces broad, membranaceo-carinated. Stamens protruded. Style declined. A native of Ceylon. _ Root ramous, annual, Siem erect, with one or ‘two oppo- site pairs of branches about the middle; above these dichoto- mous, somewhat four-sided, smooth, geen six to twelve inches. high, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, lanceolate, entire, three- nerved. Flowers terminal, numerous, pretty large, yellow, _ collected on dichotomous corymbs, with a long peduncled : one in each of the, divisions. Calyx four-parted, each division a ted. by a broad. membranaceous keel on the back. Corol /four-parted. Filaments short, inserted ona membra- naceous rim round the inside of the inouth of the tube, 4n- thers erect, yellow, opening on the sides, Style longer than the ‘stamens, declined. Stigma ascending, simple, 400 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Pladera. »§, E. suleatum. Re ~ Annual, erect, ramous, sulcated on the opposite sides of f the stem and branches. Leaves sub-sessile, lanceolate, fleshy, three-nerved. Calyx with four ridges. Stamens erect, a sules- globular. A native of Bengal ; blossoms during the cool season ; the * seeds ripen in March. Root fibrous, anual. Stem erect, from six to twelve inches high, smooth, suleated on opposite sides. Branches opposite, their flower-bearing extremities two, and three times two- cleft. Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, lanceolate, fleshy, entire, three-nerved ; from one to two inches long. Flowers terminal, numerous, of a bright blue colour, those in the divisions of the _ branchlets long-peduncled. Peduneles four-sided. Bractes ovate, recurved. Calyx deeply four-parted ; ‘divisions with an ample keel. Filaments short, inserted in'the mouth of the tube of the corol. Anthers ovate, oblong, touching at the sides, apices perforated. Style longer than the stamens, de- clined ; stigma two-lobed. Capsule globular, two-celled, swo-val ved, Seeds numerous. » Obs. This is a very beautiful small plant. PLADERA. Solander’s Mss. Calyz cylindric, four-toothed. Corol fannel-shaped, border irregular. One of the stamina larger. Stigma two-lobed. — san ang: one-celled, two-valved, Seeds ss Ga ey sessilifiora. R : - Annual, erect, four-sided ; angles winged. Leaves oppo- : site, sessile, ovate, entire, Floveeasuibidias 3 ~ Exacum heteroclitum. Linn sp, pl. ed. Willd. i. p. 639, - Gentiana heteroclita, Mant.560. ~ Bs native of Coromandel and Sebaalaiipeaiiiin moist pat - thre 07 i ; Pladera, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNITA, 401 which are again once or oftener dichotomous, all are four- sided, with a thin wing to each angle; height of the whole plant about a span. Leaves opposite, sessile, ovate, entire,’ _ three-nerved; differing much in size, the largest rarely an inch: long... Flowers solitary, in the divisions ot the plant, sessile, small, pale red. Calyx sub-cylindric, four-toothed ; teeth acute, Corol with the tube as long as the calyx. . Border three-cleft, two of the divisions equal, oblong, and crowded. at the apex, the third divided half way down. Filamenis four ; three longer, and inserted in the mouth of the tube ; the fourth just below the fissure of the bifid segments of the corol. Anthers equal, oblong. Germ linear-oblong. Style as long as the stamina. Stigma two-lobed ; lobes large, obovate, thin, Capsule sub-cylindric, nearly as long as the permanent ealya, _ and hid in it, one-celled, two-valved. | Receptacles consist in — the incurved margins of the valves, (parietal, ali — ) Seeds numerous, angular, — small, RP. iielpendidDs ia | Annual, erect, Sukakied, obranatien gpposite! alvciustes Leaves sessile, lanceolar, three-nerved. Flowers terminal, sub- panicled, — Bett -Exacum diffusum. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 637. Gentiana diffusa, Vahl, Symbol. iii. 47. - A beautiful erect, ramous annual; growing on the blinks of ; water courses, and on low fallow lands. ort time the wet season. Stem about a foot, or sometimes two feet high, erect, four- sided, ramous, smooth; inferior branches opposite, above al- ternate, very slender anal twiggy. Leaves opposite, sessile, the lower lanceolate, the upper broader, all are pointed, and three-nerved, entire, smooth; size various, Flowers numerous, terminal, peduncled, small, rose-coloured, Calyx four-tooth- ed, pe nt. Corol funnel-shaped. Border irregular, three- parted ; the two upper segments equal, and orbicular, the lower one two-parted; with a deep groove ; in the groove is VOL, I, Z \ 402 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Pladera;. lodged the fourth or large stamen. | Filaments four, inserted into the mouth of the tube, the lowermost longer than the. other three, and bearing an orange-coloured, and longer an- ther, which when shedding its pollen, is bent over the fissure of the stigma ; anthers of the other three filaments equal, pale " yellow. Style single, length of the short filaments. Stigma two-cleft, segments recurved. . Capsule one-celled, many- seeded, 3. P. decussata, R. » Annual, erect, Sur tringeds branches cross-armed, Site , cou dnnenalate, three-nerved. lowers terminal, three-fold, peduncled. | Beng. Dunkoni. . cele _ This species resembles P. virgata, but is a little more ro- bust, and seldom so high. It is a native of ihe same — Flowering time the same,: ied & Siem about a foot high, perfectly erect, fomnbchada cuales very sharp, or rather secnatien cent smooth, ramous, branches always opposite, cross-armed, in other respects like the stem, Leaves opposite, spreading, sessile, lanceolate, sharp- pointed, entire, smooth, three-nerved, size various. Flowers terminal, and axillary, peduncled, the terminal flowers three- fold ; the axillary single, larger than those of the last species, . and white. Peduneles four-sided, like the stem and branches. = large, four-toothed, four-sided, four-winged, — Cont stmepebtiets ee as in the last — & ee pecaapatal tas e P. perfalate, B. ; | Annual, erect, four-winged. Chien. leaenk lanceolate, three-nerved’; floral leaves (or bractes) patina by ede Canscora. Lamarck’s Encyclop. Bot. i, 601. Cansjan-Cora. Rheed, Mal. x. p. 103. t. B2u € » Anative of India, where it delights in a low. moist sh Flowering time the rainy BOGROR G32 615242; » skery _ Root: ‘Tamous, annual, * Stem ect somewb sid ~ Pladera. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA,: ‘403 with four broad membranaceous wings. Branches opposite, and like the stem; all are smooth. He eight of the whole plant about eighteen iniliie! Leaves of the stem opposite, sessile, lanceolate, three-nerved. Floral leaves perfoliate, all smooth and entire. lowers terminal, peduncled, numerous, pretty. large, pale rose colour. Calyx four-toothed, striated, perma- nent. Corol irregular, somewhat two-lipped ; the upper one larger and deeply two-parted, the lower one consisting: also of two lobes, but smaller. Filaments four, three of them ra+ ther shorter, and inserted on the upper side of the tube ; the third larger, and inserted below the fissure of the lower lip, Anthers oblong. Style as long as the stamens. Stigma two- parted, Segmentsrecurved. Capsule oblong, one-colleays two- valved. at re Ps pusilla R _ Annual, from one to two inches high. Leaves sais sbi cordate. Flowers terminal, sessile, three-fold, monandrous. Govet hid in the calyx. Capsule globular. . _ Compare with Hopea dichotoma. Vahl. enumer. i. i 3; oivsinnth Exacum sessile, Willd. i. 635. he A beautiful minute plant, a native of Coromandel. _ ‘Stem erect, four-sided, branchy ; from one and a half to two inches high, Branches cross-armed. Leaves opposite, sessile, cordate, minute, smooth. Flowers terminal, sessile, three-fold, small, yellow. Calyx one-leaved, sub-cylindric, as long as the corol, four-toothed, permanent, Corol one-pe- talled. Tube a little gibbous, mouth four-toothed. Filaments four within the tube of the corol, and inserted into. it near the base, Anthers, three minute, and abortive; one large and fertile. Germ globular. Style short. Stigmas two, globular. Copexie eral covered me the payee glnptee cenaie Lib Bas oben TE cosh Race 404 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIAS Plantage. * PLANTAGO. Schreb..gems D. oa ‘Gales four-cleft, Corol four-cleft, with border defmuel: Stamina very long. Capsule superior, two-celled, cut trans- versely. 1. P. Ispaghula, R. Fleming in Asiat. Res. xi, 174, Annual, caulescent. Leaves linear-lanceolar, three-nerved, slightly woolly. Peduneles axillary, naked, simple, length of the leaves ; heads cylindric. Capsules two-celled. -;Hepagool, the Hindee and Persian name, and that by which itis most generally known in Bengal and on the coast of Co- romandel, Native place uncertain, but it is cultivated during the cho) 3 season. Root ramous, annual. Stem, if any, very short, soon aivia: ing into three or four ascending, round, villous branches, which are a few inches in length, Leaves alternate, linear-lan- ceolate, three-nerved, luxuriant in young plants remotely den- ticulate, somewhat woolly, towards the base channelled, and ‘stem-clasping ; length from six to eight inches by a quarter or half an inch broad. Peduncies axillary, solitary, naked, erect, round, a little villous, the length of the leaves, «Spikes solitary, terminal, before the flowers expand ovate, afterwards -eylindric ; when in seed about an inch or an inch and a half Jong.and- erect.» Flowers numerous , imbricated, sana, dail, Jeaved, Leaflets oblong, ories a breil selalecdnorcooat margins, Corol; tube gibbous. Segments ovate, acute. Fila- ments oblong, two-celled, four, much larger than ‘the seg- ‘ments of the corol. Germ oblong, two-celled, with one seed in each, attached to the middle of the partition. Style rather _ Tonger than the corol. Stigma subulate, villous, Capsule cir- _ cumscissa, ovate, two-celled, Seeds solitary, ovate-elliptic, con- aa seeneneelipeianitesieesinaet: hope Cissus. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, A05 rather thick, smooth, tough, and brown... Perisperm conform to the seed... Embryo sub-cylindric, erect, Cotyledon long, © linear, Radicle infers one-fourth the satuciad of the eae: don, Obs. From the ain a sonciaaaenie drink :i is ccm ' and often prescribed by our medical gentlemen in India, where emollients are wanted, They are also used by the native practitioners in medicine, and are to be met with for sale in the bazars of India under the Persian name Uspagool, CISSUS. Schreb. gen. N. 192. Calyx four-toothed, Cvrol four-petalled. Germ two-cell- ‘ed; ovula two, erect. Berry superior, from one to four-seeded. Embryo erect, in the base of an ample perpen 1. C. adnata. R, ‘ _ Leaves round-cordate, bristle serrate, sence Stipules actin adnate, with gibbous centre, and scariose margins, Coe flat, flowers drooping. _. Anative of the country about Dacca, from a the late : ‘Colonel Peter Murray sent it to the Botanic garden, where it thrives well, blossoms in May and June, aud ripens its fruit _ in September, Siem and. large branches ligueous, climbing over pesos to a. considerable extent, young shoots round, a little downy and slightly furrowed, Leaves alternate, round-cordate, and often obliquely so, acuminate, bristle-serrate, the largest some- ‘times slightly repand ; pretty smooth above, but downy un- derneath,. particularly the veins, from two to six inches long, one-fourth less in breadth, _ Peduncles half the length, of the eaves, downy... Stipules nearly oval, adnate, elevated, and of a deeper green in the middle ; margins scariose, and brown, Tendrils opposite to the leaves where there is no ~cyme. _ Cymes opposite to the leaves, on villous peduncles, as long _as the petioles, very ramous, flat. Flowers numerous, Be Z3 AC6 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cissus. drooping. The germ has two cells, in each of which are two seeds attached from their lower end to the partition at the bottom of the cell. Berry succulent, size of a pea, when ripe black, and smooth, generally one-celled. Seed for the most part solitary, obovate, lower end pointed. Integuments two, exterior nuciform, and rugose ; inner a very thin, white membrane, which adheres firmly to the perisperm. Peris- perm conform to the seed, dull white, cartilaginous, divided by two fissures into three, nearly equal parts. Embryo | scarcely half the length of the perisperm. Cotyledons reni- form. adicle oblong, inferior. " 2. C, vitiginea, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 655. » Leaves cordate-serrate. Cymes intr tens Berries one or two-seeded, Hind, and Beng, Guali-lata, Teling. Maratta-tiga. ‘ | gh tres This species is a native of forests, mountains; antl way sides in uncultivated places. Trunk woolly, branchy, climbing over trees and shrubs to — a great extent. Tendril opposite to the leaves, two-cleft. Leaves alternate, petioled, cordate, serrate, or dentate, pretty smooth on both sides, from four to six inches long, and from three to four broad. Stipules cordate, Cymes peduncled, leaf-opposed, more than compound, Flowers small, red. Germ superior, half immersed in the — die n nec- tary. a black, one or ee 3. c. glauca, R. 7 Leaves cordate, Bitedte ena smooth. Stipules broad- éulleate. Cymes decompound. Berries one-seeded. Schunambu Valli. Rheed. Mal. vii. p. 21. t. 11. | ~ This species is still larger than the last, and a native of the same or similar places; the shoots, the seacee, Pt 8 : Seas ome Y 5 4 te Cissus. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, whioly dove not-admie‘of ae comeing it to be ei - 7 panda, or latifolia. bait Tendrils leaf-opposed, andividéd: Laliies 5 aia pe- tioled, broad-cordate, more or less acuminate, sometimes when large slightly lobed, bristle-serrate, smooth, from four to eight inches each way. Stipules broad-fulcate, apex rounded, caducous. Cymes with from three to five primary branches; ultimate divisions umbelliferous, Berry nearly round, size of a pea, smooth, succulent, purple, rarely more’ than one- seeded, Seed obovate. Integument a double membrane, _ with a spongy silver-coloured substance between, Perisperm and a as in the genus. 4, C, -wolata: R. ae Shrubby, scandent, smooth. Leaves donde, dlighiypsica remotely bristle-serrulate. Cymes compound, —— Meriam-Pulli. Rheed. Mal. vii. p. 91. t. 48. Fanis crepitans major. Rumph, Amb. v. p. 446. t. 164. f. 1. A native of Amboyna, from thence introduced into the Bo- tanic cpr in — phate time in Bengal, the rainy season. Stem: aed Sulen hie fond slender, climbing over bushes to a considerable extent, Bark smooth; on the young parts polished and purplish. Leaves altenidntes: piste} cordate, remotely and slightly serrulate, serratures acute, both sides smooth, length from four to six inches, Tendrils leaf-oppos- ed, simple, coloured, Stipules adjomed, oval, .coloured, Cymes \eaf-opposed, first divisions trichotomous. Flowers small, dull pa a aste of the leaves exed — —- —. ee 5. C, caliente: Willd. spec. i, p. 657. Peat eee: jointed, four-winged. ieee asciieis. opens Siadens! Pt Funis quadraigularis, Rumph Amb, vy. p. 83, t. 44. f. 2) \ 408 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ~ Cissus, This plant is one of the most common over every part of bidias blossoms during the rains ; and ripens its seed in the cool season, | Root. fibtous.. Stem and branches perennial, scandent, and ofteis of very great length, smooth, succulent, jointed, cons tracted at the joints, four-winged, wings large, and sharp, young parts succulent, tender, and very smooth. These are very generally eaten by the natives in their curries, Leaves alternate, one at each joint, short-petioled, reniform, cordate, serrulate-dentate, smooth on both sides, an inch or an inch and ahalfeach way. Stipules lunulate, entire. Tendrils so- litary, simple, leaf-opposed. Umbels solitary, opposite to'the leaves, occupying the place on which the tendril would other- wise grow, compound, Umbellets generally three or four, sub-globular. Involucre and involucels scarcely any, .Germ ovate, immersed in the nectary, two-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the bottom of the: partition ; style short. Stigma simple. Berry round, size of a small pea, smooth, red, succulent, one-celled. Seed solitary,: obovate, covered with a double, dark brown, spongy integument. Perisperm conform to the seed, a double, dark-coloured fissure runs down the middle. Embryo small, erect, lodged on one side of the bottom of the double fissure just mentioned. Cotyle- dons with minute points. Radiele oblong, inferior. 6. C. pentagona, R. _| Young shoots lucid, with ive rode anges an edeides. Leaves cordate, mets sub-lobate, —"* minate, smooth, . i 2s” An extensive ‘perennial ines, a native of a omanet Mhittagong ar oe ete C. angustifolia. R. | , Ree a’ » Divicous. _ Leaves termate; pets Innceoate, pa * Cissus, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Ata _ A delicate, scandent, perennial species, a native of Suma- tra, Flowers in February ; seeds ripen in November. Siem scandent, slender, flat like a piece of tape. Tendrils simple. Leaves ternate. Leaflets petiolate, lanceclate, re- motely serrate, acuminate, smooth on both sides, from three to six inches long, and from one to one and a half broad, Petioles shorter than the leaflets, channelled, smooth. | Sti- pules triangularly ovate, acute, smooth, Cymes axillary, so- litary, nearly round, small, and shorter than the petioles, Flowers small, greenish yellow, male on one plant and female on another. »' Mate. Calyz, corol and stamina as in the genus. Pistil no other than a small abortive roundish body on the content a four-lobed gland. . » Femave. Calyx and corol as in the male. Gevia als two-celled, with two seeds in each, Style none. . Stigma large, obscurely four-lobed, and somewhat lacerated, Berries spherical, smooth, size of a pea, white, one or two-seeded, when cut or bruised very fetid, Perisperm conform to the seed. Embryo lodged in the lower half of the perisperm, Seinen wien round, . Radicle enon; inferior. elun sa .) 8. carnosa, mg sp. 7 ad. Willd. i, 658. Stem flattened, perennial. Leaves petioled, ternate ; leaf. leis oval, serrate. Berries four-seeded. Tsjori-Valli, Rheed, Mal. vii. p. 17. t. 9. -- Folium Causonis, Rumph. Amb, v. p. 450. f. t. 166, A. -. Teling. Kanapa-tiga. ay Pi _ Is common in beteweay and forests. wianloaiige time the rang geason. ai _ Stem soba at like a a piece of it cistcne taawes: taabboes fathoms; young shoots villous, | Tendrils leaf- opposed, from two to three-cleft, Leaves. sivas: petioled, ternate, Leaflets oval, grossly serrate, downy, from two to three:inches long. Petioles round, downy. Stipules oblong, ‘ : 444 , 4 ——— “i - rt 410: -TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cissus) caducous. Cymes as in the former species, Flowers small, white. . Berry black, four-seeded. - 900. setosa, R. : | Herbaceous, scandent, bristly. Leaves sessile, ternate; leaflets grossly bristle-serrate. Berries one-seeded, Teling. Barubutsali. A native of forests and hedges in the Rajamundree Circar.. Flowering time the rainy season. ' ) Root fusiform, perennial. Stems herbaceous, nanllti round, striated, and covered with distinct, grandular, round- headed, white bristles, as is every part of the plant, even to the fruit, Tendrils leaf-opposed, generally two-cleft. Leaves alternate, sessile, ternate, rarely quinate. Leaflets, lateral — two (or four, when there are five) are sessile, the middle one is short-petioled ; all are oval, waved, fleshy, irregularly and_ grossly bristle-serrate, both sides armed with the fore-men- tioned bristles, size various, from one to five inches long. Stipules cordate. Cymes as in the former species.. Petals re- volute. Obs, Every part of the plant is esienodicag acrid. I unfor tunately tasted both the roots and berries. The leaves toasted and oiled, are applied to indolent tu- _ mours to bring them to suppuration.. Bis C. feminea, R. Leaves digitate ; leaflets piticled; icin enoetgeneil entire. Style none. Stigma from four to five-lobed. ’ A large scandent woody species, a native of pa moun- tains. Flowers during the wet and cold seasons. ’ - Stem woody, climbing over trees, Branches flexuose from leaf to leaf. Tendrils simple, opposite to the leaves. Leaves alternate, petioled, digitate. Leaflets oblong, and Janceolar, a little crenulate, inal smooth, shining, from four to ix inches» — sa one or sdencbaranairtoad Cissus. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. | ait short-peduncled, axillary. Bractes small, falling: Flowers small, green. Calyx small. Corol four or five-petalled, ge- nerally four. Nectary scarcely any. Stamens none, or at most a small seemingly sterile one. Germ superior, globose, Style none. Stigma four, or five-lobed, ii to tlie — in the corol, I have not seen the ripe fruit, ae ror Eiloamd A sent “Tender shoots tinodhlent pisliched: Leaves digitate ; ‘louie petioiiets; oblong, acute, remotely serrate, smooth, Beng. Dhemna, which is also the name of a long serpent. . . Found amongst the mountains of the coast of Coromandel, as well as.in the forests of Bengal. Flowering time the has season, baal Siem very long, running up and over the highést't trees, a little compressed, and until many years old smooth, polished, succulent, deep green, Branches few or none, until the plant arrives at a great height, and is several years ofage. Leaves alternate, petioled, digitate. Leaflets five, petioled, oblong, — the lower pair obliquely so, serrate, smooth on both sides, from — two to six inches long, and from one to three broad. Petioles round, smooth, from four to five inches long. Petiole’s chan- nelled, Stipule cordate, small, sub-ad joined, Tendrils leaf- opposed, simple. Cymes trichotomous, and dichotomous; the last divisions short, and ending in small umbellets, Bractes cordate, permanent. Calyx four-toothed. Corol, petals four, inserted in a belt which surrounds the body of the germ, Nectary a four-lobed, coloured elevation between the stamina and the insertion of the style. Filaments four, inserted oppo- site to, and just within the petals. Anthers incumbent. Germ om: Style ent. Stigma simple, Berry the size of a cherry, 5 turbinate, asi. oo mee, 12; C. devtedtiaa, R. , | “Scandent, ‘perennial. Leaves quinate ; leaflets oblong, — 412 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cissus, acute, obtusely serrate, smooth above, villous underneath, Stipules ear-shaped. Berries round, smooth, one-seeded, Anative of Mysore, from thence sent to the Botanic garden in 1802, by Mr. B. Heyne, where it flowers and ripens its wen through the whole year. whee Stem, in five years old plants, as thick as a man’s situa of great length, even up to the tops of high trees. Bark spongy, and deeply cracked ; young shoots succulent, round, and villous. Leaves alternate, remote, long-petioled, quinate. Leaflets petioled, oblong-obovate, or rhombic, acute, serrate, smooth and shining above, villous underneath; the superior from two to three inches long, two-thirds of that in breadth, the exterior much larger. Petioles nearly as long as the leaflets, round, and villous. Stipules ear-shaped, recurved. Tendrils leaf-opposed, two or three-cleft. Cymes axillary, or terminal ; dichotomous or trichotomous, these again several times divided. Germ conical, containing four seeds im one cell, attached to its bottom. Berry, the size, shape, and ap- pearance of a red cherry, one-seeded, Seed obliquely obo- vate, a little compressed, somewhat pointed at the base, and there attached to the bottom of the cell, Integument single, nuciform, rugose, covered with the green pulp of the berry, which adheres to it, and may, when dry, be considered a se- cond integument, Perisperm conform to the seed, cartila- ginous, gray ; from the inner edge two fissures penetrate deep- ly, and divide it nearly into three portions, Embryo erect, white, lodged in the base of the perisperm. Cotyledons two; pedicelled, reniform. Plumula minute, Radicle oblong, in- ferior, a little curved, with the apex to the umbilicus, 13. C. lanceolaria. R. - Divicous. Leaves pedate-quinate ; i caeeciegeinaie seiaale “oonsseg serrulate. _ Stipules — temerity: sei Cissus, _ TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 413 Bengal.’ In the Botanic garden it blossoms in: pence March, ai Trunk scandent, stout, Ligation, in six vous old plait! as thiek as a man’s wrist, flattened, and grooved on the two flat sides, Bark dark brown, rough or deeply cracked. Branches and branchlets climbing, or pendulous when not supported; young parts round, green and generally smooth ; extent of the whole plant several fathoms. Tendri/s leaf-opposed, ge- nerally undivided, Leaves alternate, petioled, pedate. Leaf- lets generally five, lanceolar, recurvate, most remotely and sharply serrulate, long, taper, acute-pointed, both sides po- lished ; texture rather fleshy, length from three to six inches, — and from one to'two broad, — Petioles and petiolets clothed with short, reddish hairs. Stipules large, of a narrow conie _ shape. Cymes sub-axillary, or close by the side of the base of the petioles, shorter than the petioles, or when most luxu- riant much shorter than the leaves, the ultimate divisions each supporting a small globular umbellet, of small pale yellow flowers. | Bractes round the base of the peduncles, cordate, Mate, Calyx scarcely any. Coro] and stamina as in the genus. Pistil none, an umbilicate, yellow, round, convex — oe its — uu. C. spider, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 659, _ Perennial, scandent. Tendrils simple, or two-cleft. Lebwes pedate ; leaflets broad-lanceolate, serrate. Berries four-seed- ved. | «Dalat Tjon-Vall Rheed, Mal, vii. p. 19. t. 10. : aon se Retz, Qhei ws We 3. 2A TAF i This j is another very extensively Heiling | species, as in- deed they all are Ans a a tal Flower: ing time the rainy season. - _ Stems woody, climbing over recs; &e. young carts cover- ed with soft down. Tendrils leaf-oppoosed, simple or two- cleft. Leaves. alternate, petioled, pedate, Leaflets oblong, 414 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Samara, irregularly serrate, downy, size various, the intermediate one is from four to six inches Jong, and the lowermost of the late- ral ones from two to three inches long, the rest between these sizes, Petioles common, round, downy, from three to five inches long. Stipules cordate, pointed, falling. Cymesleaf- opposed, or axillary, Peduneles half the length of the peti-- oles, jointed, and bracted a little above the middle. Berries whites four-lobed, depressed, four-seeded, 15. C. serrulata. R, Perennial, scandent, smooth, Leaves website: Leaf, lets oblong, serrate. A native of Chg: where it blomoms.i in ave and May. | * SAMARA. Schreb. gen. N. 195. - Calyx four-parted, Corol four-petalled. Stamina iieted opposite to the centre of the insertions of the petals. Drupe superior, one-seeded, os S. paniculata. R. fait Arboreous, Leaves opposite, entire, broad- lanneodlalis Po nicles axillary, . Stigmatwo-lobed. Nae 5 & _ A tree, a native of the Circar mountain, «4 , Leaves opposite, petioled, broad-lanceolate, seumineil to a “they arrow point, entire, exinoth, from three to five inches long, and one and a half or two broad. ‘Corymbs axillary, small, peduncled, shorter than the leaves, divided by three- forked divisions. Drupe dry, oblong, Nut one-celled,” “2.9, polygama, R, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, traddenmaliens firm A polished, Panic’ es axillary and terminal, Filaments dort, Fagara. “TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 415. BLACKBURNIA. Schreb. gen. N. 199. _ ee el Calyx four-toothed. Corol four-petalled.. N. setary a 1 sta- miniferous ring surrounding the base of the germ. Berry superior, evasmenlaiks Seed arilled. ; re 1. B. nitivlinka: R. Arboreous, Leaves alternate, Inpepalaty, Tilaeate vale at the base. _A large erect timber tree, a native of the mountainous parts of the Circars. Flowering time the beginning of the hot season. . Trunk erect. Bark thin, firm, yellowish green on the out- side ; on the inside deep red, tinging the spittle with that co- lour. It is a strong astringent. Branches numerous, forming a large shady head. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, linear- oblong, ‘smooth, below a little whitish, entire, waved, point- ed ; five or six inches long, and one and a half or two broad, Stipules none, Racemes axillary; small, erect, frequently. compound, Bractes small, subulate. Flowers small, yellow. Calyx four-toothed. Petals four, oblong, expanding, apices revolute, Nectary, a ring surrounding the base of the germ, staminiferous. Filaments four, shorter than the petals, hairy, inserted into the margins of the nectary, Anthers oval. Germ superior, globular. Style short, stigma headed, Berry verti- cally compressed, succulent, the size of a large cherry, when ripe it has a deep purple bloom, which makes it very invit- ing to the eye. Seed one; arilled, seemingly pw obey of a lively purple throughout. i Obs, The wood of this tree is white, samepeieals -_ ayehi the natives: employ it for a alas) of LL an " FAGARA. Schreb. pen: YN. 196. 3 _ Calys ice coed, or four-leaved. Corol four-petalled, & 416 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA.” Fagara. Germ superior. _ Capsule superior, two-valved, one-seeded, . - Embryo inverse, with but little perisperm. ; “1. F. triphylla. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 666, Leaves opposite, ternate ; leaflets oblong, entire. Punieles axillary, brachiate. ; Ampacus angustifolia. Rumph, Amb. ii. p. 188. 1. 62. - Found indigenous, by Mr. W. Roxburgh, on the Island of Pulo Pinang, and from thence sent to the Botanic garden, where in several years it has only reached the height of four feet, and for these last three years has blossomed beguaatly A during-the dry season. . Stem erect, ligneous, as thick as a walking cane, smooth, ash-coloured. Branches opposite; the tender parts round — and slightly villous, Leaves opposite, long-petioled, ternate. Teaflets anceolar or oblong, entire, smooth on both sides, length from two to ten inches, and from one to four broad. + Panicles axillary, and in our single young individual, shorter _ than the petioles, brachiate, villous. Flowers numerous, _ minute, white, inodorous. Bractes triangular, solitary below — id diFisions of the panicle. Calyx small, one-leaved, four- ~ Petals four, oblong, white, smooth,’ spreading, — length of the pistil, and four times longer than the calyx. re os laments four, length of the petals, -Anthers oblong, incum- bent. Germ superior, roundish, woolly, four-grooved : for the ‘filaments to rest in, four-celled, with two ovula in. each ce ‘attached to the middle of the thickened axis. Styleaslong "as the germ. Stigma large, four-lobed. Capsule from one to four, distinct, obovate, smooth, size of a field béan, ntll se celled, two-valved, opening along the upper and imner mar- gin, and round the apex ; a portion on the back does not se parate spontaneously. Seeds generally two, roundish, size of a grain of black pepper, shining, blackish-chesnut seroma 2 in the allied foto alatum. | : a Fagara, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, MZ 2. F. Budrunga, Re: ivon of} boldiscae " Arboreous, armed with deci pedacoil aculei, Lente; ie! nate ; leaflets five or six pair, unequally ovate, samaieeie: ene tire, acuminate. Panicles crowded, ) . Budrung the vernacular name in Silhet, where it grows to a large tree. Blossoms in March and April, and the-seeds ripen in July and August; they are used nedicinally by the “natives, being of a warm spicy nature with the fragrance of lemon peel. Trunk straight, while young oar tt but by age the aculei fall off. Branches and branchlets armed with innumerable, small, white, sharp, incurved prickles, Leaves crowded, from six to ten inches long. Leaflets five or six pair, opposite or nearly so, unequally ovate-lanceolate, entire, finely acuminate, smooth, from three to four inches long, by one and @ half broad, Panicles terminal;: much crowded, long-peduncled, _ trichotomous, the whole forming one large, very ramous glo- bular panicle, which is shorter than the leaves. Ca ya ie toothed. Petals four, elliptic, spreading. Stamina ‘Your, much longer than the petals, Germovate. Style short. .Cap- sule the size of a pea, drupaceous, one celled, two-valved; the _ exterior tunic is marked with cells filled with a fragrant bal- ’ sam, Seed solitary, attached to the apex of the sutureof the valves, round, smooth, polished, shining black. Integuments three ; the exterior one thin and brittle, between it and the se-_ cond is spread a quantity of dark orange-coloured pulpy mat- ter, the second thick and hard, a perfect nat, and of a dull black colour, the third or innermost membranaceous... Peris- perm in small quantity. Embryo inverse. Coyea - vate. “intel eet fais to sc dumbest fe: 4 reous, aah Leaplts tick EN to sixteen | pair; (Atte 0 smooth, entire. Panicle terminal, _ Teiing, Rhetsa-maun, Rhetsa means a committee, or select number of men as- VOL. I, Aa . 418 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Fagara, sembled to settle disputes, &c. and maun, means 'trees of the largest size. Under the shade of this tree the Hill people as- semble to examine, agitate, and determine their matters of, public concern, deliver discourses, &c. _ It is a very large tree, a native of the mountainous parts © of the coast. Leaves deciduous during the cold season ; they come out again, with the flowers about the beginning of the hot season, Trunk straight, Bark corky, deeply cracked, slight gray. Branches numerous, spreading to a great extent. Prickles _ very numerous, scattered over every part of the tree, small, very sharp, incuryed ; on the old wood they acquire a coni- eal solid . base. comet about the extremities of the branch- lets, abruptly pinnate, from twelve to twenty. inches long, Leaflets opposite, from eight to'sixteen pairs, short-petioled, oblong or lanceolate, waved, attenuated >to a narrow point, entire, smooth, about five or six inches long, and two broad, all nearly equal in size, with nerves which divide them un- equally, the exterior division being: twice’as broad as the in- terior, . Petioles round, smooth, a little channelled. Stipules: none. Punicles terminal, and from the exterior arils, fre- quently .cross-armed, particularly the extreme ramifications. Peduncles .and. pedicels, smooth, sometimes compressed. Practes minute, falling. . Flowers very minute, yellow, Ca- lyx four-leaved. . Filaments shorter than the petals. Style thick, length of the filaments. Stigma tapering. Capsule round, size of a pea, aie one-celled,: egeeiedoernnne round, glossy black. . pessee phan weeks - Obs, The unripe apeniaoia are like opal Sitios, ies are, coentalli aromatic, and taste like the skin of a fresh oranges The ripe seeds taste exactly like black pepper, but weaker; from this circumstance I conceive this may be F. Piperita, yet I have always found the leaflets entire. The bark, I mean the inner lamina, is also acrid, with a mixtureof Ludwigia, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, - 419 A, F, nitida, Roxb. | | His Sea , Shrubby. Branchlets, petioles and ribs armed. ides two or three pairs, with a terminal odd one, oblong, lucid, remotely gland-crenate, apex a long and emarginate. Racemes*axillary. «Tcheum-tsew of the Chinese. " “Introduced: from Canton into the Botanic garden by Mr, 4 W. Kerr in 1812, and. in January of the follawing: year one of the plants blossomed abundantly. - The flowers as in the other species, but the pistillum is is three or four-lobed, each appearing to end in a recurved style with a two-lobed stigma, The shrub, therefore, ap- proaches nearer than any of the preceding species to Zan- thoxylon. ' LUDWIGIA. Schreb. gen. N. 204. hihi Calyx four-parted, Corol four-petalled. Capeule pied: foutaltied, formicellosy Seeds 1 numerous, hs kL Sess R. | Annual, branches diffuse. "Leaves alternate, lanceolate, short-petioled, smooth, Flowers axillary, sessile. Bi stor pepe obsoletely four-sided. « A small, ramous plant, a native of Bengal ; flowering time the rainy season ; seed ripe about October. __, Root ramous, ante, Stem short, round, in young silawis erect. Branches many, diffuse, slightly striated ; the whole plant of a dark-ferruginous colour. Leaves alternate, short- petioled, lanceolate, entire, smooth, length from one to three inches, . Flowers axillary, small, sessile, The leaves about | the ends of the branches are so small and crowded, as. to make the extremities of the branchlets appear like leaty spikes, Bractes, a most minute one on each side of the insertion of each flower. Calyx, the divisions taper to most acute points, and equal the oblong eee Capsule beneath, linear, obso- Aaz2 . : ‘ « 420 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA. © Ludwigia. letely four-sided, smooth, four-valved. Seeds coloured, nu- merous, very small, 2. L. prostrata, R. icf Lower branches creeping, Leaves alternate, petioled, lan- ceolar. Flowers axillary, sessile. Capsule filiform, with one row of seeds in each cell, attached immediately to the axis, A native of Pegu, from thence introduced into this gar- den, where it blossoms and ripens its seed during the rainy: season, - iB} Root annual, Stem leaning much to one side, from one to’ two feet long. Branches numerous, the lower ones longer than the stem, spreading flat on the ground and striking root, smooth, striated, generally coloured with red. | Leaves’ alternate, short-petioled, lanceolar, entire, smooth, size vari- ous, the largest from three to five inches long. Flowers axil- lary, sessile, fed one to several on the same axill, very small, much elevated on the four-sided peduncle-like g germ. Petals Janceolar, longer than the calyx, yellow. Filaments tour, length of the style. Anthers roundish, two-lobed, always after expansion found adhering to the large clammy stigma, Cap-— sules slender, sub-filiform, more or less curved, smooth, four- cornered ; angles rounded, sides grooved ; four-celled. Seeds oval, minute, pink-coloured, disposed in one vertical row and attached immediately to the axis, without the intervention wt any: thing. like a receptacle. = a fa . This species is so much like my LES pitt ape as not Ste didi pueey except by attending to the germ, or cap- sule, ‘In that plant it is shorter, thicker, always straight, and with numerous crowded seeds in each cell, attached to a projecting receptacle, as in L. alternifolia, Gert. Carp. i. 158. ¢. 31. In this there is only one’ vertical row in ws cell oe site Oldenlandia, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTAL a OLDENLANDIA. Schreb. gen. N. 205. sae Calyx four-parted, permanent. Corol one-petalled, fond parted. Capsule inferior, two-celled, many-seeded. Recepta- cle free, fastened to the partition by the base only. ‘Obs.. Would it not be better to omit this Geertnerian part of the generic character, and unite our Indian species of — Hedyotis to Oldenlandia? For except the attachment of their respective receptacles I-can find no other mark by which the two genera are to be distinguished, and surely this is too minute and inconspicuous for the travelling Botanist to be able at all times to discover. oli 0. noth deta: Lim, sp, pi. ed. Willd. i. 676. Roxb, Co- Rig POL rom, pl. i. N. 3. Erect. Leaves opposed, tern, and quatern, linear, cab rous. Umbels terminal. Inside of the corol ower i Teling. Cheri-Velloo, pial ‘Tam. Saya-wer, or Imburel. | ‘Much cultivated on the light sandy ditile near the sivas of Coromandel ; where the root is employed to dye the best, and | most — red on cotton cloth, sh Het yi Sie £8; 0.0 afta’ Kinig s Mss. wt d _ Erect, four-sided. Leaves opposite, sub. sani dliptic; smooth. Panicles terminal. Corol campanulate ; mouth _— with hairs. Capsules turbinate, » Beng. Gundha-baduli, Ai ei _ Hedyotis racemosa. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Wiilds i. 565. Aao: _ Annual, a native of the borders of vice lands and moist places ; appears and flowers during the rainy season. Stem several, erect, with few branches, four sided, atid about a foot or eighteen inches high, Leaves opposite, sub- sessile, oblong, smooth, entire, succulent, about two inches long. Stipules, connecting membrane broad, toothed. Um- els terminal, few-flowered. lowers white, small, Pedé« Aas 422 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA; Oldenlandia. eels four-sided, Capsules turbinate, smooth ; receptacle club- bed, free, affixed by the small end into the partition near its 8.0. paniculata. Burm. Fl. Ind. 38. t. 15. f. Ve oo ~ Biennial, creeping. _ Leaves ovate-lanceolate,. \Peduncles three-flowered, or three times that number, . riodsuhd _ Introduced into the Botanic garden from the Moluceas, in 1798, where it blossoms the greatest part of the year. )-..o7 Stems none; but numerous, diffuse, four-sided, smooth, ra- mous branches, spread close on the ground in every direction, and strike root from their joints, their general length about twelve inches. Leaves opposite, sessile, ovate-lanceolate, smooth, and of a firm thick texture, the largest about aninch long. Connecting membrane with subulate divisions. .Pedun- eles axillary, and terminal, longer than the leaves, smooth, four-sided, with generall y hired small, white flowers, on pe- dicels of unequal length. Corol ; tube gibbous, mouth shut with fine white hairs. Stamens, in the belly ofthe tube below the cnn which shut its mouth, . Stamina entire. voc e 4.0. sdaapiaitti R.. salt _ Annual, very ramous, Pedicels solitary, shorter ‘thie the leaves, generally two-fluwered. Leaves sessile, —— ; long, underneath marked with —* meres i pe Beng: Punki. > sheets tare -ed> a Lian, yesh Willd. 566, enters - Asmall, very ramous, diffuse, annual — ed Basel ; appearing in.the rainy. season. Stem: none. Branches numerous, diffuse, about six indies ie, somewhat four-sided. | Leaves opposite, approximate, ‘sessile, oblong, and lanceolate-oblong, smooth and:marked with beautiful crystalline specks underneath, length about a See three quarters of an inch, Peduneles; from within. the: | prego ee about half coi PN SB ener-— Oldentandia. ‘TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 423 cels, Corol, mouth of the tube wma dps much com: pressed laterally. Obs. It is readily dintigraiatil ae 0. biflora a ede neral habit of the plant, this being short, diffuse, very ra- mous, with obléng or lanceolate-oblong leaves, while ‘the other is slender with long straggling branches, and. linear- lanceolate leaves, I place less confidence in the crystalline appearance of the underside of the leaves, as soil, &c, — remove it, . By diffusa, Re - Annual, round, flaccid. Leaves sessile, linoes: Jencaphabls acute, Peduncles axillary, solitary, one-flowered; capsules sub-globular, smooth. riches site » Hed yotis diffusa, Linn, sp. pl. ed, Wilid,i. 566... Found, growing in boxes, which were sent, vith Nat sins to the Botanic garden at: Calcutta from Banda. - Root ramous, annual, Stems short, flaccid, seaceliie, round, most slightly scabrous, from six to twelve inches long. Leaves opposite, sessile, linear-lanceolate, acute, smooth on both sides, Connecting meuibrane, from entire to many-cleft, Peduncles axillary, solitary, four times shorter than the leaves, one-flowered. Flowers pretty large, pure white, smooth, Stigma deeply two-cleft., Capsule roundish, smooth... |. _ Obs, The Linnzean definition of O, capensis would lead one to imagiue this to be that plant; but the observation simillima O. repenti, at capsula glabra, in the Plant. p..127, convinces me it camnot be so; as this plant has not.the-smallest reser aeyee to Oldenlendia popes now Delica radars ee 0. ideas pice al eds ‘Willd. i676. Piucd ge Peduncles solitary, two-flowered, short than the narrow — leaves, Sans. ered © Beng. Khet-papura, ~_ .Antirrhinum htmile, &c. ile Zeyl. 92, t. u. good. _ Aad 424 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNITA, Oldentandia. » Annual ; native of most parts of India. A small weak —_ eng delicate —— appearing in the ey season, ato) hevtiiin, R og ©! Erect, four-sided, dichotomous. Leaves linear-lanceolate, Peduneles in pairs from alternate axills, one-ilowered, «© Hedyotis herbacea, Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd. i. 566. . Teling. Veri nella-vemoo, | A native of road sides under thin ‘inka ke. Flowering time the rainy season. : Stem erect, four-sided, smooth, short, ramous. willie always two-cleft; from six to twenty-four inches high, Leaves opposite, sessile, linear-lanceolate, spreading, smooth, Stipu- les, connecting membrane finely-toothed, Pedanbies axilla- ry, always two from the small axills, with a branchlet, or the rudiments of one between them, round, nearly as’ me as’ ane = one-flowered. Capsule meeand orto orbbam wtuster a & 0: ramosa, R.> ‘ hue » Diffuse; ramous. Leaves narrow- lanceolate. Peduncles _ axillary, with from one to several flowers. Jp bier) A native of Pegu, from thence introduced into this garden. by Mr. F. Carey, where it blossoms and ripens tsseed diving the rains, and the early part of the cool season. 8 Root annual, The stems and numerous branches diffuse, somewhat four-sided, pretty smooth, spreading to the extent of one or two feet, Leaves opposite, narrow-la : entire; whiter underneath; length about an inch, - Connecting membrane many-toothed, \ Peduncles axillary, from one to many-flowered, Flowers small, white. Calyz, the divisions: conical. Corol with gibbous tube, mouth bearded, © Fila- ments short. Anthers within the tube, blue. — &e. as phe 3k oak Ammannia. ‘TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 425, ome Aer those below. Corol one. Pericarp one-celed, maesolee, half covered with the calyx. * Obs. It differs from A. baccifera in ee a. copeulliol one cell, in being evalyular, and in the leaves being lanced, in, that species they are linear-cordate at the base, and em- brace the stalk. This. plant has a strong muriatic, but: not diengilts smell. Its leaves are exceedingly acrid; they are used uni- _versally by the natives to raise blisters in rheumatic pains, fevers, &c. The fresh leaves bruised and. applied to the part intended to be blistered perform their office in the course of dealfioy ‘an hour or a little more, and most effectually. 6. A. i jontandva. R. In the lower part of the plant creeping and: seialat erect portion ramous ; four-sided, Branches simple. Leaves sessile, lanceolate. Sinaia se sleay sessile, en Capsule one-celled, ‘ail A native of moist places; Bowerng in. the ny and cold seasons. ‘Seen vaste near thie beet paleo erect ; the erect stipiart hidanihclere: four-sided, smooth, and coloured ; from six toeight inches high. , Leaves opposite, sessile, Salita smooth, en- tire. Flowers axillary, solitary, sessile. | Bractes two, lan- ceolate, pressing the calyx laterally... Calya ten-toothed, al- ternately smaller and inflected, Corol, petals five, very mi- nute, . Stamens five. smaller. A A slime braneby. it ‘iStencion’ in A, pentandra, Leaves opposite, sessile, alah : formed; smooth, entire. Flowers axillary, solitary, sessile. A28 -TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Trapa, T RAPA. Rater. ete N. 208. . Calyx four-parted, or four-leaved. Corol fort petalled.” Germ inferior, two-celled ; cells from one to two-seeded ; at- tachment of the ovulum emeitil Nut turbinate, armed with two or four horns, (which were the leaflets of the calyx.) Embryo simple, lodged in the apex of the ample perisperm. 1. T. bicornis, Nuts with two, opposite, recurved, — obitiice homs. 2 Chins Lin ko, A native of China, where it is carefully | jultinntedi in agua ponds and other receptacles of water. | 2. T. bispinosa, R. a , Nut with two opposite, araight) nati, spinous Jeni Neciary cup-shaped, curled. | sy es satel Shringaia, Asiat. Res, vol. iii, p. 253, Sans. Sringata, Julukuntuka, Beng. Panee-phul. Singhara. et » Panover-tsjerana, Rheed. Hort. Mal. vol. xi. p. 64. t. 33. (evidently intended for this plant, and not T. natans.) Found floating on sweet, standing water in Bengal and many sthat | _— of India. Flowering time the rainy season, | . Root consisting of numerous, simple, capillary Gbnes: which : eteciienabed under margins of the bipnaeiciensal sfenstedlic en leaves, Stems stoloniferous, often several feet long, float- _ ing. Leaves petioled, alternate, approximate round thas; apex of the shoots, of a rhomboidal-reniform shape ; with the posterior margins entire, and. the anterior ones serrate den-_ tate, smooth above, of a deep green, villous and purple un-_ derneath ; from three to four inches broad, and nearly as longs — Petioles, villous, lengthenidg with the age of the leaves, to- wards the apex: much smaller; this part contains many inflat= . ed ve scicles, sage Sites iin vines ‘buoyant, ae Trapa, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 429 and caducous, the inferior pair at first simple and. filiform; ; ,but becoming ramous by age, permanent, . r Peduncles axillary, solitary, shorter than the petioles, o one- flowered, incurved until the blossoms begin to decay, after which they bend down under the surface of the water, where. the fruit grows, and comes to maturity. Flowers pure white, expanding above the surface of the water late in the afternoon, | Calyx four-leaved, in opposite pairs, leaflets lanceolate, villous, one of the pairs permanent.’ Coro/ contracted. | Petals four, contracted into a tube at the base by the firmness of the calyx, above much broader, and expanding ; margins much curl- ed. Neetary cup-shaped, on the top of the germ, round the swelled base of the style, eight-grooved, with the margins! minutely lacerate, and curled. Filaments four, incurved. _Anihers oval, incumbent. Germ inferior, obconical, two- celled, with one ovulum in each attached’ tothe top of the partition. Mut inferior, of a turbinate triangular shape, a hard ligneous texture, and a blackish brown colour, armed with two, strong, straight, conic, barbed spines, from the up- per angles ; elegantly embossed, one-celled, not opening, but having a perforation in the top for the embryo to pass, which is guarded with a circle of stiff converging bristles from its margin, forming’ a conical roof over the aperture. Seed single, conform to the nut, Jntegument single, of a slightly brown colour, thin, but rather tough, and adhering’ firmly to the perisperm. Perisperm conform to the seed, white and of # firm cartilaginous texture. Embryo in the apex of the ee risperm. Obs, This is evidently a species perfectly distinet from nae tans, and bicornis, From the former it differs in having only” two horns, and from eit Tatter'i in noes Dae aight, ve~ ry sharp, and barbed. byes eae 2 i ae coniage The nuts are sold in sais tininiiakcietlee in season, thet ker rete i= psteeme ade tanaragl es 2 eae Pee Fi - 4 7 ; ne Ss EE ies 2 : ae s¥Gah ‘ ' : ae Ret Be 430 ‘TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Pothos, “3. T. quadrispinosa, R. Nut — two ppostte — of straight, acute, aan, horns, © Fe “A native of Silhet, where it is found floating on lakes, and” pools of fresh water ; its kernels are also esculent. POTHOS. Schreb. gen. N. 210. - Spathe sub-cylindric, Spadix covered with florets, Calyx none, or four-petalled. Coro/ none. Stamina indefinite. Germ one-celled, from one to three-seeded ; attachment of the ovula inferior (in heterophylla superior.) Berry one-celled, rarely ‘many-seeded.. Embryo uncinate, without perisperm. — 1, P. scandens, Linn, sp, pl. ed. Witla. i 1,.684, ~: Parasitic, rooting. Petioles as broad as the lanceolar leaves. Flowers axillary. Spadix gobular, reflex. _ Ana-Parua. Rieed. Hort. Mal. vii. p. 75. t. 40. ? _ Adpendix duplo folio, Rumph. Amb, v. 490. t.. 184. f. 2. j _A native of Chittagong, Malabar, and of Amboyna, and. other eastern. Islands. .Flowering time in the former cognii the month of April. pea - Stems.as thick as.a slender ratan, often ramous, saotingiancll trees in the most. shady forests, round, smooth, and less suc- _ culent than any other species which I have yet met with, ex- cept P. gracilis, Leaves alternate, petioled, lanceolate, entire, smooth ; length from two. to. four inches, breadth: about .an, inch. Petioles most amply winged, so as to be nearly as broad. as the leaves themselves, almost as long,equally entire,smooth, and marked: with similar veins, Peduncles axillary, solitary, clothed with many small, ovate, bractiform scales up tothe — spathe, where they are completely recurved. Spathe boat- _ shaped, erect. Spadizx globular, -reflex.: Calyx, or corol, ‘some roundish scales. mixed amongst. the germs, and of near-— ee 3 enon — the exactriumber voce not escer a Pothos.. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 431, with two polleniferous pits on the inside esd the retuse apex. _ Germs many, oblong, one-celled, with one, two, or three ovula “attached to the bottom of the cell, and immersed. in a clear. gelatinous liquid, Style none. Stigma, an umblicated ele- - vation on the apex of each germ... Berries oblong, size of a French bean, red, pulpy, one-seeded. . Seed solitary, or two, —- to the berry. | Qs P, ‘Sicinalias R, »Perennial; parasitic. Stems rooting. Leaves et Rhee cor- date, entire. Flowers terminal ; florets naked, octandrous, Berries one-seeded, Sans, Guja-pippulee, Kuri- pippeles; Kupi-vullee, Kalin vullee, Shreyusee, Vushira, Beng. Guj-pippul. A native of Bengal, and common in some’parts of the Mid. napore district, where it is cultivated for its fruit, which, cut. into transverse pieces and dried, is an article of some impor- tance in the Hindoo materia medica, called Guj-pippul, and sold by the druggists under that name. . Flowering time the. a season ; seed ripe in January. Siem perennial, creeping up to the top of large trees, sh ‘ig the: Ivy, taking firm hold with. its inmsshietalolas roots ; about as thick as the little finger, smooth, except the cica= trices-of the fallen leaves, and the roots from the side next: the tree which supports it. Leaves alternate, sub-bifarious, petioled, oblong-cordate, entire, filiform, pointed, smooth on: both sides; from six to ten inches lorig, and from three to six. broad. -Petioles sheathing, eemate’ sinooth, shorter, than the leaves. ..Peduncles. terminal, solitary, round, ‘smooth, scarcely half the length of the petioles; when in flower erect, but often drooping, from the increasing weight of the fruit. Spathe sub-cylindric, opening a little on one side; when in flower, smooth on. both sides; greenish without, and ofa pale yellow colour within, apex filiform, and a little twisted ; - length about six inches. Spadix sub-cylindric, obtuse, equals —_ eee ty ae lt TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Pothos. ing the spathe; colour a pale greenish yellow, dotted with the dark-coloured stigmas of the numerous fructification which ‘every where covered it. Perianth none. | Coro none. Filaments ; 1 conclude there are about eight to each germs two on each face; but the want of both perianth and corol, renders it difficult to assion the exact number of stamens to each floret, they are very short, and seem inserted on the base of the germ. Avnihers sub-sagjttate, four-lobed. Germ ‘nu- merous, parallelopiped, truncate, vertically attached to, and — completely covering every part of the common cylindric ‘re- ceptacle, one-celled, with one seed attached in .an oblique manner to the bottom of the cell. The substance of the germ is replete with rigid, sharp; vertical bristles, which are readi- ly detached, and stick in the skin, causing pain and itching. The virtue of the drug may reside in these, as it does in the short stiff hairs of the legumes of Carpopogon pruriens.. Style none, Stigma, a channel filled with gelatinous matter;:run+ ning from the cell of the germ to the centre of the trunicate apex, Where it ends ina snail slit, embraced by two darker- coloured, somewhat callous lips, Pericarps (capsule circum= scisse@ ), as numerous as the germs, and of the same*form, only larger; ‘a few only are fertile, of a soft fleshy texture, one-celled, oneévalved ; when the fruit is ripe they detach themselves from the receptacle, and drop off, leaving the sealt behind still attached to it, Seed single, ovate-cordate,some- what two lobed, covered at the base with a thin, red, succu- lent aril. Intequments two, exclusive of mene aeetiaigett yellow, polished, thin, hard, and elastic; inner’ ous. Perisperm none. Embryo uncinate, white, very suceu- lent. Radicle inferior, thickened, and in other respects ex- actly as in Geertner’s figures of a ss ited il, P- 23. t, 84." , bie ats ae Obs. The plant desetibed by Sir William Jones pn nam “oti and (See Asiatic Researches, volt iv: sec gars | Pothos. - TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. A433 plant, but as he mentions that Valli means a creeper, hae: pects in some degree, the accuracy of his information, _ Chavica, or Chavya mentioned under. the same head i is a new ngriee of Rips 3 P; Po R. . - Perennial, aii rooting on nag Leaves long-pe- tioled, oblong, acuminate, Flowers sub-terminal ; florets ape- talous, tetrandrous, . Peeplee of the Hindoos of the Silhet district, where the plant grows. Flowering time, April and May. Stem rooting on trees, like the common Ivy of Europe, scarcely so thick as the little finger, round and smooth, some- what contracted between the leaves, Leaves petioled, alter- nate, oblong, entire, smooth on both sides, dagger-pointed ; length from four to twelve inches, Petioles as long as the leaves, channelled, smooth. Peduncles sub-terminal, round, smooth, the base inserted in sheaths from three to four inches long. | Spathe sub-cylindric, opening on one side, smooth, acute; length of the spadix. Spadizx cylindric, obtuse, length of the. inside of the spathe ; colour pale yellow, every part completely covered with the fructification, without any pro- per perianth, or corolla, Filaments about four to each germ, and about half its length. Anthers linear. Germs numerous, of a square, wedge shape, truncate, the whole of their sub- stance replete with small pellucid, sharp bristles, which readi- ly enter the skin, and produce pain and itching. Style none. atom sub-rotund, cae P. cane R. bias = _ Scandent,, Leaves inal Soetiape short, ates pot ad ei their sheaths, Spadix Renee cy lindre, poanvely equalling its linguiform spathe, A native of Amboyna; it pate a eee mieitlance to ER Adpendix atone Hort, Amb. vol, y, t, 181. ty I, Bb ASA “‘TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA. *Pothos. Peretifiat Stenis rooting. | Leaves’ oblong, entire.” ee ers axillary ; florets naked, heptandrous, This is the stoutest of these parasitic Jroidee that I have met with. It is a native of Prince of Wales’ Island ; from thence introduced into the Botanic garden by Mr. W, Rox- burgh. Flowering time in Bengal the close of the rains in October. It has not yet prod wool ripe seed there, | | Stems perennial, creeping on the ground, or upon trees and plants; ina very thriving state, of six years’ growth, not more than three and four feet long, and about four iches in circumference, round, and strongly marked with the circular sears of the fallen leaves. Leaves alternate; sub-bifarious, petioled, approximate, oblong, cordate, entire, smooth; length from one to two feet high, and about two-thirds thereof in breadth. Petioles as long as the leaves, channelled, smooth, much eularged at the base, and stem- clasping.’ “ Peduncles axillary, solitary, very short. ‘Style sub-cylindric, short- pointed, opening a little on one side about the time that the _ anthers discharge their pollen, smooth on both sides, of a dir- ty dull purple colour, length about six inches. Spadix cy- lindric, length of the spathes obtuse, every part most closely covered with the sessile fructitications ; colour a pale lively yellow, beautifully dotted with the dark linear stigmas. Fi- laments about seven to each germ, short, broad, and ‘thin. Anthers two-lobed. Germs very numerous, er, , much flattened, vértically one-celled, with ge ly two Weiilas obliquely attached to the-bottoin of thé cell. Style none. Stigma a vertical, linear, grooved, dark- colour- ed projection on the middle of the truncate germ, as in the last Species ; the substance of the germ and apathe also abound in short stiff bristles, which Hensal enter the ie causing pain eine a = and coral te sili eae 1B aw ie bet 3 Pothos. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNITA, "ABS ~ perforated on one side, and pinnatifid on the other... Corodlets apetalous, tetrandrous, _ Anthers two-lobeds) | 65) 7 Elettadi-Maravara. | Rheed. dort: Mel. xii. ips Al. 20 and 21. gD JA very large ‘saciid ah iparebitieal conten so walbiok like Dracontium pertusum, that they may be readily taken for the same plant., It is a native of the mountainous parts of the coast of Coromandel; running up, and over the highest - trees, to which it adheres like vy by roots issuing from the joints. Leaves sdineisins petiole, cordate, smooth, atiteblyip per- forated with linear oblong holes on one side, and on the other passing through the margins as in the pinnatifid leaves; their Jength from twelve to eighteen inches long. Petioles nearly _ as long as the leayes, deeply channelled, wanting the stipule- like processes at the apex, which Miller’s figure represents, in which particular this plant differs from that iin the first in- stance. Scape short. Spathe gibbous, pointed, little longer than the spadix, cylindric, obtuse, every where covered with the fructifications. Corol none. Filaments intermixed amongst the.germs, (the number to each germ cannot be’ determined, but..1 think about four,) compressed ; apex bifid. | Anthers oval, two to each filament. Pisti/s mixed with the membra- naceous filaments, foar-sided, lobed; Style none, Stigma, a gage abn io oiecli-essal t5l : 3 ayyt Ms P, pinnata, Sinn: sp. ph od Willd. i. 636, aaotititia ala aceniaies rovting on trees, the apices of, the shoot steed with fibres. Leaves pinnatifid, Flowers terminal. | Adpendix estonia teens baitens Amb., We: M8916. 180, wi fi2. 46 C2 DH Ore 1s eis PEA SF > bet: els Be! 0 PETE © Found i ‘in forests in. the. ort a tumning over treas'of great size,’ It is readily distinguished from my decursiva, by the abundance of brown fibres which are found on the young: or and the: lomreipestintobe petioles. . 1 PES GRIF BT OF Heo Ty cole Bb2 436 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Pothos, 8. P. caudata. R. paths; name * Sonuedadh rooting. | rae Rea sitet eenitionis and pendulous, Leaves ovate-cordate, from entire to’ — tifid ; segments sub-ensiform, one-nerved, SEs hi Bieont Prince of Wales’ Island slips were brought to the — Botanic garden at Calcutta, in 1797; and now, 1812, it is one of the most common and most extensive climbers; but ~ has not as yet blossomed in the garden, The long flagelliform ‘pendulous extremities of its shoots readily distinguish it.from every other species I have seen; the leaves also are oftener ae mantienrinieh bios bslotiog otainotic cages. | "aie + (iG ; / naenirytchcs 2 beri dyad 9. Ps clanbdedioonsh Re» peuHy ; Perennial; rooting on trees, wisi ‘enna teh aileky pinnate; segments mone; rts eis Flowers daveral, or axillary, loug-peduncled. © ys oil de eseasac tg. iaulil « Gaj-pippul is the vehiidilend ‘name of shiacneshsidanys, powerful species, in the Silhet district, NNER nase geo and blossoms during the hot season, - 5 Stems as thick as a stout cane, rooting .on, ae ameiiiae trees like the common /vy; round, snioouls and rather: con- tracted. between the leaves, | Leaves approximate, :alteruate, petioled, pimnatifid, or completely pinnate ; from two to'six, or seven feet long, including the petioles ; segments, or leat- lets, linear-falcate, cuspidate, entire, smooth,'sometimes from three to four-nerved or triple-nerved; length from six. to eighteen inches, and two broad, . Petioles from-six inches, ‘to tliree feet long; round, smooth, stem-clasping, and the low- er portion more deeply channelled, Peduncles solitary, axil- _ lary or lateral, about six inches long, substantially thick, round, smooth, and replete with the same white bristly spi- cula that are found iu the germ and seed vessels... Spathe sub- cylindric, length of the peduncle. Spadix cylindric, length ‘of ‘the: uapete; ‘completely covered with: the imumerable “fructifications, eae mee ee : eae Pothos, | ETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 437 length. | Anthers cordate, appearing beyond the germ,. Germs numerous, the most general form a four-sided wedge, apex truncate. Style, scarcely any. . Stigma, an elevated. SR oblong ee ere tere 90 LAN “10: P. pinnatifida, Re | _ Perennial, rooting on trees. dan pinnatifid 5 oaaaie : elie, one-nerved, _ Anative of-Sumatra; from thence brought into the Bo- tanic garden at Calcutta, where it grows freely on the trunks _of trees, to which its lateral roots adhere most firmly, the ori- - ginal one being still in the ground, where first planted, _Al- though some of the plants are six or seven years old ‘-— about. ee feet high, they have not bes blossomed, . Sa | sae Bike H. P. aie ophylla, R, : »Caulescent, creeping, armed, Leaves from eS aa tate.to pinnatifid. | Spathe erect, spiral, many times longer. than the short. ideas tg _— _Florets ses sae te- trandrousiiys 20! $55) 150 Aled Can inde Dracontiian’ pinata; wan Zeyl 9289 py _»A’nativeof Bengal, delighting in a rich, moist soil; it flowers, though rarely, during the cool season... 5. Root fibrous. Stems and branches creeping, armed. ith, short, sharp prickles, Leaves until the plantsiare old, and begin to flower, simple-sagitiate, and cordate-sagittate, after- wards pinnatifid, with long lanceolar, acuminate segments, smooth above, nerve and larger veins armed on the under side; from six to fourteen or sixteen inches long. Petioles coanipletely- armed ; base sheathing ;_ above round, generally shorter than the leaves. Scapes axillary, solitary, one-flower- ed, length of the petioles, and armed like them, | Spathe sub-eylindric, acute, spirally twisted above the spadix.; co- lour a.dark dall reddish purple ; length fromeight to twelve inches long, and as thick as the little finger, opening at the base only where the spadix is lodged while the. naniie Bb3 438° rn MONOGYNIA, Chloranthus, charging, after which it shuts, as before that period. ..Spa- dix cylindric, obtuse, completely covered with hermaphro-) dite florets; length little more than one inch. Calyx none, Petals four, obovate, concave. Filaments four, broad; length of the petals, Anthers two-lobed. Germ oblong, one-celled, containing one ovula attached to the top of the’ — se none. Stigma glandular, flat, 12. P. Lasia, R. Armed, Leaves radical, pinnatifid, Spathe + very long, and twisted above the spadix. Berries one-seeded, muricate. ~ Lasia aculeata, Lourier, Cochin sr ed. Willd, i, 1038. - Teling. Moola-sari, Beng, Kanta-kutchoo, | | A native of boggy, or wet places “~ ord Crear moun- tains, ' Leaves radical, petioled, pinsctilld 3 ilies whale, smooth, shining, the nerves on the under side armed with prickles; length, about two feet, breadth about a foot and half. Petioles erect, from two to four feet long, round, every’ where thickly armed with sharp prickles, Scape the length of the petioles, round, and equally covered with prickles. Spathe very long, erect, below gaping; above the spadix _ twisted, leathery, dull red colour, Spadix about one-sixth of the length of the spathe, cylindric, every where covered. with e fr eeeasiaatoin shee i ep op ager tec oed: Wee eon CHLORANTHUS, Sehreb. gen. Np 1780s; sorts “Calyx none, » Corol; a three-lobed, unilateral anette ous petal on the outside of the pistillum, Germ semi-superunt sia Pi ARE IR MO Dra ’ one ispicuns, bin spec! plant, Wi 6885 a? Eleagnus. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, -_ 439. _Tcheu-lan, of the Chinese. ie _From,Canton it lias-been received. into the Tite ‘garden, at Calcutta, where it grows.freely to bea small upright shrab, with many straight sub-simple smooth branches, of about two feet, in height, with oblong opposite serrulate smooth leaves, Flowering time, in Bengal the rainy season. It has not yet ripened its seeds there, | ee ELZEAGNUS. Schreb. gen. N. 213. Corol none,. Calyx gibbous, border four-parted... Germ one-celled, one-seeded ; attachment of the ovulum inferior. Drupe inferior, one-seeded. Embryo erect, without peris- perm * 5 Eg, iviflara, R. Shrubby, scandent, armed. Leaves oblong, o obtuse, scaly, Flowers axillary, three-fold, peduncled. Re _Eleagnus foliis oblongis: acuminatis maculatis, Burm. Zeyl. ps 2.8. Bf Aes _ A native of Sumatra, from. thence introduced into the He. tanie garden in 1804, where it blossoms in December. Seeds ripen three or four months afterwards, Stems and branches of considerable size, and pe part 9 climbing., Bark of the ligneous parts a beautiful dark pur- plish colour, and smooth, The short lateral branchlets which. issue from the young climbing shoots are more or less recur-_ vate and answer the end of tendrils; when old, they become — stout thorns, Bark of the tender part most beautifully clothed with ppc tamcioant stellate. scales, Le alternate, short-petiole three-fold, small, ser ] Pedunclés Geaerl than the Ri one- flowered. . Calyx, with a short, four-sided 1 tube ; and. poder BbA * 440 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Eleagnus, of four cordate segments, on the outside a little scaly ; on the inside smooth, Filaments none. Anthers four, sessile in the mouth of the tube of the calyx. Germ superior, oblong, em- braced by the contracted bottom of the calyx, one-celled, one-seeded. Style as long as the calyx. Stigma oblong, glandular, oblique. Berry oblong, succulent, when ripe pale orange colour, pulp soft, of rather a pleasant astringent taste, and not acid like E. conferta; one-seeded. Seed sub- clavate. Inteyuments two, exterior eight-ribbed, soft, and lined with much wool; inner membranaceous, Perisperm none. Embryo erect. Co okfledlbils conform to the seed, amyg- daline. _Phumula two-lobed. Radicle oval, inferior. 2. E. conferta, R. ‘ Shrubby, scandent, Leaves alternate, oblong-pointed, co- vered with silver-coloured scales underneath, Flowers et lary, crowded, short-peduncled. - ; __ Beng. Guara. "This is a very large and ramous, scandent shrub; a native of the mountains near Silhet, in Bengal. Floweritig ina the cold season. Seed ripe in March, ~ Young shoots covered with innumerable ist scales. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, generally erect, oblong- pointed, entire, with innumerable small silver coloured scales, particularly underneath, which gives ‘them a bright colour ; ‘fre ree to four inches Jong, and from one and half to two bi 0% ad. Petioles short, sealy. © ne cillary, wine gibbous, fal etded? butsidé Lily’ prrege of four cor- date segments ; its or marked on the inside with four curved lines; on their pointed junctures the ‘filaments sit. Style hairy. Drupes oblong, succulent, when ripe red. ~~ Obs. The calyx of my plant’ cannot be said to be pila on ‘th germ ; ‘it has, as it were a lower tube which envelopes the i) y y, th is ea grows with the fratt and finally ect | ar Cansjera. TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 44) 8. E. arborea, R. Arboreous. Branchlets often spinous, neAe ors long and broad-lanceolate, entire, silvery underneath. Flow- ers in axillary fascicles, Fruit cylindrically oblong. Alarge tree, native of the Garrow Hills, and there called Sheu-Shong. Flowering time December, The fruit shaped like an olive, but much larger; it is eaten by the natives when ripe, which it is generally in March and April. CANSJERA. Juss. gen. ed. Ust. 85. Calyzx large, gibbous, four-toothed. Corol none. Nectary four-petalled, embracing the germ, and of the same i Berry superior, one-seeded. ¥ » 1, C. scandens. Roxb. Corom. ii. N. 103. eet ol ogi Shrubby, scandent. Leaves alternate, Spikes axillary. Scheru-valli caniram. Rheed. Mal. vii. p. 7. t. 4. i agora caniram, ibid, p. Bite 2: ener to be the same plant. — Ma ae! anges woody ctinbing shrub a native of the Circar mountains, © _ Leaves. niente seis tones, Resin, Leeadiibeaal late, smooth, entire, about three inches long, and one broad. Spikes axillary, generally single, short, every where covered with flowers, Bractes solitary, small, oval, one-flowered, Flowers small, sessile, yellow. Calyx inferior, one-leaved, -gibbous; mouth four-toothed. Corol none, except the calyx, or nectary be accounted one, Nectary four-leaved 3 leafleis cordate, acute, half the length of the calyx, inserted round the base of the germ and embracing it. Filaments four, , ins serted into the base of the calyx, and rather shorter than it. ‘Anthe ry OV vula within the calyx. Berry oblong, smooth, red, ine ie oe iee-oele: _—* vis like the berry. | Bi .seete ss, 2:93 5er8 ee i a ‘ 442 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Santalums. SANTALUM. Schreb. gen. LX. 215. Calyx semi-supera, campanulate, four-cleft. Corol_none.. Nectarial scales four, alternate with the stamina, Germ one- celled, one-seeded, attachment inferior, Berry one-seeded, | Tanhes} inverse, and furnished with a perisperm, .. 1.8. ‘alison! Linn, sp. Ai ed. Wiild, i. 691. , . Leaves oblong. ‘Sandalum album, Rumph. Amb. ii. 42. t. 11. Chandana. Asiatic Researches, vol, iv. p. 253. Santalum verum. Linn. Mat. Med. 102. 7 Sans. Gundhasaru, ns acauecahin Chunduna. re Beng. Chundan. = Lets Pers. Sundul-sufed. Sandal-wood, Buchanan’s Fommnaysi i. 186, and 202. ii. 117, 132, and 536. ii. 192. i= A native of the mountainous sibs of eee im ee Malabar, That of Timor, and the neighbouring Islands i is most. proba- bly the same species. In the Botanic garden near Calcutta, | the trees reared from seeds brought from the former country, _ thrive luxuriantly, and produce flowers and ripe seed nearly the whole year round... ; - Trunk in trees of twelve years’ 5 caamtha in de alias gare den, only a few. feet high, when. they divide into branches; ; and there from two and a half to three, feet i in cireumfer CLe Bark. brownish, and. scabrous, with longitudinal 4 Branches numerous, dividing much, spreadin and rising in every direction, forming nearly a spherical head, . Young shoots round and smooth; extreme. height . of our la est. twelve or thirteen years old trees, about twenty-five. feet. Leaves Se casiai pai ann rey ay obtuse, 7s Santalum, TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 4430 lower pair of each thyrsus generally three-flowered. Flow- ers numerous, small, when they first expand straw-coloured, changing ‘to a deep ferruginous purple, inodorous, as are all the exterior parts of the growing plant, even when bruised. Calyx one-leaved, campanulate; border four-parted ; seg- ments ovate, smooth, base of the bell only permanent, Corol_ none, except the ealyx, or nectarial glands are so called, Nectary of four, roundish, sessile; thick, fleshy glands, on the mouth of the bell of the calyx, alternate with the segments. of its border, and when the flower first. expands, the most coloured. part, entire.. In Siriwm (now Santalum) myrtifoli- um, they are lobate. Filaments four, alternate with the nee- tarial scales, and of the same length, smooth, but behind each there rises a tuft of white hairs from the disk of the segments of the calyx, perfectly distinct from the stamina, but-of the same length, the ends of these long, white, woolly hairs ad- here to the back of the small, two-lobed anthers. Germsemi- superum, one-celled, containing one conical. seed, attached to the bottom of the cell. . Style, length of the tube of the ea- lyx, Stigma three-neryed, four-lobed. Berry pyrenous, round, smooth, when ripe black, and succulent, size of a cher-~ ry, and crowned with the remaining calyx, one-celled. Nut solitary, spherical; three small, equi-distant elevations from the apex run a little way down the sides. Seed conform to the nut. Jntequment single, soft, white, spongy, lining the nut, and adhering to it and the seed also. Perisperm con- form to the seed, white, amygdaline, Embryo inverse, subu-. late, nearly as long asthe vertical diameter of the perisperm, Catiyledens ome, mupnalslinest lanceolate, shemale mt ite, Obs. The deseriptions and original figures ofthe f fc taken from the plants which grow wild, fa he “oui ‘of the Raje ri Cirear, on the coast of Coromandel, where the trees are but of a smalbsize, scarcely more than a — shrub, or bush, with lanceolate leaves; and the wood 444 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNITA, Santalum, of little value. It is now nearly twenty years since that des cription, and the drawings were made, and I have reason to” * think the tree which produces the sandal wood of Malabar,*> and Timor, to be different, and having had an opportunity of _ cultivating the former, viz. that of the Malabar mountains, in the Botanic garden for these thirteen years past, I do not’ he- sitate to say, that the Circar tree is at least’ astrongly marked variety of the Malabar sort. For that reason I have thought it advisable to give the foregoing full description, of the true sandal wood, which I hope will tend to clear up the botanical history of this celebrated tree, and its associate’ Sirtum myrtifolium, They evidently belong to one genus, to which 1 have thought it necessary to assign a new essential character, and wilebhier’t consider them to-be distinct species _ of that genus, or varieties of one species, must be of very little piteiidnse! For my own part I think it nearer the'truth to consider them distinct species. — 1 therefore out the narrow- leaved one Santalum myrtifolium. ' el ee The nature and history of the wood, white and yellow: Saunders or Sandal, are now too well known to require any ae. in addition rent me. ie . 2.8. my yrtif oli. R. Leaves opposite, lanceolate, | euteiae - Sirtum myrtifolium, Roxb. Corom. pl. i, N. 2. Wi lds A native of the Circar mountains, where it i ut ofa nal size, and the wood of little or no values © © 0 Leaves opposite, short-petioled, spreading, iene “en tire, waved, smooth, shining ; about two inches long, and three-fourths of an inch broad, Stipules none. Racemes thyr-_ siform, terntinal, compound, small, erect. Flowers small, red- — Caly ye ioe a Tube short, a little oo, percep WiC Pedigge igs o4 inca inmerer the ther Ilands therein, ese he Gyrocarpus. _ TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA, A445 four-cleft ; divisions ovate, expanding, coloured, © Corol no * other than the above, except the nectary be such, Neetary four-leaved, obcordate, notched, inserted into the mouth of the calyx. Filaments four, short, hairy, inserted into the calyx, alternate with the leaflets of the nectary.. Germ globular. Style length of the tube... Stigma four-lobed. Berry globu- —— of a large pea, smooth, juicy, black, when ripe one- seeded. Obs, Birds. sronity eat tthe berries, by which means it is propagated extensively. I do not know that the wood of this small tree is ever used as a perfume. x, | GYROCARPUS. Jacg. Gert. ee biolye superior, four-leaved, unequal... Corol none. ae tary of four clavate glands, alternate with the stamina. Berry dry, one-seeded, ending in two ak ae “salina shades ely rolled uP ; no PATER mons ’ fseglio ‘a shag rok. G. PI Roxb. cm, ak i. ™. i. Polygamous. Panicles dichotomous, Gyrocarpus asiaticus. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, iv. p. 982. _ Teling. Tanukoo.. e Grows to be a very tes tree, is chiefly a native of the mountainous parts of the coast of Coromandel. Leaves deci- uous about the end of the wet season. | Flowers during the -cold season when the trees are naked ; the leaves come out soon after. pie) Trunk generally erect. Bark smooth, alien h-co. ation Branches thin, irregularly spreading in every. di- * rection. . Leaves! apne about the extremities of the — ed, broad-cordate, three-nerved, often slight- Fie lobed, above cada ilo downy, with two pits on the upper side of the base ; length and breadth various, but in general about five or six inches each way. Petioles round, 437} . (AAG TETRANDRIA DIGYNIA. - Cuscuta, ‘downy, three inches long.’ Panicles terminal, umbel-like; di- visions two-forked. Flowers very small, yellow. =» HERMAPHRODITE FLowers solitary, sessile in the divi- sions of the panicle. | Ca/ya superior, four-leaved; leaflets unequal ; exterior pair small, oval, bractiform, caducous; i- terior pair large, wedge-shaped, three-toothed, permanent, in- creasing in size with the pericarp into two long, membranace- — ous wings. Corol none. Nectary consisting of four clavate, yellow glands, Filaments four, longer than the calyx, imsert-_ ed alternately with the nectarial glands into ‘a perforated re- ceptacle. Anthers quadrangular, opening on each side with an oval lid. Germ inferior, ovate. Style none. Stigma small, immersed in the perforation of the receptacle of the filament and nectarial glands. Capsule globular, wrinkled, one-celled, one-valved, not opening spontaneously, size of a cherry, end- ing in two long, obtuse, hsirecolats; eveceaperseiued —— Seed one. © AE AY Obs. The wood of this tree which is white inde veld light, is employed to make Catamarans (floats), when to be had, in preference to any other. TETRANDRIA DIGYNIA. ee Liga CUSCUTA. Schreb. “gen N22." oe _ aly four or Sxe-lenvet or parted. rt oe ple. yess, superior, Wecdiak dreamatate aalbe gs rolled round the perisperm, with an inferior radicle. 1..C. iin Roxb. Corde pli il. sah 104. J E siete ‘ _ Parasitical; flowers racemed, pentandrous, ‘Seales of the wots bearded. Capsuies four-seeded, ro Cuscuta, TETRANDRIA DIGYNIA, | 447 season, Stems or branches filiform, succulent, twining, very ramous, leafless, smooth, yellow. Racemes numerous, Flow- ers white, short-pedicelted. Calyx five-leaved ; leaflets cor- date, permanent. Corol ; tube cylindric ; mouth five-part- ed ; division reflexed. Neciary of five scales, which surround the germ, and are inserted into the bottom of the tube. F%- laments five, very short. Anthers oval, appearing half above the mouth of the tube. Style scarcely any. i two, large, fleshy, expanding, pointed. 2. C. aggregata, R. Head round, sessile, composed of ten or twelve perfectly sessile, aggregate, pentandrous flowers. | ~ Accidentally introduced into the Botanic garden amongst flax seed from Bagdad. When the faz plants were a few inches high, this little delicate, leafless, filiform, round, yel- low parasite began to make its appearance, adhering i in such quantities to their stems and’ leaves, as to sete -uapapene ina very short — of time. | | 8. C. suleata, R, nia | -Peduncles im fascicles, each Sting a few pentandrous, sessile flowers, with a fleshy furrowed calyx. Capsule two- seeded, surrounded by the deeply grooved calyx. _ A native of Bengal, appears adhering to Amaranthus ole- raceus, and some other plants, during the cool season. Is a plant of small size, of a pale yellow colour eaters pee fectly smooth, — , ce Peduncles generally collected in small, remote fascicles of _ two, three, four, or more, each supporting from two to four, small, ‘sessile, white mares acme ane oviths Wee six’ to pin Jeigth eee edi of hs cove. Corol; tube short, Border five-cleft; divisions oval, obtuse, reflexed. Nectarial scales five, below the insertion of the filaments, divided nearly to the base, into many, fine, filiform * 448 TETRANDRIA DIGYNIA, Coldenia, segments. Filaments five, inserted a little below the fissures of the corol, Germ round. Styles two, Stigma headed. Capsules two-celled, Seeds solitary, a: C. capitata, R. : Heads round, sessile, bracted, with from ten to twenty pen- tandrous flowers. Calyx and corol papillose, pellucid and white, 7 Hind, and Beng. Algusi. A most beautiful, small parasite, found in great Mhatlddoce growing on the lower part of the stems of Crotolaria ik ig during the month of February and March, Siems numerous, filiform, smooth, except at the parts where it grows to the stalks of its supporter, there tuberculate ; ex- tent from one to two feet high; colour pale yellow. Leaves none. Flowers from ten to twenty, forming most beautiful, round, sessile, white, pellucid heads. Bractes asingle one un- der each head, which is white, membranaceous, and oblong, Calyx and corol five-cleft, swelled with pellucid cells, like the Ice-plant. _Nectarial scales reniform, ciliate. Stamens five, Germ two-celled,with two seeds in each, attached to the - tom of the cells. Styles two, Stigma simple. COLDENIA. Schreb. gem NY. 233, Ge By! * | pi inverse, and furnished witha Tg 1. C. procumbens. Linn, sp. pl. ed. Willd, Rey fp Ae Da _. Asmall annual, spreading flat on the ground, and in | gene- ral very common on dry rice-fields during the cold. seasons _-but never to be seen Figen the bepipaieg pf the agent they are prety over, e Brucea, . TETRANDRIA TETRAGYNIA. 449 TETRANDRIA TETRAGYNIA. BRUCEA. Schreb. gen. N. 1508.0 8 Calyx four-parted. Petals four, Germs four, one-seeded, attachment inferior, Berries four, superior, one-seeded. Embryo i inverse, with scarcely any. perisperm. sonetnes 3 a fifth part is added, ny 1. B. sumatrana, R. : ; Shrubby. Leaflets serrate, acemes axillary, generally compound, _ Lussa-Radja. Rumph. Amb, Auctuar, 27. t. 15. _ Mal, Ampadoo-Barrowing. A native of Sumatra. From thence Mr, Ewer sent the _were s about four feet high with a ny be i 0 few branches, They then began to flower in May, and con- tinued to blossom and ripen 1 their seed all the: FEAR. _ Leaves. scattered, unequally-pinnate, { from. twelve to eigh- teen_inches long. Leaflets from four to six pair, opposite, short- petioled,. obliquely. oyate-lanceolate, grossly and ob- tusely serrate, pointed, villous underneath, from three to six inches long, very bitter, and somewhat foetid. Petioles com- _ mon, round, and villous. Stipules none. Racemes axillary, solitary, from one to six, or eight inches long, somewhat com- pound, dark purple, and clothed with a few white hairs, Flowers numerous, yery minute, dark purple, and in all the Sumatra plants completely hermaphrodite. Bractes subu- * Tate, hairy, very | opal, and caducous, Calyx four-leaved, - matted” “8 nall, ovate lanceolate, | dark purple, and hairy on Pe bait.” Nectary a dark purple, four-lobed, fleshy cap surrounding the inser- tion of the germs, Filaments four, short, purple, inserted un- VOL, 1. oe * 450 TETRANDRIA TETRAGYNIA. Myriophyllum. der the margin of the nectary. Anthers oval, large, and deep purple till they discharge their pollen. Germs four, su- perior, one-celled, with one ovulum in each attached to the - upper and inner side of the cell. Styles single, short, recury- ed,one to each germ. Stigmas simple. Drupes four, when all come to maturity, size of a small grain of black pepper, smooth, dark purple, one-celled, ut conform to the drupe, rugose, one-celled, inner edge thinner, and the upper half of it marked with a white line, (the umbilicus). Seed conform to the nut. Integuments single, adhering to the perisperm, thin and white. Perisperm in very small quantity, indeed it may be called a fleshy inner integument. Embryo as long as the perisperm; straight, inverse. Cotyledons oval, fleshy. _ Plumula two-lobed, Radicle roundish, superior. Obs. Since I first described this tree, and only from plants — that were completely hermaphrodite I have found some plants perfectly male, and others as completely female. In this plant, therefore, we have another instance of Trioicous Polygamy. _From the sensible qualities of the green parts of this plant, being somewhat foetid, and simply, though intensely bitter, it ‘promises to be as good an antedystenerical medicine as Bruce’s Abyssinian Wooginos itself. As soon as the plants arrive at greater maturity the bark shall be tried, and com- pared with Angustura bark which has by some been thought that of Brucea antedysenterica of Bruce’s Travels, &c. vol. v. “ owe also of I. ¥F. Miller, Tab. 25. and still better deserib- Pabtned: See.) Neu. 19. e 10. ‘See alo Lim, D. pl. ed Winds Iv. 742, hi MYRIOPHYLLUM. Schreb. gen. N. 1440... Hi Calyx four-parted. Corol four-petalled. ‘Style none,’ Stigma ; acne ne eked: he sat inverse, oe aq x us b rR Bad! sf ea ty! 3 Se pee be | lt hoa ae Ratanegeen TETRANDRIA TETRAGYNIA, | ~A5L 41. M. tetrandrum. R. Esletie verticelled, all filiform-pinnatifid., Wises axill- ary, verticelled, tetrandrous. Calyx four- leaved, | _ Compare with Hottonia sessiliflora. Linn. sp. pl. ed. Willd. 1: Bl Bair: bow ass oth: san J - Teling. oe aa odt grows in. sweet water ; appearing during the rains, . Stems round, articulate, spongy below the water, Tomoth various, above the water from four to six inches, about the thickness of a crow’s quill. Leaves verticelled, pinnatifid, below the water they are much larger, with capillary seg- ments; above the water they are small. Flowers very small, white, verticelled, i, e. one in the axill of each leaf... Calyx, above, four-leaved ; leaflets permanent. Petals es epic: Filaments shorter than the petals. pita e ae 2. M. tubereulatum, R. Leaves verticelled, pinnatifid, gp ade ee. siccall. ed, tetrandrous; fruit tetraceous, tubercled. A native of borders of lakes, and other moist cin near Calentts, in blossom: most part of the year, and very much. iBone: cxtoapints;: enh jointed, length various, seeiees enlzatnition about five or six inches. Leaves verticelled, pin natifid, or acutely serrate, | Flowers verticelled, sessile, one in the axill of each leaf, small, pink-coloured. Calyx none, Corol ; petals oblong, expanding, pink-coloured. Filament. short. . Anthers linear. » Seeds united in a the form of a coals lobes, tabercled L pewicarp. ees Jipebataalle”. (i are ag Schreb. gen. N. 234. ae - Calyx none, Coro] four-petalled. Germs four. Styles none, ene Sei Embryo hooked, alii , 7 Cc2 : 452 TETRANDRIA TETRAGYNIA. Potamogeton. © 1. P. indicum. R. Creeping. Legves alternate, from narrow-lanceolate to elliptically oval, opaque, glossy, many-nerved, Anthers four pair, attached to the claws of the round concave petals. A native of the borders of fresh water lakes and ditches in the vicinity of Calcutta. Flowers in February and March. . Stems creeping. ‘The small simple roots which issue from the joints are all I can discover, for while the-plant‘advances _ from the apex, it decays at the opposite end, so that I do not think any~part of them exists for one year. Branches few, _ and like what I call the stems; they are all round, smooth, > oa shestiaods Shaitulled with. one. 0 and jointed at various distances. Leaves alternate, except next to the flowers, and there often opposite, petioled, from narrow-lanceolate to elliptically oval, opaque, even, and very smooth, or rather glossy, entire, obtuse, obscurely many-. nerved ; size very various. Those that remain immersed are narrower, longer, more strongly marked with nerves, and sub-transparent. Petioles simple, not sheathing, length vari- ous, in plants left by the water much shorter than the leaves. Stipules solitary, axillary, sheathing, length of the petioles, slit halfway or more on the inside, Peduncles solitary, axill- ary, or opposite to a leaf, round, rather thicker, smooth, and’ nearly as long as the cylindric spike, which each supports. Flowers small, numerous, green. Calyx none. Petals long-' clawed, nearly round, incurved, fleshy ; concave within, con- vex on the back, penelennii ilemarniote Anithere; ne: Styles short, and thick. Stigmas a dark speck on the apex of the styles. Drupes obovate, smooth. Nut conform to the drupe, one-celled, Embryo curved, as represented) by Gert- ner in P. alten, vol, ii, t, 84, * 2. P. tuberosum. R. ss oie Hike she roa ik . Potamogeton. TETRANDRIA TETRAGYNIA, ‘ 453 sessile, linear, much waved, entire, clear, when dry membra- naceous, - > Pat Found immersed in extensive masses, in ponds, ie and receptacles of fresh water in Bengal, during the dry season, chiefly when im flower in February, it rises so near tothe sur- face as to allow the little spikes of flowers to gereickc com- pletely, ; Root of long simple fibres, brown, &c. siénotvliag to the colour of the mud they enter ; on the creeping joints are ge- nerally found small conndahdobae, viviparous tubers, Stems and branches of various lengths, according to the depth of the | water, &c. a groove'on each side gives them the appearance : of being compressed, thick as a pack-thread, smooth, at the bottom of the water creeping, towards the extremities when in flower dichotomous ; previously to that period the branches are alternate and naillay. Leaves sessile, alternate, except at the floriferous fork of the branches, where they are oppo- - site, linear, rather obtuse, much waved, finely and acutely serrulate, with two slender nerves near the margin,*pellucid, from two to three inches long, by little more than a quarter of an inch'broad, Stipules sheathing, short, smooth, greenish like the other parts of the plant, and scarcely to be distin- guished from them: Spikes solitary in the fork of the branches, rather long-peduncled, from four to eight-flowered, when in blossom emerged, afterwards immerged. Corol, stamina, and germ as in the genus, but here there certainly is a style with four large, obliquely truncated mene Seed as miei natans, Gert, sem, li, 23. tab. 84, iets Ce3 CLASS. V. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. _ * HELIOTROPIUM. Schreb. gen. N.239: Corol salver-shaped ; throat contracted with vaults, Seis ssc naked, or each covered with its — senso 1. H. indicum. Willd. sp. i, 740. siete ui Annual, diffuse, ramous. Leaves petioled, cordate, Spikes leaf-opposed, peduncled, solitary. Fruit two-cleft, Bena patsja. Rheed. Mal. x. p. 95. t. 48. 7 nina » Sans, Shreehustinee, Bhooroondee. is Beng. Hatti-soora, _ This is one of the most common plants in India, it is’ in . floweb at all seasons, and delights in out-of-the-way were rubbish, &c. where the soil is rich and dry. . . Stems and branches diffuse, dichotomous, hairy, general height one, or two feet, but spreading to an extent greater — its oe prevvcisiosientcmesttcerhirtis ae — ; eet 2 oolley, peduncled, foiger than thd. leaved PB ers rigidly sessile, minute, in two rows on the upper side of | _ the spikes, Corol longer than the calyx. Tube gibbous ; bor- der five-lobed, pale rose colour. Seeds united towards the base, two-cleft, smooth. = Kea. a i. “tei aera Willd. sp. i, 742. Lithospermum. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 455 _ Beng. Naga-phoollee. A native of Coromandel, Bengal, Ke. ps Gas the hot and rainy seasons. Root simple, annual, Stems several, near the base spread- ing on the ground, afterwards ascending ; clothed with white, soft hair, Leaves scattered, petioled, obovate, entire, hairy like the stems and branches, Spikes terminal, and interspers- ed among the leaves, generally paired, lowers numerous, small, white, placed in a waved row on the upper side of the spikes. Calyx half the length of the corol, the exterior, inferior, divisions longer. 3. H. paniculatum, R. a Erect, ramous, hairy. Leaves petioled, ovate-oblong. Spikes terminal, panicled, secund, Tube of the spagh ‘iad and gibbous, A native of Chittagong, flowers. during the tg season, 547. LI ITHOSPERMUM. Schreb. gen. N. 241. ,Corol. funnel-shaped, throat perforated, and saked Calpe five-parted, Germ four-celled, with one pendulous ovulum. in each, 7 : Bry. ; ‘ah L. hey Bani R. : Shrubby, erect. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, rugose, entire. * Spiet peduncled, twice or thrice dichotomous, recurved. _ A native of Chittagong, where it blossoms during the rains, ' and cool season, j ie _ Stems erect, ligneous, soon throwing « out many, Da i ternate, round, hair branches ; whole height from three to five feet. Leaves alternate, petioled, ovate-lanceolate, acute, rugose, entire, a little hairy underneath ; length from four to six. inches, and from two to three broad. Peduncles at first terminal, but becoming lateral ; as vegetation. advances, twice, thrice, or even oftener bifid; each division ending in ae 3 Ce4 456. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA. Cynoglossum. somewhat long, recurved, secund spike, with two rows of | small, exquisitely: beautiful, green flowers on its convex side. Bractes none. Calyx five-leaved. Corol with the tube en- larged towards the base, twice the length of the calyx; bor- der slightly five-notched ; throat open. Anthers linear, sub- sessile, near the base of the tube of the corol. Germ ovate, ‘four-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the top of the axis. Seeds ovate-cordate, smooth, iF - CYNOGLOSSUM. Schreb. gen. N: 243, Corot funnel-shaped; the throat contracted with Canin: Seeds four, depressed, affixed to the style. 1. C. racemosum, R.- : ) , v8 Annual, erect, ramous. Leaves lanceolate, sessile, hairy. Spikes paired and solitary, lateral, and eee Flowers pedicelled, Seeds echinate, distinct. a owed: Found growing on rubbish in the vicinity of Calcutta ; flowering time the rainy season. Root shin: Stem erect, with many alternate, erect branches from every part; all covered with short, stiff, de-— pressed hairs; the whole height about a foot and half. — Leaves alternate, sessile, lanceolate, hairy, veined, a little wrinkled, margins minutely curled, and ciliate; from two to _ three’ inches: long. aes eins ‘and axillary, ipediien: cled, ge af ed, ot their full length eee bhi ger than. he: Leave, Seiko shsraplecs - incurved, Flowers alternate, on the upper side of the spikes pedicelled, while expanded ereet, afterwards ternuous, very small, white, with a purple throat which is somewhat contract: ed by five two-lobed glands, Calyx longer than the corol; leaflets oval, hairy. Stamens just within the mouth of the = ip the: Gurel.: Snes distinct, of a roundish conical | —— Cynoglossum, — PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, | 457 tles, and affixed to a conical receptacle, which has four corres) ponding concavities to receive the four seeds. Bee 2. C. diffusum. R. Annual, diffuse, hairy. Leaves oblong, soft, hairy. | Flow- ers: — _ Stamens hid in the - Seeds scab- rous, © A native of Bingals ; appearing in gardens, anid on culti. vated land in the cold season, Stems diffuse, slender, clothed with stiff hairs; length from six to eighteen inches, Leaves alternate, the inferior ones petioled ; the superior ones sub-sesile, all entire, oblong, soft, and hairy. Flowers solitary, between the leaves, short-pe- duncled, small, white, with a tinge in the throat. Calyx longer than the tube, hairy. Corol with the tube gibbous, its mouth contracted with five broad, emarginate scales, Sta- mens hid in the belly of the tube. — Seeds, or arils obovate, - ope pee naan on —— aaa 3. ¢. wieifotina: R. Lae Annual, diffuse. Leaves. bifarious, oblong hairy, Flowers solitary between the leaves; eorol half the length of the calyx; seeds round, rough, A native of the eastern parts of Bengal ; flowering time the cold season ; soon after which the seed ripens, and the. see perish, ‘Root annual. Stem none, but several, ramous, slender, round, hairy branches spread on the ground. Leaves alter- nate; ‘bifarious, sub-sessile, elliptic, hairy nudqnnetlens cual an inch in length, and about half that in breadth, Flowers — smiley; or between the leaves, oceania; lita; mall, of a pale whitish blue, Calyx five-leaved ; leaf letsilkcticsblats, hairy on the outside, nearly twice as large as the corol. Corol, the tube very short, the throat contract- ed, by ‘five emarginate scales alternate with the stamens, - Filaments short ; anthers large, half hid in the mouth of the — 458. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Boragoy tube of the corol. . Style short, clavate, Stigma emarginate, Seeds rough, round, almost hid. in the calyx, aftixed toa very short columnar receptacle. . - BORAGO. Schreb. gen. N. 248 Corol rotate. Throat closed with rays. iia) 1. B. indica. R. Willd. sp. i. 776. eben » Annual, diffuse. Leaves sub-sagittate, siem-clasping, the lower ones opposite. Flowers solitary, drooping. Calyx _ conical, with five hornlets behind. Beng. Chhota-kulpa. Common over most parts of India, aatasien flowers pli . tipe seed the greatest part of the year... eo Root fibrous, annual. Stem scarcely any, but many cy -chotomous, hairy, spreading branches of about a foot,in | length. The lower /eaves opposite ; the upper ones alternate, all sessile, stem-clasping, sub-sagittate, entire, hairy. Pe- duncles opposite to, or between the leaves, drooping, hairy, one-flowered, Flowers pale blue. Calyx five-parted, with roe the fissures extended into five recurved hornlets; divisions. - adhering by their margins, giving to the whole a conical. — shape. Corol a little longer than the calyx; divisions cor-— date with filiform apices, .Anthers united i into.a om, sis ee jas ott fs eters Py resr Shem fe: sere 2B. gua Willd. sp. i. 777. : Annual, erect, ramous, strigose. Cauline | talacag speeds: sub-sessile, lanceolate ; foral ones alternate with the solitary, one-flowered, drooping peduncles, ‘ .ounige is native of various parts of India, Flouaiad, Simae the ~| Root annual, Stem erect, branches opposite, pane salah en ed hi spi ors aca abil Deets ef imosineadle = : Menyanthes, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, 459 of the whole plant in a good soil from four to six, or éven eight feet. Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, lanceolate, entire, harsh, with a few stiff, scattered hairs, Floral leaves termi- nal, alternate, ‘small, sessile, cordate-lanceolate. Peduncles _sub-solitary, one-flowered, drooping, sub-alternate, longer than the floral leaves, round, hairy. Bractes no other than the floral leaves. Flowers cernuous, pale blue. Calyx five- leaved ; deaflets adhering slightly near the base, and at their dBpsotis forming five chang ridges, but without the posterior horns of Borago indica ; nor, like that plant, does it shut over the seed, but becomes expanded. Corol ; divisions of the bor- der broad-cordate, with their apices sub-filiform. Filaments short, and thick, inserted on the mouth of the tube of the co- rol. Anthers sagittate, woolly, each ending in a large twist- ed thread ; sides firmly united into a conical dome over the — stigma, ‘Seeds four, ovate, smooth on the: pane: — on _ the pe where lodged in the ——— Be B, spinulosa, Re Annual, diffuse, Richetinindie; pee iil nem cosmiipe tiie et All the deaves alternate, sessile, oblong, scabrous, Pe- — leaf-opposed, one-flowered. A native of Bengal, appearing in the cold season. MENYANTHES. Schreb. gen. oo 263. _ -| Calyx five-parted. Corol monopetalous, five-parted. Cate sais — one-celled, Seeds many, inserted on parietal shi My-orietaiag tt blero B 105. swe ie ~~ ilies sigan Leaves round-corate, repand. Mee. tary triple; stigma two-cleft, Cumuda, Asiat. Res. iv. 254. Pie ‘0 Tsjeroea-citambel. Rheed, Mal, 11. p. 57. t, 29. 460 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. /Menyanthes, Beng. -Chooli. Teling, Antara Tamara. A native of pools of sweet water, where it floats, often not reaching the bottom with its roots. | Flowering time the wet and cold seasons. rigdtde f Root annual, fibrous, Leaves radical, petioled, cordate, lobes overlapping a little, margins somewhat scolloped, — smooth, on the upper side purplish green; size various, the larger from four to six inches long. Petioles round, length - various, on the upper side about two inches below the leaf there is a viviparous tuberosity, which produces the*flowers as well as other leaves and roots, the old leaf and the. parent petiole decaying, leave this a new plant, each peti- ole in succession doing the same. Peduncles many, from the above-mentioned tuberosity of the petiole, one-flowered, sufficiently long to raise the flower above the water-while expanded, afterwards they drop into the water, and:there ripen their seeds. Flowers pure white, about an inch in dia- meter, Calyx five-leaved ; leaflets broad-lanceolate, perma- nent. Corol of one petal; divisions of the border oblong, expanding with broad, membranaceous, waved, curled, rag ged margins; down the middle of each of them runs a ridge, exactly similar to one half of the divisions themselves, no hair on the flowers. Nectary triple ; the exterior one consisting of white,ramous filaments crowning the mouth of the tube of the corol, as in Nerium ; the middle one of five beautiful yellow, dies, which nearly fill the mouthofthetube,stand- _ Sing eleqrwetd wich 'thss fibemehte’ and the interior one of five: hairy, yellow bodies surrounding the base of the germ, Fi- laments inserted into the tube of the coro] near its base. An- thers oval, Style short. Stigma two-cleft; segments large, — and lobate. Seeds a little compressed, scabrous, Receptacles’ wget sapnedie, tasiliog dome the sidonelt the ene: is Me ae Coe ‘a M. indién, Wild spe. petit: ikon babar’ yd Fagrea,. ~~ PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTAS 461 the corol hairy ; nectaries none, ote three-lobed. » emiide obovate. : js ipers Hine Hind and Beng. Bura-chooli, | Teling. Antara-tamara, Nedel-Ambel. Rheed. Hort. Mal. i. p. 5d. t. 28. -Cumud. Asiat. Res. vol. iv. p. 254. N. 30. - _ Like M. cristata it is found floating on sweet water. lakes, &c. in Bengal. I never met with it-on the coast. Flowering time the cold season, Leaves petioled, saddest} margins slightly waved, ‘somewhat fleshy, smooth, when full grown about a foot or - more each way. Petioles round, length various ; from a tu- berosity near the apex, there issue flowers, other leaves, and roots ; each leaf therefrom becoming a new plant, as im My cristata, Calyx from five to six-parted. Corel expanding; tube short, yellow ; border from five to six-parted, divisions lanceolate, the upper. side thickly «clothed with long white filaments, Nectaries wanting, or minute, #ilaments as many as the divisions of the calyx and corol, ascending.” Anthers erect, Stigma three-lobed, curled, Capsu/e one-celled. Re- ceptacles three, running down the inside of the — — Sborate: te Bits gees - PAGREA. Schreb. gen. N. 276. Clilge five-leaved, imbricated. Corol infundibuliform, With, an imbricated five-cleft border, Berry oval, two-celled. : Athenhichisilgial siddphiead hy E Dr. William ciidate one garden only on the Island of Pulo Pinang ; to which it was originally brought from China, It blossoms in May and Jane, and ripens its fruit in September and October, — PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Plumbago, Branches numerous, spreading in every direction. Leaves opposite, decussate, patent, short-petioled, broad-lanceolate, taper, obtuse-pointed, entire, nerveless and smooth on: both ‘sides ; from four to five inches long, and about one and a half broad. Petioles short, smooth, enlarged at the base into a stem-clasping ring, which in the dried specimens are encrust- ed with a clear yellow resin. Corymbs peduncled, axillary, — nearly as long as the leaves, decompound, decussate, smooth. Flowers numerous, large, whitish yellow, fragrant. Bractes: small, permanent. Calyx beneath, deeply five-parted, or ra- ther five-leaved ; permanent. Leaflets sub-rotund, imbricat- ed, smooth, many times shorter than the tube of the corol. Corol one-petalled... Tube between campanulate and infun- dibuliform. Border contorted, five-parted ; divisions ovate-: eblong, expanding. _ Filaments five, ascending, inserted in the mouth of the tube, and, much longer than the corol. . An- thers incumbent. Germ above, ovate. Style, the length of the stamens. Stigma enlarged, entire. Berry oval; a little pointed, size of a currant, smooth, red, pulpy, wile Seed several in each cell, angular, and scabrous. ntpae “2, F. elliptica. R. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, caiiliniee iid aad firm. Corymbs terminal, more than ne Tube of the corol cylindric. _ A native of the Moluccas, PLUMBAGO. Schreb. gen. N.281.. °° -, Calyx gibbous, five-toothed. Corol funnel-shaped:) Sta- ; mina. inserted into the tops of the five nectarial seales which embrace the germ. htc five-cleft., premqnegeecs : iy ; eahoat it Siete ie a distinguishing marks between seats sind 464 PENTANDRIA MONOGYRIA, Porana, species, according to my observation, depend on the racemes and bractes, colour not being a specific mark. PORANA. Schreb. gen. N. 286. . : Calyx five-leaved, growing in the pericarp into scariese wings. Corol campanulate. Germ one-celled, from two. to four-seeded. Utriculus one-seeded, intra erect, curved, and Ss isseviaeiolyt 1. Py pbicnlaton ® Res Shrubby, twining, Leaves exactly pen A entire, hoary. Panicles terminal, and seen Goel sub-entire,. Style short, simple. resis A native of the interior parte of. cael and. comticnlatie plentiful upon the rums of Gowr, and. the Rajamahl hills, Flowering tite the cold season; seeds ripe in March, Stem woody, divided into numerous, very long, scandent, and twining, stout, woody branches, which extend over the largest trees, or whatever else they meet with, their extremi- ties drooping beautifully. Bark of the woody parts ash-co- Joured, and uneven ; that of the young shoots clothed with _ whitish soft down, - deine cordate, entire, fine-pointed, vil- - lous on both sides, but particularly so underneath, where they are also hoary, frem one to four inches each way... Panicles Fas ae shes roesenienslinensaemsTnne 2 five-lobed. Filenalits bak inserted into abe bation of; the tube of the corol. Anthers linear, half hid. Germ ovate, one-_ _ celled, ovula four, attached to the bottom of the cell. Style a me aes of eee tga lobes. pe gs Porana, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 465 riose are enlarged into as many oblong, lanceolate wings many times longer than the capsule itself; the other two continue of their original length, but so contracted in breadth as to be filiform. Seed solitary, affixed to the base of the capsule, Pe- risperm and embryo as in the Convolvulacee, to which order it belongs, Obs. A large plant, from thirty to forty feet long, covering a mango tree, is now in full blossom before me, and is certain- ly a most lovely sight; the long pendulous extremities of the branches, with their numerous panicles of small, white flow- ers, and hoary leaves, render it a very pleasing object. 2. P. volubilis. Burm. Ind. 51. t. 21. f. 1. Willd. sp.i. 843. _Shrubby, twining. Leaves cordate, entire, smooth. Pani- cles axillary, and terminal. Corol five-cleft, | Style bifid. A native of various parts of India, but scarce in Bengal; flowers during the cold season in the pein, and when i in that state is uncommnly beautiful. _ Trunk and branches ligneous, twining, to a very igen ae able extent, over trees, &c. Leaves alternate, petioled, cor- date, entire, smooth, pointed, from two to three inches long, and from one to two broad. Panicles axillary, and terminal, drooping ; ramifications thereof alternate, and downy. Flow- ers numerous, small, white, inodorous, pedicelled. Bractes small, villous, several on the base of the pedicels, and one longer than the others under its insertion. Calyx of five, oblong, scariose leaflets, which are nearly as long as the corol. - Corol campanulate; border five-cleft ; divisions oblong, and obtuse, Filaments five, inserted near the bottom of the tabe Ge odin Sigh Ball two.cltiyene of the divibonia idsintor, Stigma’ eaded , somewhat two-lobed, U/iriculus surround- ed with five, scariose, equally enlarged, permanent leaflets of _ the calyx ; round, OO > hm meararmcaahe The “rest as in the former species, = = : inet VOL, I. Da AGG , PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Convolwulus. 3. P racemosa, R, bie Bad Vian Annual, twining, filiform. ‘Leaves jrsilae. the douline ones petioled, the floral ones stem-clasping. Racemes axil- lary and terminal. Corol five-cleft. So A native of Nepal, from thence introduced by Dr. F. Buchanan, into the Botanic garden, whee it blossoms during _ the dry season. Stems annual, twining, slender, pretty auiogths Leaves cordate, entire, obtuse-pointed, soft, and smooth, the cauline ones are petioled; the floral ones sessile, indeed stem-clasp- ing. Racemes axillary, and terminal, long-peduncled, few- flowered, Bractes, the lower ones like the floral leaves, but smaller, those of the superior flowers very small. Flowers al- ternate, pedicelled, small, white. Calyx fjve-leaved ; leaflets — sub-lanceolate, growing with the pericarp into five scariose wings. Corol sub-campanulate ; tube short, and rather gib- hous; border five-parted ; segments oblong. Filaments short, ‘iitenal, inserted into the tube of the corol near its bottom. Anthers ovate, within the tube. Germ ovate, one-celled, containing two seeds, attached to its bottom. Style length of the stamens. Stigma oval, apex two-lobed. Utriculus oval, smooth, of a very delicate, entire, membranaceous texture, surrounded by the five leaflets of the calyx, now enlarged into five scariose, cuneiform = Seed as in the age ee CONTOL. YULUS. y Rese oo . Calyx five-leaved. Corol campanulate. Germ fwo, rand three-celled, Stigma from two to three-lobed. Capsule, two or three-celled; cells two-seeded, Einbryo erect, curved 5 ; cotyledons pao _N. B. In far the greater number of our East Lindi Con- olvuli, and Ipomoea, the stigma consists of two globular i globe an aggregate of minute, roundish, ps iu- us | mileweltt teen specific character, ther: ore. Convolvulus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 467 I take no notice of the stigma when so formed ; it will conse- quently be understood ‘to consist of two round lobes, when not mentioned, In this genus there is' but one species (C. fla- gelliformis,) that can be said to have any thing like an entire stigma and in /pomoea only one, viz. I phoenicea, I do not drovadars think it would answer any valuable purpose to make a double stigma the essential, generic mark of Convolvulus, and a single capitate one, that of Ipomoea. But those with an entire seed vessel, may be advantageously formed into a distinct family, which I have done in the next genus, Lett- somia, SECT. I. Twining with undivided Leaves. 1. C. gangeticus. R. = Perennial, twining, extensive. Leaves round-cordate, en- tire, obtuse. | Peduneles solitary, from one to four-flowered. Leaflets of the calyx reniform, increasing in size with the capsule, and hiding it, Coro/ with nearly entire margins, _ A native of the banks of the Ganges, where it blossoms du- _ ring the cool season; when its extended branches, and ‘nu- -merous, very large, bright, pink-coloured flowers are biased ornamental ; seeds ripe in March, Stems shrubby, twining up and over trees toa pa ex- tent; young shoots round, pale green, and a little hairy. . Leaves petioled, re-entering, round-cordate, entire, often emar- ginate, nearly smooth above ; villous, and dotted underneath, and there strongly marked with many, nearly simple, paral- Jel veins; length and breadth about three or four inches, Petioles channelled, nearly as long as the leaves. Peduncles axillary, solitary, shorter than the petioles, from one to three- flowered. Bractes oblong, opposite, caducous at a very ear- ly eriod, Leaflets of the calyx obvolute, reniform, emar- ginate, ‘with thin, membranaceous edges, increasing in size with the fruit, and covering it completely at all times. Germ . 1 wets with one oyulum in each cell, attached to the . Dd2 — PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Convolvulus. bottom, stigma of two round lobes, Capsules entirely hid in. the calyx, which together with them is the size of a large nutmeg. Seeds covered with a dense coat of fine brown down, and hairy round the umbilicus, 2. C, semidigynus, R. Perennial, twining. Leaves cordate, villous. Peduncles three-or more-flowered. Style half two-cleft. Stigmas glo- bular. yatta _ A native of the Shree-nugur mountains, from thence Cap- tain Hardwicke sent seeds to the Botanic garden, where the plants, three years old when this description was taken, are very extensive and in full blossom in December. Stems woody, twining ; young parts villous. Leaves alter- nate, petioled, cordate, and ovate-cordate, entire, pointed, of a very soft, villous texture, particularly underneath ; three or four inches long, and about two broad. —-Petioles half as long as the leaves, villous. Peduncles axillary, solitary, shorter than the petioles, round, downy, each bearing three or more large, pure white, inodorous flowers. Bractes ovate, caducous. Calyx downy. Corol villous on the outside. Anthers' with their points bent back towards the bottom of the corol, and their sagittate bases pointing to its mouth. Germ bearded. Style two-cleft, Stigma globular. — Coane wees roe ae fowertd:' A native of the interior parts of Beucal: in flower, and full foliage most part of the year. ; _. Root perennial. Stems and branches numerous, twits all the sub-ligneous parts scabrous; young shoots running over bushes to an extent of many fathoms, generally tinged pecs ton Long runners issue from the oF, of the root, : . nthe young xi shoots and runners they are often + fa 2 Convolvulus, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 469 _ riously, lobate, or have their posterior lobes angular; all are ~ smooth on both sides from two to four inches each way, and like the tender branchlets often tinged with purple, particu- larly the margins, veins and nerves; there are two round, smooth, rust-coloured glands on the sides of the base of the nerve, where it joins the petioles, which are from one to six _ inches long. Peduncles small, deciduous. Calyx smooth, leaflets obovate, acuminate, and very small in proportion to the size of the corol. Stamina within the tabe. Stigma of two round lobes. Capsules smooth, membranaceous, from two to four-lobed, with a single, dark brown or black, smooth seed in each, 4. C. maximus, Willd, sp. pl. i. 853. Perennial, twining. Leaves ovate, entire. Peduncles many- flowered, longer than the leaves, Seeds woelys e ' A native of Coromandel, 5. C. malabaricus. Willd. sp. pl. i. 857. Perennial, twining, every part smooth, Leaves cordate entire. Peduncles many-flowered. — -Kattu-Kelengu. Rheed. Mal. xi. 105. t. 51. A very extensive, perennial species, found in Mysore by Dr. B. Heyne. In the Botanic garden it began pier cenines in Febraary, when the plants were four years old, Stem and larger branches ligneous, and clothed with spon- gy, uneven, ash-coloured bark ; twining over trees &c. to the extent of several fathoms ; young shoots smooth, deep green; — every part, on being wounded, discharges a large qaanpry of dull-coloured, clammy juice, which instantly ecomes of a deep brown colour, Leaves long-petic ate, entire ‘smooth on both sides, from three to six spobes lope, and i near- aN as broad. : ‘Peduncles axillary, smooth, many-flowered ; a mes terminal and panicled ; pedicels clavate. Flowers rather small ; the bottom of the bell deep purple; throat ‘pink with the margins pale, almost whites and lightly ee: Da3 A70 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Convolvulus, ° lobed. Calyx consisting of five, smooth, obtuse, oval leaflets. Filaments smooth. ‘Style longer than the stamina, Stigma of two round lobes. ‘6. C. blandus, R. Herb. Banks. Perennial, twining, smooth. Leaves oblong-cordate, smooth. Stipules recurved. Peduncles as Jong as the petioles, many- flowered. Lobes of the corol obcordate, — of two pee lobes, A native of the mountainous parts of the Circars, ~ Stem twining, running to a great extent, round, smooth. Leaves alternate, petioled, oblong-cordate, pointed, entire, smooth, from three to four inches Jong. Petioles short, chan- nelled, smooth. Stipules small. Peduncles axillary, as long as the petioles, erect, rigid, round, smooth, many-flowered, umbel- - like. Flowers large, pure white ; lobes rounded, and ek nate. Stigma two-lobed ; lobes globular : Obs, There is a variety of this, if not a distinct species, which differs from it in no other respect, than in being whol- — ly covered with soft hairy down. 7. C, laurifolius, R. Perennial, twining. Leaves from ovate to elliptic, with simple and parallel veins, Peduneles axillary, ——— | ed. Capsules fleshy. © A native of Mysore, and from thence introduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta by Dr. B. Heyne, bt it flow-— ers in November. The seeds are ripe in March, = "Stems woody towards the base, twining to a very considera-’ ble extent. Bark of the ligneous ‘parts smooth ; that of the’ ~ young shoots armed witli small, stiff, adpressed hairs. Leaves’ alternaie, petioled, from ovate to elliptic, with a few ad pressed © — hairs scattered over both surfaces; véins simple ‘and parallel, ength from two to six inches; Petiolesscarcely half the length’ phd Mls So ds at 'ihe'apex, and a » Convolvulus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, A771 than the leaves, round, hairy, many-flowered, the divisions of- ‘ten accompanied witha leaf or two. Bractes small, hairy, ca- ducous. Flowefs ofa moderate size, rosy. Calyx with equal, ovate, rounded, smooth, segments; their margins coloured. Corol ; tube or bell sub-cylindric; the inside deep purple; the outsideand border pink ; lobes emarginate, and slightly se- parated, Wectary a yellow, fleshy ring,surrounding the base ofthe germ. laments inserted on the bottom of the bell of the corol, there of a purple colour and bearded. Anthers ovate- oblong. Germ sub-obovate. Stigma of two globular lobes. Capsule nearly round, size of a large pea, fleshy, two-celled, with two smooth seeds in each. 8. C, parviflorus. Willd. sp. pl. i. 856. Annual, twining. Leaves cordate, smooth. Pedugelee as Jong as the petioles, many-flowered ; lobes of the corol catia ed, ~Stigina two-cleft, lobes oicmaea ; Pr Ipomoea paniculata, Burm, Fl. Ind. p. 50. t. 21 ee 1. (bad.). ., | A native of hedges, ke. «Teer time the cool season. Stems twining, annual, round, sometimes slightly hairy, Leaves alternate, petioled, exactly cordate, entire, fine- point- ed, sometimes very slightly hairy, from one to four inches long. Peduneles axillary, rather longer than the petioles, erect, ma- ny-flowered, umbel-bearing. Flowers pure white, lobes acute. Stigma two, clubbed, revolute, 9, C, calycinus, R, Perennial, twining, hairy. Leaves cordate, acute. Pedun- cles from two to three-flowered. Exterior three leaflets of e the calyx sagittate, ciliate, sakes as the. aici tube of the ecorol. Fruit drooping. — A native of the interior se init Saal Pareapore Captain Hardwicke ’sent plants to the Botanic garden, where they blossom about. the beginning of the cool season, : ae twining, perennial ; tender shoots very hairy, Lec 36 me Das A72 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Convolvulus. cordate; entire, acute; lobes large, and rounded, a few dis- tinct hairs on the nerves and veins; from three to six inches long, and from two to four broad. Petioles hairy, slightly channelled, shorter than the leaves. Peduncles axillary, so litary, about as long as the petioles, bearing two, or three al- ternate,.pedicelled, rather small, pure white flowers ; after the flowers drop, the pedicels become drooping. Bractes cordate, a few scattered over the peduncles, and pedicels. Calyx, leaflets as long as the tube, ciliate; the exterior sagittate. Fi- laments smooth, Germ on a escent pedicel. Stigma “eh two round lobes, 10. C, obscurus. Willd. sp. pl. i. 852. Annual, filiform, sometimes villous. Leaves exactly cor- date, entire. Peduncles jointed, clavate beyond the joint, af- ter the flower decays this part droops ~~ lobes of the corol emarginate. Seeds downy. A native of various parts of India, lileadiniing 4 in Bengal during the rainy and cool seasons. : Obs. In Dillenitus’s figure of C..obseurus, which is the on- ly species I_can compare this plant to, the lobes of the corol areacute ; here they are emarginate, hence I conclude they are different, In the Banksian herbarium either thine or one —— like it is named C. se te are Cc. spechorocephalus. R axillary heads, i A native of the interior panes of Sienna: Flsieatiag time from the close of the rains in October till January. batten: Root annual. Stem and branches twining, round ; young shoots clothed with short soft hairs. Leaves sagittate-cordate, | oste di lobes a and owned both fhe sides and a Convolvulus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, A473 dunciles axillary, solitary, very short, or almost wanting, bear- ing many small, rose-coloured, sessile flowers, formiag globu- lar heads. Bractes or involucres many, linear, recurved, Calyx, leaflets as long as the corol, hairy, tapering to a rather long, recurved point, Corol having the border slightly mark- ed wilh ten indentures. .Anthers half hid in the tube of the corol,. Stigma of two round lobes. Capsule globular, villous, — size of a marrow-fat pea, two-celled, with two ee seeds in each. Obs, There is a variety of the above, if not a distinct spe- cies, with white flowers, in round sessile heads, and having narrower leaves; in other respects they exactly agree; both are natives of Bengal and both arenow growing luxuriantly in the Botanic garden. Compare them with J; pombe ‘qoute 12, C. pilosus. R. : ‘Annual, twining, every part very hairy. ‘lieth de cor- date, entire, or slightly three-lobed, hoary underneath, S¢i- pules ear-shaped. Cymes long-peduncled. pe ota leaflets and bractes ensiform and ciliate. _A native of Mysore; the seeds were sent from thence by Res Heyne, to the Botanic garden, where the plants spring up during the rains; jbleasdtniny and ripening their seeds Per the cold season, | Annual, Stem and branches twining, extensive, oak very hairy, every part replete with a clammy white juice. Leaves broad-cordate, sometimes a little three-lobed, on the upper side a little hairy and deep green, underneath clothed - with soft white wool; length from two to six inches, breadth nearly the same. Petioles about as long: as the leaves, chan- nelled, and hairy. Stipules yeniform, with callous, ciliate margins ; they are always present where there is a peduncle, — Peduncles axillary, about as long as the petioles, bearing from one to ten or twelve, small, rose-coloured, pedicelled flowers. Bractes opposite, with a cordate, peduncle-clasp- ing base; long, taper, recurved points; and ciliate, callous ~ ATA PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Convolvulus. margins, Flowers numerous, of a lively pink colour, expand- ing about an inch, Calyzx ; leaflets linear, acute, longer than. the tube of the corol, on the outside glandular, and very hai- ry. Stamens equalling the tube. Stigma of two round lobes. Capsules globular, half the length of the calyx. Seeds four, woolly. 13. C, Malcolmi. R. Root perennial, Stems twining, farsateal Leaves ate tate, with large, angular barbs. Peduncles two-flowered. Bractes lanceolate. Stigma of two linear lobes, The seeds of this plant were brought from Persia by Ma- jor Malcolm, in 1801. . The plants raised from them in the Botanic garden, blossomed during. the hot season of 1802, when they were about one year old. Root perennial. Stems and branchlets twining to an ex- tent of six or eight feet; somewhat furrowed, twisted, and villous, herbaceous, Leaves petioled, sagittate; margins a _ little hairy ; smooth on both sides, from one to three inches long. Barbs or posterior lobes dilated, spreading, some- _ what acute, often dentate, and always angular. Peéioles scarcely half the length of the leaves, channelled. Peduncles — axillary, iieodoseretiin three times longer than the petioles, _ round, Pedicels clavate, as long as the petioles, villous. _ Bractes two, opposite, at the base of the pedicels, lanceolate. . bre « ccsornaaacml fivale Corot large, ae sheansifel lively Germ with a yellow ring round the base. - “Siyle} iocaes than if the stamina. Stigma of two linear, spreading lobes... Obs. 1 must leave the European Botanist to determine how - nearly this is allied to arvensis, a Plant I have never seen ip — if this be not it, _ weds (veetitco:ipaiebwiaeba t2 Jenggtit: Kalaails “villo ges Filam MG dom Willy pi 8 canine ca Convolvulus. © PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAL~ AG5 dilated and dentate. —_Peduncles axillary, from one to two- flowered. Leaflets of the calyx lanceolate, cuspidate: Tala-Neli. Rheed. Mal. xi, 113. t. 55. Found in various parts of India, in flower during the rainy and cool seasons, 15, tridentatus. Willd. sp. pl. i, 848. Annual, leaves short-petioled, sub-cuneate, with sagittate, acutely dentate, posterior lobes, and a somewhat retuse, or rounded tridentate apex. Peduneles filiform, one, rarely _ two-flowered. Evolvulus tridentus. Burm, Ind,77. t. 16. f. 3. ~ Sendera-clandi, Rheed, Mal, xi. 133. t. 65. - Found common on the coast of Coromandel, Malabar, boss 2 F lowers EY the rainy season in Bengal. ey 16. C. bicolor. Willd. sp. pl. i, 850. — : ~~ Perennial, twining, hairy. . Leaves cordate, nid Ficsaiell somewhat angular, downy. ‘Peduneles longer than the leaves, _ from one to four-flowered. Bractes lanceolar. Calycine ~ lets acute and very unequal, —— Jurud-kulmi,. ~ Isa species common in hedges, &c. over the coast of Coro- mandel, Flowers during the rains. Stems twining, hevbadeons round, covered with soft hait; ‘ or down, from one to two fathoms long. ° Leaves alternate, petioled, broad-cordate, sometimes slightly and irregularly lobate, downy, from one to four inches long. Peduncles ax- — illary, twice as long as the leaves, slender, erect, downy, end- _ ing in a small head of from two to four sessile flowers. Bractes lanceolate, one or two pressing on each of the calyces. Flowers middle-sized, yellow, bottom of the bell, deep purple. Stigma — of two globular heads, — rss —— | Seeds black, onein each cell, Obs, Since writing the siege daserijiéon I have often met with plants, having one, and two-flowered peduncles, It is ri, ae gz 476 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Convolvulus. therefore very likely that those varieties include both C. ity lobatus, and bicolor, 17. C. Turpethum. Wiild. sp. pl. i, 859. Perennial. Leaves from broad-cordate, to arrow-shaped, angular. Stems three or four-angled, Peduneles many- flowered. Stigma of two round lobes, Capsules inflated, transparent, four-celled, one-valved, Sans, Synonyma. Beng, Teoree, Dood kulmi, ' Teling. Tella-tagada. Common in hedges, &c, Flowering time the rainy 8 season. Root perennial. Stems twining, several fathoms long, from three to four-sided, angles membrane-winged, a little downy, perennial, Leaves alternate, petioled, form various, from cor- date to linear, all are pointed, and lobate, or angular ; behind a little downy. Stipules none, but instead thereof glands, Pe- duncies axillary, many-flowered. Flowers large, white. Brac- tes oval, concave, falling. Germ elevated on alarge glandular body. Stigma two-lobed. Capsules involved in the dry calyx, absolutely four-sided, four-celled, one-valved ; apex trans- parent, Seeds round, black, one in each cell, free, «a Obs. The bark of the roots is by the natives employed as @ purgative, which they use fresh, rubbed up with milk. 7 ‘About six inches in length of a root as thick as the little fin- _ "2 get ats peckoety a Comp dose. Cattle fo.not eat ei pisat | ‘SECT. Ir. 1. Twining » aatk divided « or apo ty Leaves, eit: 18, C. vitifolius. Wilid, sp. pl. i. 864. voy Perennial, twining, hairy. Leaves cordate, five-lobed, ser- rulate-dentate, Peduncles as long as the leaves, from three to six-flowered. Leaflets of the calyx obovate, A native of Enh and forests ; Pegi in the cold ait Convolvulus, || PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, | A77 fathoms long, the extremities of the branches are often high- ly coloured, and less hairy than the other parts. Leaves al- ternate, petioled, broad-cordate, frequently five-lobed, re- motely serrate-dentate, a little downy ; size very various, be- ing from one to six inches long. Petioles of the longer infe- rior leaves equalling these in length; those of the floral leaves short. Peduncles axillary, about as long as the floral leaves, from three to six-flowered. Flowers large, bell-shaped, very beautiful, of a bright lively yellow, Calyx hairy. An- thers becoming spiral after opening the extremities, Stig- ‘ma of two round lobes. “19, €. dentatus. Willd. sp. pl. i. 849, 3 Twining, and creeping, muricated, Leaves cordate, three- lobed, dentate, Peduncles from two to three-flowered. ‘Leaf- lets of the calyx obovate. — In Bengal it is more luxuriant than on the coast, leaves ge- nerally entire, stems, &c, generally smooth, and with foirer, many-flowered peduncles. Teling. Talla-antootiga. . Anative of hedges, thickets, &c. Flowering time the rainy season, — 7 Stems and Dantles twining, or creeping, filiform, often per- ennial, coloured, armed with small inoffensive prickles, other- wise smooth, one or two fathoms long. Leaves alternate, peti- oled, cordate, three-lobed, toothed, smooth, from one to two inches long. Petioles prickly, branch-like. Peduncles axil- lary, as long as the petioles, and like them, from two to three- flowered. Flowers short-pedicelled, small, yellow. Filaments sists at the base, Stigma single, large ®, globular. a . 20. C. copticus. Willd. sp. pli i, 863. Herbaceous, procumbent, angled. Tae ielante, Eobes Sardosotate: serrate, Flowers terminal, on minute branchlets. Calyces 1 murexed, ‘A native of pasture ground, Swett in the rains, 478 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Convolvulus, Stems procumbent, rarely twining, herbaceous, angled from the insertion of the leaves, from one to two feet long. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, palmate, scarcely an inch long, lobes from five to seven, divided to near the base, lan-— ceolate, serrate, smooth, the inner ones smallest. Stipules * like the leaves, but small, and ‘sessile. Flowers terminal, small, white. Calya murexed. Lobes of the corol semi-or- bicular with a point. _. 21. C. paniculatus, Willd. sp. pl. i, 865. _ Root tuberous, perennial, twining, smooth. Leaves pal- mate, Cymes ane ee — four-celled.. Seeds woolly, Pal-modecea, Rheed. Mal, xi. 101. ¢. 49, epic Mo- decea. Rheed, Mal. viii, 39, t. 29.) — Ipomoea mauritiana, Jacq. Collect. iv. 206. Beng. Bhoomi-koomra, Se Teling. Matta-pal-tiga. A native of hedges, thickets, &c. Flowering time the wet season, ey _ Root perennial, tuberous. Stems and branches perennial ; young shoots round and smooth, Leaves alternate, petioled ; palmate, from three to six inches each way. Lobes generally five, divided little more than half way down, broad-lanceo- late, entire, smooth. Peduneles axillary, erect, as long.as ~ _fhe petioles, : sub-umbel-bearing. | Flowers numerous, large, of a beautiful dark reddish b nara femee capers | ‘Seeds woolly, all round. Obs, Cattle eat it, The r root is eohete ind as muah used , by the natives where is grows, si 22. pedatus. R. _.. Perennial, twining, smooth. Leaves oeilaie-sdeeietacdale: Jets, lanceolate, entire. Stipules Aver rive Redan cle " one- ercoreds and etait as warted. ‘ Convolvulus. _PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. A79 the Botanic garden amongst plants received from friends in the vicinity of Calcutta. The flowers appear in profusion during the cool season; they are pretty large, of a bright sulphur colour and the stigma is of two round lobes. 23,0: sligititbscol . Perennial, twining, tina Leaves digitate. ines cles from three to four-flowered, Coro/s almost funnel-shap- ed. Siigmas of tworound lobes, Seeds woolly on the con- vex side. ‘ae ; A native of hedges, &c. Flowering time the cold season. _ Stems and branches twining, perennial, round, with here and there a few small inoffensive prickles. Leaves alternate, petioled, digitate. Leaflets generally five, broad-lanceolate, entire, smooth, the inferior ones smallest. | Petioles channel- led, armed as the branches, as long as the leaflets, Pedun- eles axillary, about as long as the petioles, from three to four- flowered. lowers pretty large, between campanulate and funnel-formed, a pale bluish purple. Stigma two-lobed. Seeds woolly on their outer angles. ae This i is one of the most beautiful Convolvuli in India, “ea, ‘hisses: R. , Annual, twining, extremely hirsute, Leaves digiiatss leaf. lets five, sessile, broad-lanceolate, entire. Peduncles from one to three-flowered. Calyx very hairy, entirely hiding, un- til ripe, the cordate, smooth, four-celled capsule. A native of the interior parts of Hindoosthan; —- time the close of the rains, and cold season, Stem and branches annual, twining, ity: daideltey phnice somewhat bristly, issuing from little brown glands; general extent of the plant from six to twelve feet. — Lotiien’ petioled, digitate. Leaflets five, sessile, lanceolar, acute, entire, hairy, ‘about three inches long by one broad. Petioles round, as long as the leaflets, hirsute. Peduncles axillary, sometimes as long as the petioles, hirsute, bearing from one to three, a A80 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Convolvulus. — rarely more, middle-sized, pure white flowers, on long hirsute, — proper pedicels. Bractes at the base of the pedicels only, sub-lanceolate, recurved, hairy. Leaflets of the calyx oblong, permanent; the exterior three large, and extremely bstxites Corol campanulate, white ; tube as long as the calyx, Sta- mens smooth, Stigma of two round lobes. Capsule broad- cordate ; valves thin, and smooth on both sides, Seeds three or four, smooth. 25. C. heptaphyllus. R _ Perennial, twining, sabi Leaves digitate ; leaflets se- ven, lanceolar, entire. Peduncles filiform, mite, ween one, rarely three-flowered, Of what part of India this is a native I cannot certain! y say. It has appeared in one of the nurseries in the Botanic garden at Calcutta. The seed was most likely received accidentally with some other sorts. Here it flowers during the latter part of the rains, and cold season. __ Stems and branches twining, perennial, long, dass round — and smooth, Leaves petioled, digitate ; leaflets generally se- yen, sessile, lanceolar, entire, smooth ; from one to two inches Jong. Petioles slightly channelled, length of the leaflets. Pe- _ duncles axillary, solitary, very slender (filiform), twisted, pendulous, longer than the petioles, generally one-flowered, rarely two or three, though three seems the natural number, and the two lateral ones for the most part prove abortive. -Bractes few, and minute. - Calyx ; leaflets ovate, ragose on the outsides, Coro! small, pale pink, with the bottom of the bell deeper coloured. Stigma of two round lobes, Obs. A beautiful, delicate, though extensive plant, and un- commonly interesting on account ofits slender, pendulous, spi- ral peduncles, with its pretty, small pink flowers, standing _ £rect on its thickened, curved apex, aes Py Convolvulus, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 481 _ SECT. III. Prostrate, or creeping ; not twining, ~ 26. C. reniformis, R Perennial, very ramous, and Grocpingtcloas on the ground, Leaves reniform, emarginate, long-petioled, Peduneles ma- _ ny-flowered, Inner three leaflets of the calyx Heo-lobed, and ciliate.. Lobes of the corol bifid, A native of Bengal. Flowering time the cool season, Burman’s figure of Evolvulus emarginatus, Flora Indica, 77. t, 30. f. 1, is very much like this; if the flowers were more numerous, and their petioles longer, I should consider them the same; they ought to be compared, when an opportunity offers. _ Stems and branches numerous, always creeping flat on the ground, and striking innumerable roots from the joints, smooth, and slender as a pack-thread, Leaves long-petioled, reniform, emarginate, and often. slightly scollop-toothed, smooth ; size very various ; often of a dark ferruginous colour, Petioles longer than the leaves, smooth. Peduncles axillary, | much shorter. than the petioles, many-flowered. Flowers sub-sessile, very small, bright yellow, opening late in the forenoon, and shutting early in the evening. Calyx the two exterior | leaflets eualler, oblong, and pointed ; the inner three broad, wedge-shaped, with a ciliate, two-lobed, apex. Corol _ with its five lobes deeply divided, Filaments smooth, Stig- ma two-lobed ; lobes roundish, Capsule round, size of a small ; pea, rather oe than the calyx, tomentose, two-celled, Seeds light brown, minutely dotted, Obs. In some soils it is found sey of a dark : pprple or ferruginous colour. RES er Smee ee eR ie: Ree eae aad. C. flagelliformis. Re ee MOR tara, gore B "Perennial, creeping. i pie reniform, pes smooth, with 40d glands at the base. Peduncles from three to five- flowered. Calyx transversely rugose. Stigma transversely - oval, somewhat two-lobed, = VOL, I.. Ee 482. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, = Convolvulus, Bel-Adamboe, Rheed. Mal. xi. p. 119. t. 58. may be this plant though in some respects they will be found to differ a little. Ipomoea repens. Lamarck illust. i, 497. A native of the Mysore country, from thence the seeds — were sent by Dr. B. Heyne to the Botanic garden, where the plants thrive luxuriantly, and are in blossom most part of the year. Stem and branches creeping, perennial, long, simple, slen- der, and smooth. Leaves reniform, or cordate-reniform, with a small terminal bristle for a point, smooth on both sides, and as in C. brasiliensis, having two glands on the under side of the base; breadth from two to three inches, and the length considerably less. Petioles as long as the leaves, channelled, swelled at the insertion, and there marked with some glan- dular knobs. Peduncles axillary, solitary, larger than the petioles, round, smooth, bearing from three to six, large, pure white flowers, Leaflets of the calyx ovate, fleshy ; outside transversely rugose. Stigma of one, transversely oval, large lobe. Capsule with generally four, light brown, smooth seeds, 28. C, repens, Willd. sp, pl. i. 874. Annual, creeping, or floating, piped, smooth. Leaves hs long-cordate, posterior lobes angular, Peduncles shorter than the’petioles, from three to six-flowered, Corol sub-in- fundibuliform, ~ Ballel. Rheed, Mal. xi, p. 107. 1.52. igs Olus-vagum, Rumph. Amb. y. 419. t. 158. f. i C. reptans, Willd. sp. pl i, 875. is probably ipl or a variety of it, Beng. Kulmi-shak. Teling. Tootie-kura, ) A native of standing sweet wale: 4 or places. hee water lately stood, very common, Epes Biigal creeping, or floating on the water, anna or bi ‘ie 1 Convolvulus. | PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 483 Leaves alternate, long-petioled, oblong-cordate, pointed, en- tire, smooth, from four to six inches long. Peduncles axillary, erect, round, smooth, from three to six-flowered. Flowers large, beautiful rose colour. Lobes triangular. Tube of the corol between bell and funnel form, Base of the filaments woolly. Stigma two-headed. Obs. The tender tops and leaves are eaten in stews by all ranks of the natives, and much esteemed. 29. C. Batatas. Willd. sp. pl. i. 853. Root tuberous, Stems creeping, rarely twining. Leaves cordate, angle-lobed. Peduncle many-flowered. Segments _ of the calyx oblong, smooth, acute. Beng. Lal-shukur-kwnda-aloo, the red variety ; and Suf- fet-shukor-kunda-aloo, the white. ; Kappa-kelengu. Rheed, Mal, vii. 95. t. 50. ; The red sort is in very general cultivation all over the warmer parts of Asia and very deservedly esteemed one of their most palatable and nutritious roots, I suspect C. edulis, Thunb, japan, oe, is the same or a variety. 30. C. ‘ain. Bh i Annual, or biennial, creeping. Leaves linear-lanceolate, pees Peduncles longer than the petioles, from one to four-flowered. Calyx smooth. Capsules one-celled, four- seeded, A native of the dry lands of Dinagepore and Rungpore, from thence the seeds were sent, by Dr. Carey, to the Bota- nic garden at Calcutta, where Hey. blossom during. th the cold season. Root generally annual, though : sometimes iipunsl, ay ; I cannot say there is any thing like one, but numerous, slender, , round, cespitose, somewhat villous, and, in some parts, even hairy branches, spread close on the earth, and strike root; length of the larger branches from one to three feet, : Leaves petioled, linear-lanceolate, smooth, entire, from two Ee2 484” . PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, —- Convolvulus. three inches Jong, and less than half an inch broad. Peti- oles clothed with long, soft, brown hairs, | Peduncle axilla- ry, longer than the petioles, hairy near the base, bearing from one to four, small, very pale-yellow, flowers, but when one, or two, these are accompanied with the rudiment of one or: two more, and some small, cordate smooth bractes. Calyx; leaflets oval, equal, smooth, concave, with callous, smooth, dark green margins. Stigma of two round lobes. Capsiiles globular, smooth, size of a pea, one-celled, aed es Sed gppoth, deep brown. “31. C: stipulaceus. R. 3 | Creeping, smooth, with apices twining. Leaves cordate- sagittate, with lobes repand. Stipules recurved, Peduncles many-flowered. Calyx smooth. Lobes of the corol obcor- date. Seed woolly. A native of Chittagong, sent from thence by Mr. W. Rox- burgh to the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it flowers about the beginning of the hot season. ‘ _ Root perennial. Stem and branches creeping, round, smooth, extremities twining ; length from one to two fathoms, — or even more, Leaves petioled, cordate-sagittate, with pos- terior lobes (barbs) often repand, smooth on: both sides, point rather obtuse, with a minute bristle ; length from two to’ three inches. Petioles channelled, from one to two inches long. Stipules two, stout, inoffensive, non acute, at the base’ the pet luncles ‘axillary, so! » about’as long as the petioles, round smooth, somewhat clavate, searing from — three to six or even more, large, pure white flowers. Pedi- _ cels clavate, shorter than the peduncles, round, smooth. Ca- lyx; leaflets ovate, equal, concave, smooth, and somewhat transparent. Corol ; lobes of the border large, obcordate. Neetary a pentagonal cup surrounding the base of the germ. Convolvulus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 485 32. C. pentagonus, R.- Perennial, angular, creeping. Leaves cordate daisiitede: with the posterior lobes rounded, but somewhat angular. Peduncles rigid, umbelliferous. Calyx smooth. Lobes of the corol circular] Seeds hairy. : __ A native of the Moluccas; and from thence introduced in- to, the Botanic garden at Calcutta in 1800; where it blos- soms during the cold and hot seasons. - Root perennial. Stems and branches creeping, pentan- Gabi: young parts villous, and sometimes twining, though not readily ; length of the whole plant from two to three fa- thoms. Leaves petioled, the lower ones broad-cordate-sagit- tate; the superior ones narrow-sagittate ; in all the posterior lobes are large, and rounded, though frequently a little an- gular; margins generally entire; both sides very villous; length from one to four inches, Petioles scarcely half the length of the leaves, channelled, villous, at the base swelled on-each side into two glandular, stipulary knobs, Peduncles axillary, solitary, erect, rigid, clavate, villous, about as long as the petioles, supporting a trichotomous, corymbiform um- bel, of many, pretty large, pure white, inodorous flowers, Pe- ' dicels shorter than the peduncles, but like them clavate, and villous, Bractes many, caducous, and of various sizes, Calyx ; leaflets oval, concave, slightly villous, much shorter than the tube of the corol, Corol perfectly campanulate. Border divided into five semi-circular lobes. Stamina hid in the tube. Style about as long as the stamens, of two round lobes. Seed dark-brownish black, and covered. with much soft hair, of the same Solem. ee a a 33, C. bilobatus, R. _ Perennial, creeping. Leaves seclobad, smooth. Pedun- oh. from threo to six-flowered. ace aeinem Seed woolly, _ Convolvulus marinus. Resi Amb. v. 433. t) 159, op 1. ' A native of the Moluccas, from whence the roots were ae Ee3 486 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Convolvulus. brought to the Rotanke garden at Calcutta, amongst the earth in which some spice plants came. They bloga during the hot season, Stems and branches creeping, perennial, striking root at the joints chiefly ; young shoots smooth, polished, pale green; Jength from one to three fathoms. Leaves, petioles erect, two- - lobed, or of a deeply emarginate, round, obcordate shape, margins entire, and very smooth on both sides, about three inches long, by two and a half broad! Petioles round, slight- ly channelled, smooth, with two very conspicuous reddish glands at the apex. Peduncles axillary, erect, slender and longer than the petioles; bearing from one to seven, or even nine, large, purple flowers on their proper, clavate striated, pedicels. Calyx ; leaflets ovate, somewhat three-ribbed, and transversely rugose. MNeclary, a glandular ring round the base of the germ. Filaments enlarged, woolly at the base. Stigma of two round lobes. Capsules vertically compressed, smooth, lined with a tough pellicle. ‘Seed clothed with much soft, short, dark brown hair. : ° _. Obs. A variety, if not a distinct species has been reared in this garden, from seed received from China. It flowers in April and May; the peduncles one-flowered, the leaflets of the calyx scarcely rugose, with subulate points ; when wound- ed milky. In size, colene of Aho Rowers sisi ge. ia are the same, sh. cc Pes-capre. Willd. sp. A i, 876. aah 1 Detenniel: creeping to a great extent, Leaves Lange ppeicl- ed, two-lobed, smooth, at the base two glands, “Peduncles axillary, solitary, one or two-flowered. ; Beng. Chhagul-khooree, i bs Hind. Dopati-luta. ak il ~ Schovanna-Adamboe. Rheed. Mal. xi. 117. 4. Bre ) : A native of the sandy shores of India ; where. it blossoms ae and ri pens its seed most marist este ue isis BiBER. vad cs Lettsomia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, _ 487 creeping to a very great extent over the sandy shores of the sea coasts, where the plant is chiefly found. Leaves long- petioled, deeply two-lobed, smooth, with two large coloured glands at the base. Peduneles axillary, wolltsey, length of the leaves, generally one or two-flowered. Flowers large, -red-purple. Calyz ; leaflets oblong, acute, transversely ru- - gose on the outside toward the base. Stigma of two round lobes. Seeds densely clothed with a dark brown, pane pubescence, Obs. This plant is very useful where it naturally grows, he] ping to bind the loose sands, and in time render it suffici- eit stable to bear fare. Goats, horses, and rabbits eat it, LETTSOMLA. R. Calyx five-leaved. Corol from campanulate to infundibu- liform, Germ two-celled. Stigma two-lobed. Berry dry : or succulent, two-celled ; cells one or two-seeded, innag erect, curved ; centeleliak corrugated. In honour of John Coakley Lettsom, M. D. F. Ss. A. au- thor of numerous valuable works, which more than prove him. fell entitled to this mark of respect. ! - The genus is composed of very powerful, extensive, twin- ing, perennial, lactescent plants; with simple leaves and: axillary inflorescence. SECT. I. Corols campanulate. 1. L, splendens. R. ' _ Perennial, twining. Leaves cordate-oblong, ocala, vein- ed, sericeous underneath. Corymbs axillary. — Berry high- ‘ly coloured and embraced by the permanent crimson calyx, A most beautiful plant, far exceeding every other species I have yet met with ; a native of Chittagong, where it blos- suns an ripns its seeds at various times of the year, ; eee tae ‘ Ee Y ‘ oe? _ 488 -PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Lettsomia. 2. L. aggregata. Ro :. Perennial, twining. Leaves echt saatlty: aniderseth. Peduncles axillary, supporting four sessile heads of invo- lucred flowers. Stigma and style much longer than the corol. Berry four-seeded. : ~ Teling. Yerra-kutha. A native of various parts of the coast of Coromandel, Flowering time the cool season; seed ripe in March and April. Stems ligneous, twining to a great extent; young shoots round, clothed with soft, white pubescence; and discharg- inga milky juice when wounded. Leaves petioled, round: cordate, entire, smooth above, woolly underneath ; from three to six inches long, and from two to five broad. Peduncles axillary, generally solitary, longer than the petioles, round, woolly ; each supporting an umbellet of four, cruciform, ses- sile heads of small, pink-coloured, sessile flowers with a sin- gle sessile one in the centre; surrounded with several, round- ish woolly bractes, (involucres,) with incurved margins, Calyx ; leaflets unequal, cuneiform, woolly on the outside. Corel campanulate. Border deeply cut into five, emargi- nate lobes, Stamina much longer than the corol, and of the same colour, Germ surrounded with a particularly large, ‘yellow, nectarial ring. Style as long as the stamina. Stig- ma of two, large, round lobes. Berry round, covered with a soft, tough, smooth, fleshy, bright red envelope, about the size of a marrow-fat pea, two-celled, with two seeds in each, when all come to maturity. ~The remaining calyx is now enlarged, and clothed on the outside with sericeous down, while the smooth bright red, inner surface thereof adds much to the beauty of this elegant species when in fruit, Seeds smooth, pale ash-coloured. Embryo asin the Letisomia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA; > 489 date, sericeous ynderneath, veins parallel,, Peduneles long- er than the petioles, umbelliferous, Stigma round, of two lobes. Capsules one-valved, one-celled, Convolvulus nervus. Burm. Ind. 48, t. 20. f. 1. Samudra-stjogam. Rheed. Mal. xi, 125. iab. 61. Beng. Bis-taruka. | - Teling. Kokayti. - A ‘native of forests, hedges, &c. it is one of the lengua species of the Convolvulacea I know. Flowering time the wet and cold seasons. Stems twining, woody, of a very great length, running - over the highest trees; young parts covered with white silky down. Leaves petioled, broad-cordate, entire; many large, distinct, opposite nerves running parallel; the upperside pretty smooth, the under side covered with niuch soft, white silky hair; from four to twelve inches each way. Petioles shorter than the leaves, tapering, round, at the apex on each side is a large, flat, scabrous, dark-coloured gland, Pedun- cles axillary, like the petioles, but longer, bearing an erect umbel, of many flowers. Flowers large, of a deep rose-co- lour. Bractes many, large, oval, white, waved, pointed, caducous. Stigma two, globular. Berry globular, smooth, entire, not opening in a regular manner, but ——- to. pieces. ) _ Obs. Seeds received from Buglendi sent to me He be late Honourable Charles Greville, under the name Convolvulus speciosus, produced this identical plant, Stigma, &c. Ke, peeey the same as in the original Bengal nines Ke fds L. argenteag Beeb) 287) wht iat _ Perennial, twining. Leaves aia i eeieed, aot ceous underneath. Peduncles, as lonaee the petigies, lealys bractes lanceolate, sericeous, _ Found in forests about Calcutta, never saw it on the : ‘coast of Coromandel. _ ks Beng. Sumoodra-shoka, chhota Bistaruka,. ihe 490 _ PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Lettsomia. Stems twining, perennial. Leaves petiolgd, broad-cordate, entire, with many parallel veins, as in C, ne, vosa ; the upper side pale green, with depressed hairs, the under side covered with much bright, silver-coloured, silky down; about four inches long each way. Petioles erect, round, hairy, length of ‘the leaves; at the apex on each side is a green gland, as in C. nervosus. Peduncles axillary, erect, round, hairy, umbel-bearing, Bractes lanceolate, silky. Flowers many, large, of a beautiful rich pink colour. WVectary, a fleshy - _ ring round the base of the germ. Stamens, base of the fila- ments woolly. Berry soft, and pulpy, four-seeded. ‘Obs, The following marks distinguish this species — : ee to which it is nearly — ~-Jst. The leaf-bearing umbel. 2d, The bractes, In this species they are lanceolate, and not waved, in that oval and much waved. 3d. The flowers of this species are larger, and the leaves much smaller than in that. - Ath. Here the veins are few, and alternate ; there me lange and opposite. 5th. This produces a soft berry; that a perfectly dry cap- 5. L, setosa, R. ~ Perennial, twining, tender parts armed with adpressed bris- tles. Leaves round-cordate, acuminate, parallel-veined, scaly tinderneath. Peduncles panicled. Corols exactly campanu- late, with a small, sub-entire border, Berry: hid in the large, fleshy calyx. A native of the northern Circars, Flowetinge time the ae ay months of December and January. oa Stems ligneous, twining. Branches numerous ; young — saad clothed with stiff, short, silvery, adpressed bristles, Leaves © emer Fouad cordate, entire, acctiainiatess pe ae Lettsomia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. _ 491 cid scales and a few remote, adpressed, stiff hairs ; from two _ to eight inches long, and nearly the same in breadth. Peti~ oles considerably shorter than the leaves, bristly. Panicles axillary, solitary, long-peduncled, corymbiform. Peduncles and ramifications whitish, with numerous, adpressed, whitish bristles, Flowers numerous, pretty large, sessile on the ra- mifications of the panicle, pink-coloured. Bractes several round the base of each calyx, like a calycle, oval, concave, rigid, bristly. Calyx ; leaflets oval, obtuse, nearly equal, permanent; the outside bristly. Tube of the corol exactly campanulate, the outside somewhat bristly, Border almost entire, spreading, Germ, the lower half invested in a large yellow ring. Style about as long as the stamina, Stigma of two round lobes. Berry ovate, smooth, shining red, Hid within the leaflets of the permanent calyx. ) _6.L. striyosa. R, Perennial, twining, every part ceed with harsh brown hairs. Leaves cordate, entire, with many parallel nerves. Pe- duncles elongated. Flowers aggregate. A native of the eastern part of Bengal, ia from thenee sent to the Botanic garden at Calcutta, by Dr. Buchanan, Blossoms about the close of the rains, Stem woody, twining up, and over high trees. Bark rough, Young shoots very hairy. Leaves alternate, petioled, cor- date, entire, nerves many, and parallel, very hairy on both sides; from four to six inches long, and three or four broad, Peduncles axillary, round, hairy, longer than the petioles, each supporting a few large, sessile, rose-coloured, ¢ cam anu~ late flowers, surrounded with many broad-lanceolate h ui bractes. Stigma of two, » Ine globular Oe ees eS Toe | en ni l inf ae. ‘cunéato-emarginate ; villous wrleesith Peduncles three-flowered, much shorter than 492 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, _Lettsomia, - Convolvulus cuneatus, Willd. spec. i. 873... ‘ Some plants of this uncommonly elegant species, were brought from the Mysore country, by General Martin in 1792. He gave one'of them to the Botanicgarden at Caleutta, which has been multiplied by layers, and blossoms about the close of the rains in September, and October. Stems woody, twining, of very considerable extent. Bark smooth, dark grey. Young shoots covered with short depress- ed hairs. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, cuneate, emargi- nate, entire, smooth above, a little hairy underneath ; general length about two inches. Peduneles axillary, solitary, three- flowered, round, villous, about three quarters of an inch long. Pedicels shorter than the peduncles, always consisting of an opposite incurved pair, with a solitary shorter one in the cen- tre. Bractes linear.’ Calyx, leaflets ovate, a little villous. Corol large, of a beautiful deep bright purple colour. Tube ample; the five lobes of the border emarginate, which makes the whole appear ten-lobed. .Nectary, a fleshy ring round the base of the germ. Filaments broad, and hairy, at the base. Stigma of two, round heads. Berry oblong, dry, one- celled, Seeds from one to four, peas ina little dry il _naceous matter, Obs. This when in blossom, is one of the most beantifal of the whole order ; the large, very bright, deep purple flowers make it particularly conspicuous amongst its own deep green win =e this is much augmented by making it run over 8. ie eymosa, R. ne Perennial, twming. Leaves round, reniform- ooblaaali Pe- duncles larger than the leaves. Flowers many, in an: ‘involu- ered, dense cyme, Berry globular. ’ ee An extensive, stout, perennial, twining plant, sini . the: oa ns 3; from Wynaad. the seeds were sent, ensOn, PAT Rese ale eee ik OES S Betteomia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, — 493. where the plant flowers during the cold season. The ea ripen four or five months afterwards, . 3 _ Stem and large branches woody, twining ; young shits vils lous. Leaves round, reniform-cordate, villous; from three to four inches long, and from three to five broad. Peduneles axillary, solitary, generally longer than the leaves, each sup- porting a yellowish, dense cyme of many sub-sessile, large, pale pink flowers; embraced by one or more unequal small leaves, the largest of which are shaped like the other leaves, and peduncled ; the smaller ones nearly round, and sessile. Calyx, the exterior leaflets nearly round ; the inner ones ovate- oblong ; all are more or less recurved, and villous. Corol sub- infundibuliform, the outside villous, Sty/e much longer than the stamens. Stigma of two round, bright purple lobes. Berry smooth, yellow, soft, pulpy, round, size of asmall cher- ty; with from one to four, smooth, white seeds, Seeds and: embryo as in other convolvulacee, viz. a descending radicle with the lobes irregularly folded, and invested while fresh, in desea pone! same Seta ) 8 OL Te plod R. arse © Perennial, twining. aes ekndcerdite, emarginate, -Peduneles dichotomous, from three to five,or scorcenilioreits Bractes ‘cuneate, Berry succulent, four-seeded.. fy ~ Tpomoea zeylamica, Gert. carp. ii. 482. t..178. - A native of Mysore, from thence the seeds were sent by - Dr. Buchanan to the Botanic garden, where the plants thrive well, and blossom during the hot and soe Seasons me suite py. about eight months afterwards, Boe Stems twining, ligneous, as shisk-oahenieuacotie parts covered with tolerably smooth, ash-coloured bark, Branches mauris, oe very extensive young shoots cordat with the: nerf waved, iisiaiaeies both nidlde clothed with short hair; veins almost simple and parallel Jength from two to four inches, the breadth nearly equal to ~ 494 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA. Lettsomia, the length. Petioles round, shorter than the leaves, hairy ; an obscure green gland on each side of the apex. Pedun- _ cles axillary, solitary, longer than the petioles, round, hairy, dichotomous ; each division bearing one, two, or three large rose-coloured flowers, with one in the fork, Bractes several, cuneate, hairy. Calyx ; leaflets oval, obtuse. Corol, tabe somew hat gibbous, a little hairy on ‘the outside. Stigma of _ two round lobes, Berry spherical, smooth, size of a cher? ry, when ripe yellow, consisting of soft yellow pulp, contain- ane pee large, roundish, saniobily white seeds, SECT. II. Corol infundibuliform. - 10, L. bona-nox. R. ; poe . Perennial, twining, Leaves round-cordate. | Peduneles three-flowered; stigma of two cylindric lobes. Berry drys ovate-oblong, one-celled, from one to four-seeded, 6 6 . Beng. Kulmi-luta. oP ely ier Clove-scented creeper. Asiat. Res. iv. 957. ; _ Midnapore creeper, its common English name. _ Ipomoea bona-nox. Gert. carp. ii, 247. t. 134..agrees bet- pa with the seed vessel of convolvulus nervosus, Burm. — of this species, A native of the forests of Midnapore in Doneel flowers drive tl the rains. Seed = in November, aayesolonss ~~ Sten eth ity sii ‘laos as. . thick ciintcadidinainasiamr® : ed with spongy, cracked, dull ash-coloured bark, ‘Branches and branchlets twining up and over large trees, to a great: extent ; tender shoots somewhat hairy. Leaves long-petiol- ed, round, and round-cordate, entire, bristle-pointed, though obtuse, or even emarginate ; somewhat villous, particularly. _ underneath, and there, while young, hoary; length from _ three to six inches; breadth nearly the same. | raalente Lettsomia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 495 ally. shorter than the petioles, three-flowered, though fre- quently one of the three, or even two of them, are abortive. Flowers short-pedicelled, large, pure white, expanding at - sun-set, and perfuming the air to a considerable distance with a fragrance resembling that of the finest cloves. In fact it is the Prince of the Convolvulacée. Bractes sub-lanceolate, three to each of the lateral flowers. Calyeme leaflets ovate- cordate, obtuse, a little hairy. Corol; tube cylindric; bor- der ample and nearly entire. Filaments woolly at the base. Germ surrounded with a yellow nectarial ring, ovate, four- celled, with one ovulum in each cell, attached to its lower, inner, angle. Stigma composed of two distinct, cylindric, glandular lobes. Berry dry, smooth, shining brown, ovate- oblong in our cultivated plants ; somewhat pointed, size of a filbert, one-celled. Seeds from. one to four ; in our gardens one is by far the most common number; ‘enveloped in a soft, white, spongy substance, which in drying separates from the inside of the pericarpium and adheres to the seed, which is of an oval shape, and about the size of a small pea. Integu- ments two, besides the exterior spongy lamina; the exterior one hard and tough; the interior one sclestbiratlneeous, and entering the folds of the cotyledons. Embryo as in the pers convolvulacee, i _ Obs; The trivial name bona-noz is well applied hereon ac: - count of the charming appearance, and delightful fragrance of its flowers from the time they first expand, about sun-set, until sun-rise, when they wither. But I doubt if it is the species to which Linneeus gave this name; I rather think it was that — which I now call ae prandifore bie soe a ae | Van pa8H ae un L. sniftorai'R ms nnial, twining, ie “Leaves reniforn-cordete, net, apiece treed ‘Berry dry, spherical, 3 sec candicans. Rottler. _— amet 496 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Lettsomia, This species is very common in forests over the southern parts of the Carnatic, and Tanjore country. Flowering time the cold season. _ Stem twining, woody, running over high trees, &e. Young shoots hoary. Leaves petioled, broad-cordate, or reniform, entire,with the under side downy, particularly while young ; from one to two inches each way. Petioles the length of the leaves, having two glands laterally at the extremity. Pedun- - eles axillary, solitary, length of the petioles, one-flowered. Flowers large, pure white, opening at sun-set, and drooping at sun-rise. Bracies two, near the top of the peduncles. Tube long, slender, cylindric, Nectary a yellow, fleshy — ring surrounding the base of the germ, Stigma two-lobed. Lobes \inear-oblong, erect. Berry spherical, dry, smooth, shining, brown, one-celled, Seeds ; from one to four is the natural number, immersed in a brownish farinaceous pulp. 12. L, ornata. R. Shrubby, erect, ultimately twining. ‘Gagvas pain: conde entire, with large round Jobes, sericeous underneath. Pedun- eles many-flowered. . Stigma with two lanceolate lobes. Berry ary, oblong, beaked, shorter than the calyx. A native of the interior parts of India; from Cawnpore Colonel Hardwicke sent the plants to the Botanic oule at Calcutta, where they blossom during therains. .. _- «Stems . aaah penherermas Hagcid, ising ever aieik Leaves analy pace suclinn lobes senda: 1 tire ; apex rather emarginate ; smooth above, of a dull livid plone: underneath, and somewhat sericeous; general size from three to six inches each way. Petioles round, serice- ous, shorter than the leaves, with a greenish gland on each side near the apex as in all the other = pamelor ee axillary, as as aan ales etioles, a Ipomoea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 497 Lettsomia bona-nox. Bractes lanceolate, Calya; Jeaflets Imear-oblong. Corol with a cylindric tube, from two to three inches long, border about four inches in ‘diameter, _ Flowers hairy at the base. Anthers within, Germ four-cell- ed, four-seeded. Stigma of two linear-oblong lobes, Berry oblong, shorter than the calyx, smooth, pointed, one-celled, Seeds from one to four, (one is most common,) enveloped in a ' little mealy pulp. Perisperm and embryo as in the order, IPOMOEA. Calyx five-leaved, (or five parted), Corol funnel-shaped. ee two-lobed, Capsules two-celled ; celis two-seeded. LL. grandiflora. R. Perennial, twining, sometimes murexed, Iota Siblata, rarely lobate, acute, smooth, | Peduneles length of the peti- oles, three-flowered. eet of two round lobes, Ca a _ two-celled. - Munda-Valli, Rheed.. Mal. xi, 103. 1. 50, Convolvulus grandiflorus, Linn, suppl. aieids 136. Munda-valli, Asiat. Res. iv. 257. Beng. Doodiya-Kulmi. — Ipomoea bona-nox. Jacq. Hort. Schoenb, Convolyulus maximus. Sloan, Jam, 96, f.1. is unget ‘likely this plant, for I have reared it in Bengal from seed received from the West Indies with that name. The only difference is that the leaves of the West Indian plant are rather more angular, and like Sloane’s aligns than those of the valk In- dian'one. = A Lies sosindegiapuelens einen Te: gallery: adn cota, and’ in Bengal, and on the banks of water courses amongst bushes. . Flowers during the cold season in the Cir- cars, and in Bengal during the hot and rainy seasons. Stem twining, running’ to the height of from ten to twenty feet, smooth, except that it is sometimes armed with small i in- - ‘VOL. I. = 498 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Tpomoea, offensive prickles, Leaves scattered, petioled, cordate, point- ed, generally entire, though sometimes a little lobed, or angu- lar, smooth, about three or four inches long and three broad. Petioles round, smooth, length of the leaves, Peduncles axillary, smooth, clubbed, length of the petioles or more, from two to four-flowered. Fowers remarkably large, the border being from four to six inches in diameter, pure white, delight-. fully but faintly fragrant, opening at sun-set, and drooping at day-light. Tube very long, cylindric. Stigma double, Capsules ovate, smooth, two-celled, four-valved. Seeds four, viz. two in each cell, smooth, black. - Obs, Till L observed Giertner’s figures of the capsule and seeds of Ipomoea bona-nox I considered this to be that plant. Dr. Konig also thought it was bona-nox and I think he said Linnzeus the son had committed a mistake when (in the Sup- plemenium Plantarum) he called this plant Convolvulus grandifiorus, instead of Ipomoea grandiflora, 2. 1. salicifolia. R. Leaves linear-lanceolate, acuminate. Peduncles one to three-flowered, length of the petioles. Found by Dr. Buchanan in the district of tear in Bengal. In the Botanic garden, at Calcutta it is biennial; Ser: ering in the rainy season, = Stem and branches twining to a moderate extent, round, and smooth, Leaves short-petioled, linear-lanceolate, taper- ing from the rounded base into a long, slender, acute point, entire, smooth on both sides, from three to eight inches long, and scarcely one broad at the broadest part. Peduncles axil- lary, solitary, half an inch long, bearing one, two, or three large, pure white flowers. Calyx ; leaflets five, ovate, smooth. Corol with a cylindric tube of about an inch and a half in length, border flat, obscurely divided. Stamina hid in the tube of the corol. Stigma of two round aabelis — Ipomoea. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, _ 499 3. I. muricata, R. Annual, twining, muricate. Leaves cordate. Peduncles few-flowered ; inside of the tube of the corols hairy, Convolvulus muricatus. Linn, Mant, 44. Ihave only met with this in my own garden; it was raised from seeds sent from Persia and proves annual, _ Stem as in I, grandiflora, but much more murexed, and _notso long, the leaves also the same, but much larger. Pe- duncles axillary, half the length of the petioles, from two to six-flowered. Flowers large, pale bluish-purple, Tube wid- ening a little towards the mouth; inside hairy, by which mark it is instantly distinguished from I. grandiflora, rhs i. multifiora, R. : Siems woody, twining. Leaves broad-cordate, downy. Pe- duncles as long as the leaves, umbelliferous. pak) A common species, native of hedges, forests. &c. Flower- ing time the cold season, Stem perennial, woody, twining up, and over trees and | bushes, Leaves scattered, petioled, broad-cordate, entire, a little bent downwards, bristle-like pointed, both sides a little downy, particularly the under one, from three to four inches: each way. Petioles round, downy, from two to three inches long. Umbels three or five-parted, many-flowered.. Pedun- cles round, nearly erect, longer than the leaves. Flowers nu- merous, very large, rose-coloured ; inside of the tube a bright red, Leaflets of the calyx unequal. Stigma two-lobed ; lobes globular. Obs. This species while in flower is one of the greatest beau- ties of our forests. . Whether this is what Kénig called wei 0000: Daa ar eo ihe i sepiaria. Kin. Mo. ae Perennial, twining, hairy. Lenin cordate, Pudaelin many-flowered, and with the pedicels clavate ; pps four celled. Fi2 500 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Ipomoea. Tiru-tali, Rheed. Mal. xi. p. 109. t. 53. is certainly this — plant, though quoted for Convolvulus maximus, Can they be the same.? Probably they are, as Vahl’s description agrees tolerably well with my plant. Teling. Metta-tootia. This is one of the most common species on the coast, it grows plentifully in every hedge, thicket, &c. Flowers dur- ing the rainy and cold season. — Stem twining, perennial; young shoots round, filiforra, hairy. Leaves alternate, petioled, cordate, pointed, somewhat sagittate, or angular behind, otherwise entire; smooth, often clouded with brownish spots in the centre ; from two to three inches long. Peduncles axillary, as long as the leaves, round, smooth, clubbed, many-flowered. Flowers large, of a beau- tiful. pale rose-colour. — awayatinds, lobes epehuas: Sor smooth, . 6. I. cerulescens. R. i Perennial, twining, all the tender parts hairy. Leaves round cordate, acute. Peduncles erect, length of the petioles, from one to three-flowered. Stigma of three round lobes. Cap- sules smooth, three-celled, Native place uncertain, nor can any Asiatic names be pro- cured for this beautiful, distinct species, Stems perennial, twining to a great extent ; young shoots jercg and easy aaie ber apa nied anietew anit; surface less Bikey than the yeilbnesed Aanéta,sletlirtn or four inches each way. Peduneles axillary, length of the petioles, hairy, at all times erect, from one to three-flowered. Flowers pretty large; their colour when they first expand early in the morning, is a beautiful lively pale blue, or azure, gradually growing darker. Bractes lanceolate, hairy. Calyx pay Seen IeNate petiolt ent Apomoea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 501 Stigma three-lobed ; lobes round, Capsules smooth, three- celled, with two peas black seeds in each. Obs. This, and I. cerulea (probably I. hederacea of dec quin,) are exactly the same in the inflorescence, germ, stigma and capsules ; but they differ specifically, This being peren- nial, and having the leaves constantly without any tendency to be lobate, whereas that is annual, with three-lobed leaves, I may farther add, that plants raised from seed received from the Honourable Charles Greville, in London, under the name Convolvulus hederaceus, differ only in the colour of the flow- ers from my I, c@rulea, in which it is blue, and in this, heder- acea, white. 7.1. cerulea, Kon, Mss, veer om Annual, twining, hairy. Leaves cordate, three-lobed, downy. Peduneles from two to three-flowered, margins | of the - corol sub-entire. Stigmas three-lobed, ——— three-celled. Beng. Neel-kulmi. It is common during the rains in most parts of India. Stems and branches twining, annual, round, hairy, from six to twelve feet long, as thick asa crow’s quill, Leaves alter- nate, petioled, broad-cordate, | three-lobed, downy ; from two _ to four inches long, acute, &c. almost as in Dillenius’s figures of Convolvulus Nil. Peduneles axillary, length of the peti- oles, round, hairy, from two to three-flowered. Bractes and leaflets of the calyx linear. Flowers large, of a beautiful light, but bright blue. Stigma sub-globular, large, glandu- desi three-lobed, Capsule much shorter than the cal % emabohy Semesttied: with two seeds in each. . I have often reared this species in miesnien, dapecount of the gre: ae! oe a tanigs Bese, 2H sg pat find it to he « ‘eads of thin plant aro sold intense, sasliiueentieg’ shops in Calcutta, under the name Kala dana, and used as a purgative. I have heard them much praised as an effectual, quick-operating, safe cathartic, The dose is from thirty to Ff3 502 _ PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Ipomoea, forty grains of the seeds in substance, when administered they are gently roasted like coffee, then powdered, and given in any convenient vehicle. It scarcely differs sufficiently from Convolvulus Nil to war- rant its being considered more than a variety of that, or that of this. In that the leaves of plants growing in the same si- tuation are less divided and the lobes shorter and less pointed. The rim of the corol five-angled, and the angles pointed as in Dillenius’s figure, whereas in I, caerulea it is nearly circular, 8. 1. phoenicea, R. Annual, twining. Leaves broad-cordate; posterior edges often variously lobate. Racemes dichotomous, many-flower- ed, Leaflets of the calyx end subulately, Stamina erect, — Stigma globular. | , A native of the southern parts of the Coromandel coast, the seeds were received into this garden from Dr. Berry, who pro- cured them from Dindigul. In Bengal it thrives luxuriant- ly, and is in blossom most part of the year, but chiefly during the cool season, This plant has also been reared from seeds received from the island of Trinidad ; there i is therefore the more reason to compare it with I. coccinea, Stem and branches twining, young parts somewhat angu- . Jar, and twisted. Leaves alternate, petioled, cordate, acumi- nate, sometimes three-lobed ; sides and posterior edges vari- ously dentate, sinuate, or —— ‘smooth on both sides, from two to six inches each way. Petioles nearly as long as the leaves, channelled, Racemes -aattibeey, solitary, generally two-cleft, much longer than the leaves. Flowers remote, large, of a most beautiful bright crimson colour. Calyx smooth, the leaflets subulate at the end. Corol ; tube nearly two inches long, contracting towards the base, slightly curv- ed; border at first expanded, afterwards a little revolute. Sitenitict projecting considerably beyond the mouth of the tube of the Corel. Stigma es ee mam —_— 3 -four-celled, with ‘asingle seed in each, - e ae Ipomoea, . PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 503 - Obs. This is by far the most gaudy plant of the kind I have yet met with ; no painter can do justice to the brightness of its flowers, 9. 1. Pes-tigridis, Willd. spec. i. 886. Annual, diffuse, or twining, hairy. Leaves palmate. Pe- duncles longer than the petioles, Flowers several in a soli- tary, aggregate, involucred head. Beng. Languli-luta. Pulli-schovadi. Rheed: Mal. xi, 121. t. 59. Volubilis zeylanica. Dill. Elth. tab. 318, f. 411. This is one of the most common, and generally diffused plants we have in India. Flowering time the rainy season chiefly. Stems diffuse, or twining when supported, round, and very hairy ; hairs fulvous, and diverging. Leaves alternate, long- petioled, palmate, hairy; lobes from five to nine, lanceolate, entire. Peduncles long, or longer than the petioles, hairy, each supporting a single head of sessile, white, or pink flow- ers ; the latter variety is smaller than the white one. IJnvolu- cre from eight to twelve-leaved ; deaflets unequal, recurved, lanceolate, obtuse, hairy. Calya of five lanceolate, acute, unequal, leaflets. Corol, with its five lobes deeply emargi- nate. Stigma of two round lobes. Capsules two-celled. Seeds two in each cell. 10. I. Quamoclit, Willd. spec. i. 879. 7 Annual, twining. Leaves pinnate, leaflets filiform, Pe- duncles one or two-flowered. eee Se Tsjuria-cranti. Rheed, Mal. xi. 123.4.60. Flos cardinalis. Rumph. Amb. v. 155. t. 2. — Camalata. Asiat, Res, iv. 256. Sans. Kamaluta, ’ Turooluta, = Beng. Lal kamluta or lal turooluta, the red variety ; ; sweta kamluta or sweta turooluta, the white-flowered variety, rea 504 _PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Campanula, A native of various parts of India. Flowers during the rainy season’in Bengal. past 11. I. pileata, R. Perennial, twining. Leaves profoundly round-cordate, vil- lous. Flowers a few, sessile in a peltate, four-cornered, pe- duncled, axillary bonnet. This rather small, villous species has baie introduced from China into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it blossoms and ripens its seeds during the cool dry months from No- vember to February. It is particularly remarkable on ac- count of its entire, rhombiform concave bonnet or involucre, in the bottom or centre of which, from three to six middle - sized, rosy, funnel-shaped flowers sit; it is hairy round the flowers, as are also the unequal leaflets of the calyx. CAMPANULA. Schreb. gen. N. 290. Calyx five-parted. Corol campanulate. Filaments with their lobes dilated, and arched. Stigma from three to five- cleft. Capsule natoxinl from three to five-celled, ope by ake on the —: | 1. C. dehiscens. R. Annual, ascending, voted a little eee ities les linear-lanceolate, remotely toothed. Flowers from five to six, oe icacgearen rigieaieacet anes Resin’ meting the apex, 2 Me on oe A native of Seagal! Blower ine she: wold, aa hea ning of the hot season, Root nearly simple, white, annual. Stems sie branches ascending, about a foot high, round, hairy. Leaves alternate, sessile, linear-lanceolate, remotely, and lightly toothed; from ‘one to two inches long. lowers terminal, corymbiform, wh meet: large, bell-shaped. Calyx, corol, stamens and il as the genus. _ sConeninchanee, without lateral wet ~ Phyiewna. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 505 opening at the apex. Seeds numerous, minute, vollaigptacic reniform, in the angle of each cell. den Bub. lancifoli. R. Ramous, smooth. Leaves sub-opposite and alternate, ae petioled, lanceolate, serrate, acuminate. Flowers terminal, Calycine leaflets lanceolate and laciniate. Capsules obovate, five-celled. A native of the moist vallies Ps Chittagong, whee it flowers in October. PH YTEUMA. Schreb. gen. N. 292. 7 scCalye semi-superus, five-parted. Corol rotate, inserted on the calyx. Germ inferior, three-celled, ovula numerous, on _a pendulous receptacle from the top of each cell. Stigma three-lobed. Capsule three-celled.. Seeds numerous. 1. P. begonifolium. Roxb. Hort. Beng. 85. Creeping, woolly, _ Leaves alternate, semicordate, serrate, Racemes axillary, secund, recurvate, Bractes cuneate. A native of Pulo Pinang, where Mr. W. Roxburgh found it in forests shaded by trees and shrubs, and with flowers and ripe seeds in June and July. Stems somewhat dichotomous, round, fleshy, spreading on the ground, and rooting at the insertion of the leaves, the younger parts as well as the petioles and racemes clothed with a harsh, ferruginous, woolly pubescence. Leaves alter- nate, petioled, semicordate, (as in some species of Begonia), serrate, acute, pretty smooth; length six or eight inches, breadth about halfthe length, Petioles from one to two inches longs. Stipules none. acemes axillary, solitary, secund, olute, twice the length of the petioles. lowers short- pedicelled, alternately arranged in two rows on the anterior _ side of the raceme; while two rows of alternate, cuneate, woolly bractes occupy the posterior side, Calyx one-lobed;, 506 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, - Lobelia. tube gibbous, and growing to the lower half of the germ. Border of five sub-orbicular, woolly, permanent segments. Corol one-petalled, rotate, tube very short, and united with the calyx into one envelope which closely embraces the up- ° per part of the germ; border of five, oblong segments, alter- nate with those of the calyx, and double their length, wither- ing. Filaments five, short, inserted partly on the tube and top of the germ. Anthers oblong. Germ inferior, oblong, three- celled, each cell contaming numerous ovula attached to a long, free, linear receptacle, which is united, by a slender pe- dicel, to the top of the cell, Style very short and thick, Stiy- ma concave, with a thick fleshy three-lobed margin, Cap- sule oblong, clothed with the woolly tube of the calyx, and crowned with the segments of its border, as well as the with- ered corol, three-celled, (in what manner they open I have not been able to ascertain.) Seeds very numerous, adhering to the long, filiform, free receptacles, which are attached to the apex of the capsules as already mentioned, LOBELIA. Schreb. gen. N. 1363. Calyx five-cleft. Coro] one-petalled, irregular. ‘Anthers united, Capsule inferior, two or three-celled, 1. L. nicotianifolia, Heyne’s Mss. Erect. Leaves cabesossile, lanegolar, acute, entire. Raceme : ge eer er ee anh found it indigenous in the vicinity of Bangalore. 9. L, trigona, R. Annual, base creeping, erect parts three-sided. fe ate : _ sessile, cordate, serrate, _Peduncles axillary, janet sito ee _ eaves, one-flowered, al. small, annual, ramous plant which delights i in meh pas- ture g round, and appears eaaing the wet and cold seasons. — Sphenoclea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ia Stems near the root creeping, above erect, ramous, three- sided, smooth, the whole plant is from six to twelve inches high. Leaves sub-sessile, cordate, grossly serrate, smooth. ‘Peduncles axillary, solitary, erect, length of the leaves or _ longer, two-bracted at the base. Flowers small, blue. Corol inserted in the mouth of the calyx. 3. L. radicans. Willd. spec. i, 948, Annual, creeping, smooth, Leaves sessile, lanceolate, re- motely serrulate. Peduncles axillary, solitary, twice the length of the leaves, one-flowered. Accidentally introduced from China, into the Botanic gar- den at Calcutta, where it blossoms freely during the rains. Our plants are but small, very ramous, spreading over the soil, and striking root at every branchlet. The flowers are large for the size of the plant, pink-coloured; segments of the corolla equal, unilateral, and narrow-lanceolate, with two green glands under the two middle sinuses, opposite to the long, green, two-lobed stigma. SPHENOCLEA. Gert. carp. i. 113. tab. 24. Calyx five-parted. Corol one-petalled. Capsule inferior, two-celled. Seeds numerous, 1, S. zeylanica, Willd, spec. i, 927. : Pongati. Rheed, Mal.ii. 47, t. 24. Sphenoclea Pongatium. Lamarck, Gertnera Pangati. Retz. Obs, vi. p. 24. Beng. Jeel-mureech. o Teling. Neeroo-pipli. 3 An erect ppavals ; a native of watery. places, < Focen i. the wet season. Root fibrous, al Stem erect, conn: ramous, smooth, glossy, piped. Branches alternate, ascending. Leaves al- ternate, short-petioled, lanceolar, entire, tender, smooth, from 508 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Nauelea. two to three inches long, and half an inch broad. Stipules none, - Spikes terminal, or leaf-opposed, peduncled, cylin- dric, middle-sized, closely surrounded with the fructifica- tions. Bractes small, three-fold, one-flowered ; one below, and one on each side, pressing the calyx. Flowers small, white. Calyx superior, one-leaved, five-cleft; divisions obtuse, spreading when the flower is open, afterwards converging over the capsule, permanent. Corol one-petalled, Tube short; throat gibbous ; mouth five-cleft, inflexed. Filaments five, short, inserted into the mouth of the tube. Anthers two- lobed, in the gibbous throat of the corol. Germ inferior, an- gular, Style short. Stigma headed. Capsule turbinate, an- gular, (from being pressed one against another,) two-celled, circumcised, ‘Seeds minute, very numerous, oblong. NAUCLEA. Schreb. gen. N. 295. Flowers aggregate, on a globular receptacle. Corollets funnel-shaped. Germs inferior, two-celled ; cells many-seed- ed ; attachment interior. Capsules two-celled. Seeds many, imbricated, and winged. Embryo inverse, and furnished with a wi, “thie aS R, sotdadae R, ssiieiiain Arboreous, branches brachiate. Leaves sich oneness ing isceeno meen elliptic, _— - ee — — A ndtv of dhs Moludeay from arias siiffodabett' jiito ‘he Botanic garden at Calcutta in 1789, where the trees blossom in May and June; the seeds take above a year to ripen. — Trunk perfectly straight to the top of the tree. -Branehes brachiate. Bark smooth, that of the ligneous parts brown, that of the tender parts green. Height of ten year old trees, : ~ fifteen to twenty-five feet. Leaves opposite, petioled, -ovate-oblong and oblong, waved, entire, “polished on both °s; from six to twelve-inches long’ by from three Naucelea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 509 broad. Petioles coloured, slightly channelled, about two inches long.. Stipules elliptic, length of the petioles, smooth: Peduneles terminal, solitary, drooping, each bearing a single, large globular, aggregate head of numerous, small, most beautiful, yellow, fragrant florets. Bracte, a small, wither- ing, somewhat four-toothed ring near the base of the pedun- "cles, and hid hy the stipules, Calyx, common none, or very obscure; proper, of one fleshy cup, cut into four or five, cla- vate segments. Corol funnel-shaped, much longer than the perianth; yellow and fragrant; divisions of the border four, or five, oval, obtuse. Filaments scarcely any. Anthers on the five fissures of the border of the corol. Germs inferior, grown together, two-celled, with many ovula in each, attach- ed to their proper receptacles, projecting downwards from their attachment to the partition a little above its middle, Style much Jonger than the corol. Stigma large, oblong, with the apex somewhat two-lobed. Fruit the size of a small apple, rough with the remains of the segments of the calyx, now Seineningp five conic knobs on the crown of each of the par- tial seed vessels, which are all firmly grown together, each _ of these are two-celled. Seeds rarely more than one in each cell, and fragrant, not one of the whole being abortive, they. are oblong, not winged but crowded with a fleshy gland which unites them to the receptacles on the partition. —Lnte- guments uncertain, from the smallness of seed. Perisperm conform to the seed. Embryo inverse, nearly as long as the — Cotyledons oblong. Radicle oval, superior. 2, N, cordata. R. at Leaves petioled, broad-ovate-cordate, teil ainsi smooth, — obovate, © Plows: — — Capsules united. A remiinailik Geils sain lends taodatie Lendieitei in 1802, to the Botanic garden at Calcutta by General Hay * Macdowall, where the young trees blossomed in May and June, 1808, and the seeds ripened in the cold season, 510 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Nauclea, Trunk straight up through the branches to the very top of the tree. Bark of a light greenish ash-colour. Branches spreading, horizontal, forming a broad-ovate, shady head, ge- neral height of our six years old trees from fifteen to twenty feet. Leaves opposite, short-petioled ; from round-cordate to ovate-cordate, obtuse, entire, coriaceous, smooth; marked with prominent, alternate veins; the upper surface shining — dark green, the under one paler; length from three to nine inches, and from two to eight broad. Petioles roundish, smooth, about an inch or an inch and a half long. - Stipules interfoliaceous, large, roundish, or obovate, apex rounded, marked with numerous, fine veins, caducous. Peduncles ter- minal, solitary, and generally in the small lateral branchlets, _ drooping, each supporting a large, beautiful, globular, aggre- gate head of very fragrant bright yellow florets. Bractea small, irregularly four-toothed, withering ring round the pe- duncles, near the base, within the stipules. Calyx, common none, or very obscure; proper deeply cut into four or five, fleshy, clavate, permanent segments, which thicken as the fruit advances in size, Florets funnel-shaped, four or five-parted. Divisions obovate, obtuse. Filamenis very short, from the mouth of the tube just under the fissures of its border, An- thers cordate. Germ inferior, completely united to each other, their whole length two-celled, each containing many imbricat- ed seeds attached to a receptacle rising from the partition a atic above its middle. Style much longer than the corol. | a oblong, apex obscurely two-lobed, of a beautiful pearl colour. Fruit*aggregate, size of a small apple, round, rough, with the obtuse, fleshy permanent portions of the di- visions of the ealyces; the partial seed vessels thereof are firmly united, angular, inversely conical, two-celled, with a few oblong, imbricated seeds in each, besides a number of small, brown scales, which are the abortive ovula, as may be ‘seen | by the structure of the germ as well as by their being attached to the same central receptacle; the full grown seeds” are crowned with a greenidh, fleshy-gland, to shidebene: Nauclea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 511. bilical cord is fixed. Albumen conform to the seed.. Em- bryo inverse, straight. Cotyledons oval. Plumula minute. Radicle cylindric, superior, 3. N. macrophylla, R. Leaves stem-clasping, narrow-oval, obtuse, villous under- neath, Stipules lanceolate. Peduncles terminal, solitary, one- flowered. From Amboyna this magnificent tree was introduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, jn 1797. In 1810, they began to blossom in June, the trees were then fifty feet high, and the trunk of the largest rather above three feet in circumfer- ence, four feet above ground, while young their growth was — not rapid. Trunk perfectly straight, like the pines, tothe very top ofthe tree. Bark smooth, dark brown. Branches decussate. Branch- lets round and smooth, Leaves opposite, stem-clasping, broad- oblong, entire, obtuse, and though they completely embrace the branchlets, yet taper more toward the much waved base than theapex, somewhat villous particularly underneath, veins. parallel ; length from eight to twenty-four inches, and broad in proportion, when the trees were young, they were even more than two feet long. _ Stipules opposite, linear-lanceolate, con- cave, smooth and yeinless, about three inches long. Pedun- cles terminal, solitary, length of the stipules, recurvate, giv- ing support to a single most beautiful flower, of full three inches in diameter, and sweet smelling, the corollets are very numerous, of a pale yellow colour ; and the stigmas, which project far beyond them, are pure white, Common calyx none; proper perianth of five, long, clavate leaflets, Corol funnel-shaped. Tube slender, widening gently to the mouth; segments five, ovate-oblong, spreading. Filaments none. An- thers attached to the mouth of the tube of the corol, under the fissures of its border, sagittate. Germ numerous, distinct, in- ’ ferior, somewhat wedge-shaped, two-celled, with numerous, imbricated ovula in each, attached to every part of a free li- 512 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Naielea, near receptacle, which is united to the partition, a little above - its middle, and descends deep into each cell, in fact, it is ex- actly that of Gertner’s Oldenlandia corymbosa, i. 147. t. 30.. inverted. Siyle twice the length of the coro). Stigma cla- vate, somewhat two-lobed. 4, N. Cadamba. R. Leaves petioled, ovate. Stipules triangular. Peduneles terminal, solitary; divisions of the calyx linear. Capsules four-celled at top and two-celled at the base. Seeds without a wing, “Sans, Neepa, Priyuka, and Coitansilon: Beng. Kudum, — Katou-tsjaka. Rheed, Mal, 3. t. 33. Is common about Calcutta, where it grows to be a large tree, and is not only highly ornamental, but very useful from the extensive close shade it yields, | Flowering time the hot season. Seed ripe in October and November. Trunk erect, and perfectly straight, bark smooth, dark gray. Branches numerous, horizontal. Leaves opposite, between bifarious and decussate, spreading, petioled, oval, smooth, entire, nerves many, and simple; from five to ten inches long. Petioles smooth, about an inch and a half long. Stipules interfoliaceous, triagular. Flowers solitary, termi- nal, aggregate ; corollets numerous, forming a large, perfect- ly csp ——— en ane! airy eres proper, veut. Cored: as in soillinakagy Sily therdir’. sions are never recurved. Capsules inferior, four-sided, taper- ing from the apex to the base, near the top it is composed of. four, distinct, hard cells, under the common envelope ; the lower two-thirds is two-celled only. Seeds numerous, very | —- — brown colour, nears Nauclea. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 513 terminal, tern ; divisions of the calyx triangular. Stigma glo- ' 7 bose ; seeds three or four in each cell, A native of the Moluccas, 6. N. parvifolia, Willd. spec. i. 929. Roxb, Corom. i. 40. tab. 52. Branches and branchlets brachiate. Leaves ovate. Sti- pules oval. Flowers terminal, one or three. Seeds imbricat- ed, membrane-winged, | Teling. Bota kudumee. _ This grows to be a large tree; is a native of almost every part of the coast of Coromandel, but chiefly up amongst the mountains, Flowers during the cold season, Trunk straight... Bark brownish gray, and. cracked. Branches opposite, numerous, spreading, forming a large oval, shady head, Leaves opposite, decussate, petioled, ovate, entire, smooth. Petioles channelled. Stipules large, oblong, obtuse, glutinous, caducous. Peduncles terminal, single or three, when three the middle one is shortest ; near the apex jointed, and bracted, each supporting a single, globular, nak- ed head of corollets. | Bractes two, opposite, near the extre- mity of the peduncle, oval, caducous. Corollets small, light yellow. Calyx, common none. Common receptacte chaffy, _wedge-form, hairy at their insertions, Proper perianih very minute, entire. Corol one-petalled, funnel-form. Tube widen- ing. Border five-parted ; divisions pointed, spreading. Fi- laments five, short, inserted just within. the mouth of the tube, Anthers erect, oblong, pointed above. Germ beneath, Style thread-form, nearly twice the length of the corol. Sti large, resting on the style (like the cap of liberty,) turbinate, covered with a scabrous crust or bark, which splits irregular- ly when the seeds are ripe; within are the proper two-celled capsules, each consisting of one valve, opening round the apex and down on the inside, Seeds several, very minute, oblong, tailed, inversely imbricated round the outside of their recep- - tacle, with insertions downwards, VoL, 1. ; Ge 514 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA,. NMauclea, Obs, The wood is of a light chesnut colour, firm and close grained, is used for various purposes where it can be kept. dry, but exposed to wet it soon rots, 7. N. cordifolia, Willd. spec. i, 929, Roxb, Corom.i, 40, tab. 53. Leaves opposite, round-cordate, downy underneath, #low- ers axillary, from one to three. Segments of the calyx cla- vate; seeds membrane-winged, not imbricated. le Kelt-kudum. Teling. Daduga. _ This like the foregoing species, grows to be a very large tree ; it isa native of the mountains of the coast of Coroman- del. Flowers during the wet season. The seeds ripen about. April. ¢ Trunk tolerably straight... Bark: like that of the formers Branches yery numerous, horizontal, forming a very large, shady head. Leaves opposite, decussate, petioled, broad- cordate, pointed, entire, above pretty smooth ; downy under- neath, particularly when young, beautifully reticulated with small veins ; from four to twelve inches each way. -Petioles, _ round, a. little downy ; from two to three inches long. Séi- pules, as in the last species, Peduncles axillary, from one to four, round, downy, length of the petioles, near the apex jointed, and bracted, each supporting a single globular head. finngtes:, oval, caducous, lowers as in the former. i ; ( receptacle as in the pre- an species, - i pitetkahaviAies oot} divi- sions clavate. Corollets, stamens, germ, and style as in the former species. Stigma clavate. Capsules wedge-form, the other parts as in the foregoing species. Seeds, about six, in each cell, surrounding their receptacle, oblong, not imbricat- ed, membrane-winged at the extremities, the lower ones pointed, the upper.two-forkedsis:¢.. gira: odiag euale bes ~ Obs. The wood of this tree is exceedingly beautiful, its. colour is like that of the boa-tre, but much igh and aie 2 . eed Nauclea, . PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAS. 5 1 ae same time very close grained. It is to be had of a large _ size, from one to two feet, or more in diameter, and is used for almost every purpose where it can be kept dry.. For furniture it answers ener” well, being light and dur-. able, 8. N. purpurea, Willd, spec. i. 929. Roxb. Corom, i. 41, tab, 54, Leaves petioled, oblong, very smooth. Flowers terminal, from one to three, segments of the calyx clavate, Seeds very. numerous, membrane-winged, imbricated. Teling. Bagada, A small tree, a native of the moist vallies up amongst the Circar mountains, Flowering time the beginning . of the hot season, Trunk irregular. Bark scabrous, ash-coloured, | leihteichice opposite, decussated. Leaves opposite, decussated, short- petioled, oblong, pointed, entire, very smooth and shining both above and below, from four to nine inches long, and broad in proportion. Stipules as in the two preceding species. Peduneles terminal, one or three. Flowers larger than in either: of the former species, purple, Calyx, common none. septacte almost naked. Proper perianth as in N, cordifolia, Corol, stamens and pistillum as in the species. _ Stigma glo- bular. Capsules turbinate, (the outer covering wanting,) two-celled; the cells two-valved, opening from the base, Seeds numerous, most minute, imbricated with their i insertion upwards. eee 9. N. sessilifolia. Ro eS Leaves oblong, sessile, base silane clues, samactite: the branchlets; apex gonnileds ineies, terminal, itraam Capsule. four-valved. | A. large tree, a salve of the forests of sf Ohitcebing, where it ne from Jattunry till March. Gg2 516 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, Nauclea. ~ 10. N. rotundifolia. R. Leaves petioled, round-oval, obtuse, Stipules oblong, ob- tuse-nerved. Flowers terminal, sub-panicled. Gapeules dis- tinct. ; A middling sized tree, a native of Chittagong, where it blossoms in October, and the seeds ripen in March. 11. N. ovalifolia. R. "Leaves sessile, oval and elliptic. Flowers terminal, soli- tary. | A tree, a native of the forests of Silhet, where it is called = by the natives. 12. N. jeivcade Res : E Leaves ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, villous. Flowers ter- minal ; corol/ets tetrandrous, a black gland between the four segments of the calyx and corollets, . Beng. Shwet Kudum (white kudum.) ; An elegant small tree, a native of Silhet. Here it grows to the height of from ten to twenty feet, with a distinct, erect trunk. Flowering time the hot season, Branchlets straight, round, very downy. Leaves from opposite to quatern, alist potip bl, Sevbiie Suchesbobiben entire, acuminate, downy underneath, from three to five inches long, and rarely so much as two broad. Stipules within the leaves, acuminate. _ Anflorescence terminal. Flowers peduncled 2 to a verticelled panicle, — ‘Perianth proper four- toothed, with"s little black gland between. Corollets fun- nel-shaped, yellow, intermixed with filiform, clavate scales; - border four-parted, with a little black gland between, as in the calyx. Filaments searcely any. Anthers four, erect, attached to the mouth of the tube of the corollets. Germ in- ferior, very minute, but clearly two-celled ; only one ovulum in each rea be — Bs eh ~~ net — Uncaria, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 517 UNCARIA. Schreb. gen. N. 311. Flowers aggregate, on a globular receptacle. Calyx, common simple, remote; proper five-parted, Corollets fun- nel-shaped. Germ inferior, two-celled ; cells many-seeded ; attachment interior. Capsules pedicelled, two-celled, parti- tions parallel. Seeds many, imbricated, membrane-winged. Embryo inverse, and furnished with a perisperm. Our East India plants belonging to this genus are very permanent, ciriferous ramblers; with opposite, stipulate leaves, Flowers globular, terminal, or axillary, and for the most part the capsules pedicelled, and in that state like globu- lar umbellets which (with the habit,) separate them from Nauclea, 1. U. Gambit, Hunter in Linn, Transact, ix, wees tab, 22, Fleming in Asiat, Res. xi, 187, Leaves ovate-lanceolate. Peduncles ‘xillady, solitary. Capsules clavate, pedicelled, Funis pacotuagisecitoling Rumph. Amb. 5. p. 63. t. 34, tt 2 and 3. A: stout, scandent shrub, a native of Pulo Pinang, Suma- tra;-Malacca, &e. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, from antiaianasil melie lanceolate, entire, acute; smooth on both sides; about four inches long, and two broad, Stipules sous uniting the upper margin of the base of the petioles, caducous, Tendrils. axillary, solitary, or in opposite pairs, simple, recurved, hook-: ed. Pedunceles axillary, solitary, about the middle jointed and bracted, supporting a single globular head, of beautiful, green and pink, small aggregate corollets. Bractes, about the middle of the peduncle, a three or four-cleft annular peri- anth-like cup. Perianth ; common, no other than the just. mentioned bracte ; proper sericeous on the outside with a five- cleft border. Corollets ; tube filiform ; border of five obtuse: divisions, villous on the outside, and haityel in the centre of: Gg3 ~ 518 VENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, Uncaria. the inside, Filaments short. Anithers large, on the mouth of the tube. Germ beneath, turbinate, sub-sessile, sericeous, Style as long as the tube of the corol. Stigma clavate. Capsules pedicelled, clavate, longitudinally grooved, crown- ed with the five-cleft permanent calyx, two-celled, two-valv- ed, Seeds numerous, imbricated, winged. _ Obs. Gambier is the Malay name of an extract, prepared from the leaves of this plant. And I believe one of the drugs, if not the only one, formerly called Terra Japonica in Eu- rope. For the following account thereof I am indebted to Dr. Charles Campbell, of Bencoolen, who says : | _ © This material is called by the Malays Gambier. It is chewed by the natives mingled with Beé/e leaf and areca af- ter the manner in which the Cutch is used on the continent of India, * With some sweetness it has a more highly concentrated astringent principle than Terra Japonica, 1 am solicitous that a trial should also be made of its power in tanning. “ In regard to the natural history of the Gambier it is pro- cured from a climber little known to the Botanic garden. “It is the Funis uncatus, or Daun Gaita Gambier of. Rumphius. Herb. Amboin. vol. v. tab. 34. The variety from which it is chiefly made is that denominated by peaiines us the Funis uncatus angustifolius, _ “ The preparation is simple, the: young shoot and toate ares sand. bruised’ in water for some hours, until a feculum oe ‘into. ‘moulds of ac circular form; cui ; this state the Gambier is brought to market. * Rumphius has fallen into an error in asserting that Gam- ier di is not made from this plant, for in my journey to Cochin China I had an opportunity of inspecting the whole process, having resided some days at a small village near the foot of the mountain, where the Sultan of Moco has evo biinbone a Uncaria. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, , ee _ The price at which it can be procured from the Northern parts on this coast, I have ascertained to be nearly ten dollars per hundred weight, it can be supplied in any quantity de- sired, for the plant abounds in these-districts, and the mode of eliciting the astringent matter is such as requires neither much attention nor labour.” So far Dr. Campbell. - But in other parts to the eastward of the Bay of Bengal I learn that the process is carried on by boiling the leaves sae young shoots ; evaporating the decoc- tion by fire and the heat of the sun. When sufficiently in- spissated, it is spread out thin and cut into little square cakes and dried. The same substance is mentioned by Marsden in his Histo- ry of Sumatra, at p. 242-3, who refers for a particular detail of the cultivation of the plant and manufacture of the Gam- bier, to the 2d volume of the Transactions gt the Batavian Society. ee: 2. U. ovalifolia, R. Leaves oval, entire, smooth. Peduneles axillary and ter- minal, compound. Capsules and common receptacle yee ~ A native of the Island of Pulo Pinang. ES “Trunk and branches woody, climbing to a great extent. Bark dark-brown, Leaves opposite, petiotald and obovate, pointed, smooth on both sides, entire ; from three to six inches long. Petioles short, recurved, channelled. Peduncles axill- ary and terminal, expanding, bearing from one to three agere- gate flowers. Pedicels nearly as long as the peduncles, bracted and jointed at the middle, Bractes sheathing, with the mouth from two to six-cleft, © Calyx, common perianth none. Receptacle globular, villous, Proper perianth above, five-toothed. Corol, aggregate, equal, globular. Corollets numerous, funnel-shaped ; tube very long and slender; bor- der of five obovate divisions, Filaments scarcely any. An- “thers affixed to the mouth of the tube. Germ beneath, Style the length of the corol. Stigma clavate. Capsules two-cell- Gg4 520 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Uncaria,. ed, villous. "Seeds numerous, minute, imbricated from the base of the receptacle. 3. U, pedicellata, R. Leaves ovate-cordate, Peduneles axillary, solitary, undi- vided. Corollets long-pedicelled. A native of the Molucca Islands. A, U. eirrhiflora. R. Leaves ovate-oblong, smooth. Stipules bifid. Peduncles, a continuation of the recurved tendrils, A native of the Malay Islands, 5. U. acida, Hunter. Leaves ovate, smooth, Stipules Seale two-cleft.. Flowers solitary on the bracted apices of the tendrils, | Found by Dr. Hunter on Pulo Pinang. The leaves Dr. H. observes are acid, hence the specific name. 6. U. sclerophylla. Huuter. Branches four-sided, pubescent. Leaves elliptic, pointed, rigid, Stipules lunate, two-lobed. Peduncles sina litary. Found by Dr, Hunter on the hills of Pulo Pinang, 7. U. sessilifructus, R. Leaves smooth. above,.. soft salenniine iin cles axillary, and from one to three-flowered ; also terminal, and many-flowered, Capsules sessile. A large scandent shrub, supported by strong, spiral, axil- lary hooks; a native of the forests of Caton F lowest time the sail season, 4 8. ‘U. pilosa. R é = _ All the tender sian me baie posses orate oblong ae; 3. es $a Se eS ate ge eae Sonielatio. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 521. 7 acuminate, Stipules frtepanions Peduneles erect, and furnished _ With a perisperm. : Sa e ~ song eet Pesce at a Shrubby. abe Gcalddececka saceles ioad,. "Sti. pules bifid. Peduncles axillary and terminal, several toge- ther, long, slender, one-flowered. Flowers tetrandrous, Carol with long, slender tube and border. _ Beng, Chilmaree, : _ Anerect, slender, ramous shrub, a atlas of Silhet, Chitta- ons paste siohe cat border of [Bengal where it flowers: in May, and the seeds ripen in October and November, Coffea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAS 539 Branchleis opposite, round, smooth, and slender, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, broad-lanceolar, entire, acuminate, smooth, and glossy on both sides; from four to five inches long, and scarcely two broad, ‘Stipules generally bifid, Seg- ments sitbulate. Peduncies terminal and axillary, several to- gether, long, slender, straight, one-flowered. Calyx four or five-toothed. Tube of the corol long, slender, somewhat cla- vate, smooth; segments of the border four or five, length of the tube, ensiform, spreading. Filaments scarcely any. An- thers four or five, linear, inserted within the tube, their api- ces even with its mouth. Germ inferior, turbinate, two-cell- ed, with one ovudum in each cell, attached to the middle of. the partition. Style two-cleft. Stigmas simple. Berry in- ° ferior, round, size of a small cherry, smooth, when ripe black- ish purple, and with but a small portion of pulp, one or two~ celled ; generally one-celled, the other cell being abortive, and then the berry has an oblique direction. Seeds solitary, when the berry is two-celled nearly round ; when one-celled, flat on one side and conyex on the other, in which case there is a deep round cavity on the flat side. Perisperm conform to the seed, horny. Embryo erect, very small, and lodged in an » oblique. direction in the middle of the convex side of ( rm, With the two reniform cotyledons pomiing uP and in, the obleng radicle out and down, tcnmbverd: - 2. C. arabica. Willd. spec. i, 973. Leaves oblong, ovate, acuminate. Flowers axillary, crowd- ed. Stamina without the tube of the quinquifid Sanh Coffee. Fothergill’s Works, ii. p. 279. t. 3. : A native of Arabia, and now common in both leihie i Bengal it — in iia en erTi¢ — ber. Tn the West Indies Coffee plies are said to produce on an average from six to sixteen ounces of clear coffee annually, Fothergill’s Works, ii. p. 323. At St. Domingo they caleu- late on one pound per plant, At Jamaica one pound and a 540 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Coffea. half, and at Terra-Firma two pounds, where the plants stand in quincunx, at from four to eight feet according to the rich-. ness of the soil. English Translation of Depon’s Travels in South America, i, 434, 1809-10. Two middling plants at the age of six or seven years produced in the Botanie garden in one year or crop, seven pounds of the dry berries which gave three pounds of clean coffee, equal to the Jamaica pro- duce, 3. C. bengalensis. R. Shrubby. Leaves opposite, oblong. Flowers axillary, Segments of the corol oblong. Filaments none, Anthers long and within the tube. : This i is evidently distinct from C, arabica, It is found in- digenous amongst the mountains of the north-east frontier, _- chiefly about Silhet, and trom thence brought many years, ago to Calcutta where it was for some time much cultivated under the idea of its being the real coffee of Arabia. It is’ now neglected, being of an inferior quality, and not produc- tive; however the number and beauty of its flowers entitle it to a conspicuous place in the flower garden, Flowering: time the beginning of the hot season. . Root ramous. Trunk short, and clothed with rachel horizontal, opposite. branches, and branchlets, to the surface. of the earth, forming in our gardens, a pyramidical bush of from four to six feet in height. Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, from ovate to oblong ; smooth on both sides, obtuse, pointed as in C, arabica (both are now. before me just.t: aken from the plants,) here are also pores in the axills of the nerves on the under side, Stipules within, subulate. Flowers in the axills of the leaves, and of the young shoots, sub-sessile, pure white; generally from one to three, though sometimes more. Mar- gin of the ealyx crowned with an undetermined number of — minute sige Corol contorted ; divisions of the border. pb-, Morinda, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 541 Germ turbinate. Style not quite half the length of the tube, Stigma two-cleft ; divisions nearly as long as the style. Ber- ry two-seeded, size of a small cherry, when ripe black. 4. C. pedunculata, R. Shrubby. Leaves elliptic, sub-sessile, smooth, and entire, Peduneles terminal, and axillary, many together, long, one- flowered. Stamina within the slender, smooth tube of the corol, A native of the Moluccas, 5. C. angustifolia. R. : Leaves lanceolate, entire, firm, and polished. Panicles axillary, mouth of the corol hairy ; segments of the border li- near, longer than the tube, and about as long as psi —. exsert anthers. -A native of Pigeon Istand,: one Ser the Malay Arehipe: lago, _MORINDA. Schreb. gen. N. 317. Floteshe aggregate. Calyx superior, five-toothed. Corol - ‘Germ from two to four-celled ; cells one or sienedded:s tntiadlbinbat interior. Stigma aos cbaht Ber- gies aggregate, Embryo erect, and furnished with a peri- 4 — et HAs: i hy: Mita Wiild. apet- i, 992. Gert. et bao 3 posite to every other solitary leaf, tik si between, An- a ac ger occa ale ese Fruit ovate, pice % whitest ee Cado-pilava, Reed, Mal i. 97. t. 52. poo ahates latifolia. Rumph. Amb. iii. 158. t. 99, 542 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAg Morinda. An elegant small tree, with straight trunk, and numerous, decussated, assurgent branches, a position they generally — take from the weight of the fruit, and constant exuberant fo- liage.. From Pegu it has been introduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it is in constant fruit, and flower the whole year. It does not appear to be a native of Bengal, nor did I ever meet with it on the coast of Coromandel; but the species which I formerly considered as citrifolia is com- mon in both countries, and the description and drawings thereof were sent to the Honourable the Court of Directors, That species, which however is quite distinct, I now call tinctoria, as it is the sort most in use for dying. ~ Bark of young trees, or their trunk, light ash-coloured and smooth; young shoots somewhat four-cornered, smooth and lucid, Leaves opposite to each other, or to a peduncle, short- petioled, from oblong to oval, lucid, entire, rather obtuse ; from five to ten inches long, and from three to five broad. Stipules large, semi-lunar, entire, smooth, Peduneles solita- ry, opposite to a solitary leaf on the upper side of the branch- lets, erect, short, cylindric, smooth, each supporting a small aggregate head of small white flowers.. Calyx an entire margin round the apex of the germ, Coro funnel-shaped ; mouth of the tube hairy. Border five-parted, segments lan- ceolate, acute. Filaments five, woolly, inserted into the tube of the corol, a little above its middle. Anthers linear, erect, half hid in the tube. Germs firmly united, single, two-cell- ed, each cell containing two ovula, attached to opposite ends of the wings of the large, thick, fleshy partition, Style length of the tube of the corol. Stigma two-cleft. Berries com- pound, size of a pullet’s egg or even longer, obtuse, when ripe pale-white, polished, and succulent, as doscriivad — aes by Gertner, _ Obs, Its roots are employed by lie’ tntioels like those of sere ter specie o dye red, 331 Morinda. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, §43 2. Mz tinetoria. R. . : Leaves oblong, sub-sessile, opposite to each other, or to the solitary one-flowered peduncles. Stamina enclosed. Stig- — ma exsert, Sans, Uchyoota, Hind, and Beng. Ach. See Asiat. Res, iv. 3544, Teling. Tagaroo. - This small tree I have found pretty common in every part of India, where I have been. It is in flower and fruit the greater part, if not the whole of the year. : - Trunk seldom straight, and only a few feet in height, but supporting a pretty large, ramous, shady head. Bark co- _ vered with an ash-coloured, deeply-cracked, corky crust. Leaves opposite, except where there is a peduncle, in that case, solitary, the peduncle occupying the place of the other_ leaf, short-petioled, oblong, entire, smooth on both sides, but not lucid like citrifolia, pale underneath, from six to ten inches long. Stipules within the leaves, as in the other Ru- biacee. Peduneles leaf-opposite, ex panding, about an inch long, supporting an oval head of aggregate, pure white, Jas- mine-like, fragrant flowers, Calyx as in the genus. - The compound fruit is well described by Gertner in his eipeiesiy and figures of M. citrifolia. Obs, The bark of the roots is used to dye red, seanilonees fixed with alum, but it is neither bright nor durable. In some parts of India it is cultivated for the sake of the roots; see Asiat. Res. iv. In the Circars the dyers use the bark of the . fresh roots bruised and gently boiled in water for a short time, the cloth or yarn is prepared in a cold infusion of the powdered gall of Terminalia Chebuda, in milk and water ; it is then dried and moistened with alum water, and again dri- ed, and receives from the above decoghinny i a red. » The green fruits are picked lis ‘fie Fiodeon: and eaten oes their curries, The wood is hard and very durable, varie- 544 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Morinda, gated with red and white, it is employed for gun-stocks in preference to all other kinds, 3. M. bracteata. R. . Arboreous, straight. Leaves opposite to each other or to a peduncle, oblong, polished. Anthers within the woolly mouth of the tube. Stigma exsert. Heads bracted, Bancudus angustifolia. Rumph, Amb. iii. p. 157. t. 98. has the process of the calyx of my plant, but I cannot say they: agree in other respects. : It is a native of the Ganjam district ; from thence Mr. Snod- grass sent the seeds to the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where the tree thrives well, and is in blossom during the hot and rainy seasons, Trunk straight. Branches opposite, decussate, smooth. Leaves opposite to each other or to a peduncle, short-petiol- ed, oblong, acute, smooth, polished, deep green on both sides, margins entire, length from six to twelve inches, Stipules large, with semi-circular apices. Peduncles solitary, and al- ways opposite to a leaf, round, smooth, from one to two inches long, supporting a single, small head, of small pure white flowers. In tinetoria and exserta the peduncle is often in the axill of a small leaf, which stands opposed to the large one. Calyx ; perianth proper, a tumid margin round the crown of the germ, frequently a small portion thereof grows _Seehe: @ Tong linear-laneeolate, permanent leaflet. Corol - funnel-shaped ; mouth of the tube very woolly. Filaments short, Anthers Vinear, lodged amongst the wool, but entire- ly within the mouth of the tube. Stigma two-cleft, and. ele- vated about the mouth of the tube. Berry aggregate, size varying from that of a crab-apple, to that of a small nutmeg, single berries several, obovate, size of a pea with around eye on the apex. Nut or seeds four, the shell or cover uniform- ly convex on the outside, and on the inside concave, with an _ elevate d convexity near the top which covers a void cell, the fertile cell occupies ihe ile lag, axl oucty ee Morinda, _ PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA.. 545 breadth of the nut, (for so I may call the hard, smooth, brown integument of which it is formed,) but is much compressed, Obs. I have not learned thatthe root of this species is used in dyeing, but have no doubt of its possessing qualities simi-. lar to the roots of all the other Baie of the genus that [ have yet met with, _ ; # M, exserta. R. - Arboreous, Leaves opposite to each other or to a pedun- cle, ovate, pointed, Stamens above the tube, Stigma rather , within, ‘ Beng. Bhun-autch, or Bun-aal. _ A tree of rather small stature; a native of Bengal. Flower- ing time the hot and rainy season ; seed ripe in about twelve sor thirteen months afterwards. _ Trunk from six to twelve feet high, often anne on and covered with deep cracked, spongy, ash-coloured bark, Branches spreading in eyery direction; branchlets opposite, smooth; young shoots somewhat four-sided, in some. plants smooth, i in others: villous. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oval, or yentricose-oyal, pointed, margins entire, but waved ; in some plants smooth, of a deep shining green on both sides; ; _others downy, from four to six inches long, and from ic, % to four broad. Stipules interfoliaceous, entire, emarginate or bifid, Peduncles generally solitary, though sometimes there “are two together, leaf-opposed, or in the axill of a small leaf, opposed to one of the usual size, round, smooth, about an inch “Tong, each supporting a round aggregate head of many pure White, Jasmine-ltke flowers. In very luxuriant young: eee find oF Aowreds ‘exch arait. ‘alyx sca any. funnel-shaped._ Border of mee emis Taticcolates ae ex- - panding divisions. Filaments inserted on the mouth of the tube, in the division. of its margin; erect, Anthers linear. Germ beneath, fonr-celled, with one ovule, Style length of : ‘the tube of the corol. Stigma even with its mouth and two, oe VO, 1 li 546 - PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Morinda. cleft. Berry (rather drupe) aggregate, oval. Seeds or nut regularly four and distinct to each proper berry, forming a square, inserted pyramid, each one-seeded. Here the abdr- tive cell is scarcely visible. Obs. This species is immediately known by its exsert sta- mens, half-concealed stigma, and broad-pointed leaves. In all the other species figured and described by me, viz. citri- - folia, tinctoria, bracteata, multiflora, and angustiflora the sta- mens are enclosed, and the style exserted. 5. M. — R. Sub-arboreous, Leaves opposite, SblougFentricoeds dow- ny. Peduncles terminal and leaf-opposed, gupennd, An- thers within ; ; stigma exert. Aal the vernacular name at at Rapes: s A native of Berar. From Nagpore the seed was sent by Mr. Colebrooke, Resident at the Court of Rughoojee Bunsla, to the Botanic garden at Calcutta in 1801. By the close of the same year the plants were in blossom, and in one year more they have grown to large ramous shrubs, and now in eight years they are small trees and in constant flower ; may farther remark that notwithstanding all the other four species of Morinda already described and figured by me, grow to be small trees, they generally towabin the first year of their growth if the soil is good and the plants taken good care of, _ Leaves very short-petioled, opposite, or opposite to a pe- di 07 val, aes. at each end, acute, margins waved ; 3 six inches long, anid hen two to three broad. ‘Stipules inter- foliaceous. Peduncles variously disposed, viz. axillary, oppo- site to a leaf, and terminal, one or more from the same place, and often compound ; round, villous, from two to four inches long. Heads sub-globular, many-flowered. Receptacles, ly and corol as in the genus, Filaments short. Anthers i apices: even with ‘the mouth of the tube of the : Morinda, ; PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. BAT the anthers. Berry, rather drupe, aggregate, ovate-oblong ; surface very unequal, size of alarge mulberry, Seeds or nuts regularly four to’ each proper berry’ or drupe of the com- pound fruit, obliquely wedge-shaped ; three-celled, two of them empty, the third with a single seed, as accurately de- scribed and figured by Gertner in Morinda citrifolia. . _ - Obs, This. plant is cultivated about Nagpore as the other species are in various, other: parts of India, and for the same ’ purpose, (see Asiat, Res, iv, 35—44.) 6. M. angustifolia. R. Shrubby, erect. Leaves opposite to each other or to a peduncle, lanceolar, bullate. Heads solitary. Flowers nu- merous. Anthers concealed deep within the tube; stigma exsert. Berries distinct, on a glomerate receptacle, succulent, four-seeded, 7 _ An erect, thinly branched shrub, was found at Chittagong by Dr. Buchanan, and from thence sent to the Botanic gar- den ‘at Caleutta’i in 1798, where it blossonis in March, and the seéds ripen in May. — Trink straight, with a few erect branches. Bark light ash-coloured ; height of the whole plant about four or five feet, Leaves opposite, or single when a peduncle occupies the place of the other, sub-sessile, recurved, lanceolate, bal- late, smooth, entire, about six inches long and less than two wide. ‘Stipules opposite, sub-cordate, interfoliaceous, united into'a ring and remaining long after their respective leaves drop. Peduncles solitary, short, seemingly terminal when they begin to blossom, but soon after the brancblet shoots out from between each peduncle and its respective opposite leaf, which marks their proper situation | to be oppositifolius. Heads. solitary, globular, many, viz, from fifty toa hundred- flowered. Flowers. ‘pure white, in size and shape like those of the common ; - Jasmine, Calyx. merely an almost entire, marginal ring round the base of the tube of the corol. Corel fannel-shaped, Filamenis short, inserted rather below. the 1i2 548 - PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA. Loranthus. middle of the tube of the corol. Anthers linear, hid in the middle of the tube. Stigma exsert, two-lobed. Berries in general distinct, but a small proportion of them only comes to. perfection, sessile, the size of a large pea, succulent, deep shining black, with very dark daldured pulp. . Seeds four; each two- celled, with the inner cell large and empty. ~~ Obs, The root of this shrub is also wed i in dyeing by the natives of India where the plant is in plenty. 7. M. scandens. R.* Shrubby, scandent; /eaves oblong, lanceolate. Umbels terminal, simple, berries round, three or six-seeded. — A stout scandent shrub of several fathoms in extent, found ‘common in the hills which form the east side of Point de Galle Bay or harbour. In flower and fruit in March, Stes <9 LORANTHUS.+ Schreb. gen. N. 600. Pa ipe iy Calyx uncertain. Corol generally one-petalled, snd oft nregular. Germ inferior, one-celled, one-seeded ; attachment superior. Berry one-seeded. Embryo i nthe. ae froeiet witha weHEm. ee ie aa ik: se bicolor, Roxb. prenar ii, 19. re 139, Leaves opposite; oblong, smooth, .Racemes axillary. ssn five-cleft.. Stamens five. Berry oblong.. San: rikshadunee, desea an Toile ge . * This mn was discovered by Dr. ‘Roxburgh ons last voyage to England, and the accompanying short description was sent to “me from Ceylon.—W. C. + This genus is usually placed in Heimat Monogynia, but as ‘Dr. Roxburgh in the last copy he made of the Flora Indica, before s e left this Beg? fh removed it to Peri ‘it ee where ~ 7 are so.—W. C. honanthus © PENTANDRIA MONOGENIQ, = 8 $40 find, and Beng. Bura-manda, © ) ‘ ~ Yellinga-wadinika of the Telingas ; (wadinika means s pa- rasitical,) ; : Is always found. growing pee "the branches of various ade of trees, . and, is_yery ramous. Flowers during the greatest part of the year, and is highly ornamental, _ Trunk: scarcely, any. . Branches. numerous, ascending, woody ; ; bark gray. Leaves nearly opposite, sessile, or very _ short-petioled, from oval to linear-lanceolate, waved, entire, reclined, veins scarcely any ; from three.to fiye inches long, and from half an inch to an inch and a half broad, Racemes axillary, single, simple, sub-erect, many-flowered, Flowers in size and appearance very much like those of the honey-~ suckle. Bractes, a small, concave, cordate one, pressing on the base of the germs on one side, Calyx, there is no other perianth of the fruit than the above-mentioned bracte; that of the flower is cup-shaped, entire, permanent. Corol one- petalled, Tube long, a little curved, swelling from the bot-— tom to within a third of the mouth, then contracting a little ; border five-parted, upper fissures much the deepest ; segments linear, reflexed towards one side, Filaments five, from the base of the segments of the corol, short. Anthers linear, Germ inferior, naked, Style length of the corol, Stigma clubbed. Berry inferior, crowned with the remaining calyx, eblong, smooth, pulpy, one-celled. Seeds single, .1Qbs; This is a handsome looking parasite, bearing saint number of very beautiful flowers; its foliage also looks very well. All that part of the br tear of the tree above ace grr becomes sickly and soon perishes. ... It should be compared with L, longiflorus, oe. differs from Geertner’s Lonicera zeylanica in not Eiea calyx of the fruit, and in having only five parts in the corol ; but in the racemes they agree. I cannot Feroncile it with L. fal- all parasitic Socio It i is probable that all the names here cited 1i3 550. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Loranthus. catus of Linnzeus’s supplementum, nor with L. loniceroides, Linn. for here the inflorescence bears no resemblance to an involucred umbe]. Neither can it be L. pentandrus, as there the leaves are alternate, with petioles nearly as long as the racemes; in short I cannot well reconcile it to any of the hi-” therto described species. It unites the two genera of Loran-— thus and Lonicera. In Bengal I have found it with leaves from five to aix inches long, and four or five broad. - 2. L. Scurrula, Willd. _— li, 232.— Roxb. veer: ii. 19. tab. 140. - Leaves opposite, ovate, underneath abwtie. Flowers ax- illary, fascicled. Corol ee four-cleft ; stamens nee Berries turbinate. The Telingas have no other name for this than Wadinika. It is also a parasitical shrub, but considerably smaller than the last and much more scarce ; grows upon branches of trees in the same manner. Flowers during the wet season. : Leaves opposite, petioled, cordate, scolloped, covered with _ soft, white down underneath; about two inches long, and one anda half broad. Peduncles numerous, collected in the © axills, one or more-flowered. Flowers considerably smaller — than in the last species, of a rusty gray colour, and covered with gray farinaceous dust. Bractes one, pressing on the germ. \ as in the last. Calyx of the fruit no other than the bracte igo flower; as in the former. Corol one-petalled ; tube ds the base. Border four-parted, upper fissure _ deepest; - division Tinear, reflexed ; ; stamens four, the pistil as _— in the Jast species. Berry top-shaped, one-seeded, ps 3. L, siihcinue R. Leaves opposite, oblong, smooth ; spikes 7 Corols regular, six-cleft. Berries round, oviids etal _Kenneli-itti kauni, Rheed, Mel xi * sakes (erie came! ~ Beng. Chhota-manda.— dj haetiaty Stes A ramous shrubby prs, Uke the two specs lready Loranthus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 551 devittbods grows common on. trees —— pl Flowers all the year. Leaves generally opposite, ‘ini sometimes nliewilaieg and also three-fold, short-petioled, oblong, smooth, entire, of a thick leathery texture, almost veinless ; from two to three inches Jong. -Racemes, or rather spikes, axillary, or between the leaves, or from the old axills, generally solitary, though sometimes there are two or even three together, much short- er than the leaves. Flowers opposite, from three to six paits on the spike, sessile, small, greenish orange colour. “Bractes no other than the perianth of the fruit. Calyx. Perianth of the fruit inferior, two-leaved, the under and exterior cordate, the: inner two-toothed; that. of the flower no other than the circular margin of the pit which receives the flower. Corol one-petalled ; twbe gibbous, six-sided, Border.six-parted, divisions alike, and cut equally deep, reflected. . Filaments six, erect, inserted into the base of the divisions of the corol, Germ ovate. Style the length of the stamens. Stigma large, glandular, naveled, . Berry inferior, round, oval, size of a pea, smooth, when ripe the pulp is yellow, clammy, and elastic, which makes them adhere to the branches of trees where they germinate, resting on three permanent calyciform bractes and crowned with a ring where the corol stood round the permanent base of the style, one-celled.. Seeds solitary, conform to the berry. Jntegument single, white, tough, and clammy, marked with twelve. whitish striz. Perisperm.conform to the seed, six-grooved, green. Embryo central, inverse, straight, pale green, nearly as long as the’ perisperm. Cotyledons two, linear-oblong. Phanesee minste, Young. sheeiaen well. espa santas ida of the oval labios long, slender, tetrandrous, regular ; flower, fruit, and etlc cels Bote with much ferruginous nei Tia Ree 552 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Loranthus. Found by Mr. W. Roxburgh growing on trees in the sp ests of Pulo Pinang. bed » 6.1L. mvolueratus. R. Ag des Leaves opposite, ovate-cordate, smooth. Umbellets axil- lary. Involucres four-leaved, four-flowered ; flowers — lar, pentandrous, . A stout parasitical shrub, found on trees in the Petectt ' the eastern border of Bengal, where it blossoms — _ of the year. * Branches while young clothed with smooth, abschinay eric bakivietoemdis Eeaves opposite, short-petioled, ovate and ovate- cordate, sides often unequal, as’ in most of the plants of this genus, entire, smooth on both sides ; from three to four inches long. Umbellets axillary, crowded, sub-sessile, much shorter . than the leaves. Involucres four-leaved, four-flowered ; leaf= lets ovate-lanceolate, smooth, entire. #lowers sessile, pretty large, equalling the involucre. » Calyx superior, short, five> toothed, villous, Corol; tube widening toward the mouth, villous. Border regular, five-parted ; segments linear, revo- lute. Filaments equalling the segments of the corol, and in+ serted on°them below their middle. Anthers oval. Germ oval, sericeous. ‘Style rather sisi than the corol. —_ two-lobed. - sels ys 6. L. ampulacns. R. ple. > Flowers uadyeied; aeestiog hexandrous; tube ot the corol gibbous. Berries long, oval. . “0S Found on trees in the forests of Silhet, but seems to piehit the mango tree to all others, Flowers in the ars somes aa = the whole year round, sah Stems as in our other Indian species, the size aoe eke ‘very uncertain, but numerous, bifid, trifid,. or -quadifid, — > arora sere eee spre n-all | Loranthus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAs 553 three to: four inches long, and generally less than two in breadth. Racemes axillary, solitary, or in pairs, much shorter than the leaves. Flowers opposite, short-pedicelled, pretty large, greenish yellow. Bractes oval, one at the:base of each pedicel, and two pressing the base of the germ like an inferi- or, bilabiate, calyx. Calyx superior, entire, rotate, Corol regular; tube gibbous; border six-cleft ; divisions. revolute, somewhat spatulate. Filaments six, from the mouth of the tube of the corol, length of its segments, . Anthers ovate. Germ inferior, one-celled, and containing one ovule attached tothe top of the cell. Style longer than the corol, Stigma large. Berry inferior, long-oval, smooth, yellow, size of a currant, one-celled: Pulp pale yellow, very clammy, Seeds solitary, ovate. Inteyuments two ; exterior marked with six. ~ dongitudinal fibres; inner membranaceous. Perisperm ¢on- form to the seed, six-grooved, green. Embryo cylindric, inverse, Cotyledons short, semi-cylindric. Radiele cylindric, with a tarbinate apne aoee above me Sas inverse. dipa: ; ey fe Pe slides R Leaves opposite, ssenididanaaslanee Siew isctieed, fow together, tetrandrous; corods irregular, four-cleft; berries clavate. A delicate, shrubby parasite ; found in the Silhet district bid on Averrhoa: Carambola. 8. L. pentapetalus. R. «Leaves opposite, from lanceolate to oval-cordate, and - Tiqualy attenuate smooth. atime ax Ula ieee: A Laie, very ramous, shrubby Splits Sobdagiomringidh various tees in the forests of Silhet. ee the ning of the rainsin Jane. _ Branches and branchlets eat sed nick: ‘aaetili Leaves opposite, petioled, from lanceolate to ovate-cordate, obliquely attenuate from the middle to the apex, entire, “e 554 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Hamiltonia, smooth, from three to four inches long, and about two broad. Racemes axillary, solitary, or paired, straight, simple, often as" long as the leaves, smooth. Flowers very numerous, short- pedicelled, small, scattered, red. Bractes, an oval one em- braces the base of the germ on the outside. Calyx superior, rather small, sub-entire, smooth. Petals five, the base of each swelled out intoa fleshy, three-sided body, giving to:the bot-— tom of the corol a globular form and meeting in the centre, leaving only a small aperture for the style; above tongue- shaped, and recurved. Filaments five, inserted on the petals ; anthers obovate. Germ oblong, one-celled, and containing one ovule, pendulous from the top of the cell. Style four-sid- ed, jointed, or appearing so near the middle. Stigma a little enlarged. Berries oblong, smooth, greenish-yellow, one- _ seeded. Grea o eg ee sari tS ob! HAMILTONIA. Sake Calyx five-cleft, Corol infundibuliform. Germ cnedelll ed, five-seeded ; attachment of the ovula inferior. Stigma — five-cleft. Capsules inferior, one-celled, five-valved. » Seeds. five, lattice-arilled. Embryo erect, and furnished with, a — p LL eR 1. i. cabins R. y Shrabby. Leaves opposite, bonnes Sines ined terminal, umbelliform heads. — nLShe leew ie aghast sae tri: This charming, ee shrub was found. wild on— the Rajmuhal hills by Mr. William Roxburgh, jun. and by. him introduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it — blossoms during the cold season, It is named after Mr. Wil-.. liam Hamilton of the Wood-lands near Philadelphia in North America, an eminent botanist, and the first who was at'the expense of erecting a conservatory in that country for the pre- servation of oe a hot climate. ns: Hamiltonia: PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 555 tion for having enriching it with —_— of the choicest ate of the New World. aoe Stem stout, shrubby ; branches opposite, cross-armed, as- cending. Bark of the igneous parts ash-coloured, with dark purple specks; general height from six to ten feet. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, broad-lanceolate, smooth, entire, from three to six inches long. Stipules or rather connecting _ membranes broad, ensiform. Flowers sessile, i in terminal co- rymbiform heads, on short, trichotomous branchlets, numer- ous, pure white, and ‘delightfully fragrant. Bractes ensi- form, villous; several surrounding each fascicle or head of flowers, as well as intermixed amongst them, Calyx superior, five-cleft, permanent ; divisions subulate. Corol one-petal-- led, funnel-shaped. Tube slender, widening a little towards the mouth. Border consisting of five, spreading, oblong di-. visions. Filaments five, very. short, inserted into the tube of the corol a little within its mouth, Anthers half- erect, li- near. Germ inferior, one-celled, and containing five distinct chambers attached to the bottom of the cell, which now, thick and succulent, become the net-like aril of the ripe seed ; each chamber contains one ovulum attached to its bot- tom, Capsules the size of a pea, oblong, crowned with the calyx, one-celled, five-valved, opening from the apex. Seeds. five when all come to maturity, which is very seldom the: case, their shape differing according to the number attached to the bottom of the cell, each enveloped in a beautiful, dry net-like - aril, Integument single, dark blackish-brown, friable. Pe- risperm in very small quantity, indeed it may be called an inner integument. Embryo conform to the seed, erect; c0- iyledons two, cordate, foliaceous, with a doubling down n the middle. | Plumula minute.’ Radicle oblong, inferior, point- ing to the umbilicus, ee ones cai ig Gert, =~ | tiv 684 te 194, AF ett Peel i a ALS, sae ting, ne ‘pilosa. Soe ‘by? eee RES : é ; Shrubby, scan ‘edibetingAd bing! Leaves opposite, — ; Gae.. 556 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Mussaenda, short-petioled, lanceolate, entire. lowers in axillary fasci- cles, mixed amongst many long, very hairy bractes, _ Anative of the Moluccas. : MUSSAENDA, Schreb. gen. N. 326." Cah yst five-cleft. Corol funnel-shaped. Stamina, within the'tube,. Germ inferior, two-celled;_ cells many-seeded ; attachment: of the ovula two canine receptacles, inserted onthe partition. Stigma two-cleft, . Capsules two-celled, three-vyalvyed. _ Seeds numerous, ) | ere M. corymbosa, Roxb. - -« Shrabby,;. erect. . - Corymbs . terminal. Leaves oblong, smooth. _, Native of Ceylon, Malabar, =o In the Botanic garden at Calcutta it grows to be a stout, aigidly erect, ramous shrub, and is in blossom during the rains, at which time few plants surpass it in beauty, ’ _ Trunk straight ; branches. many, decussate. Bark pit coo opposite, short-petioled, oblong, pointed, entire, smooth on both sides, from six to nine inches long, and from three to four broad, Involucre or floral leaves long- petiol- ed, generally one to each primary division of the corymb, of an oval form, acute, pure white, smooth on. both sides, five « n-nerved,. Petioles. of the oral leone lawson cordate base, tapering fo an acute point, “Corymbs terminal, compound and decompound, smooth, Bracies ovate-lanceo- late. Flowers numerous, and uncommonly beautiful. Calyx five-parted; divisions erect, bristle-shaped, smooth. Corol funnel-shaped. Tube slender, more than twice the length =o. the calyx, swelled a little about the middle, where the iS are ge mouth closed with at AS sia" Ser ee ee eae é Bo ‘der of * . o to ‘ fly ve. nem Se ee ERE FE a, Oe PEPER GS Eee . + - » Bacobotrys. |§ PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAS 557 on the upper side convex, villous, of a deep’ but bright orange colour, and greenish underneath, Filaments five, short, inserted into the middle of the tube. _Anthers linear, hid in the tube. Germ inferior, two-celled; ovu/a numer- ous, on a pedicelled jugiform receptacle, projecting above the insertion and far below it. ‘Style half the length of the tube of the corol. Stigmas two. Capsule oval, oe two-valved. Seeds numerous, — Obs. In some parts of India the white floral tives are ‘brought to table as an esculent herb. 2. M. frondosa, Willd. sp. i. 997. Shrubby, erect. Leaves oblong, acuminate, villous.. Pa- nicles terminal, dichotomous, villous. i RS STHT - M. Zeylanica. Burm. Zeyl. 165. t. 76. 1 = oils ’ Belilla. Rheed. Mal. ii. 27. tab. 17. fine | - A native of various parts of India; in stig Botanic Sault at Calcutta it grows to be a pretty large shrub, but with few branches, at least when compared to the preceding species, but the flowers, which appear about the end of the rains and _ = so = cool — are larger and of a brighter co- © Jour. fen Btts oe? e = BAEOBOTRYS. Schreb. gen. N. 318. 3 pays five-parted, Corol tubular. Germ sink: infiniti, snivalled, many-seeded, attached to a free, inferior, central med meee ‘Berry — many-seeded, + oye Pye ee’ - 7: B. facia: Fe Peaghe migse? GA AE A PEO ES, Shrubby. Leaves ineebaata® Visits hoe, Cady’ ser- Tate. Racers ‘axillary, ant terminal ; the soem ones more A larg Shih a native dk Chitlaninig: ii ths Hotabe gar- a = at Calcutta it flowers in February, March and te hat rarely perfects its seeds there, 558 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Baeobotrys. It appears to differ from Vahl’s B. lanceolata. Symb. i. p. 19. ¢. 6. in the leaves being shorter-petioled, and more grossly serrate ; as well as in the inflorescence. Trunk erect, in plants eight or ten years old_as thick as a man’s lee. Branches numerous, exiending down. to the ground, straight and nearly erect; Bark smooth, dark. brown, general height of the whole plant from eight to twelve feet, Leaves alternate, rather short-petioled, ventricose-oblong, ta- pering to an acute point, remotely and deeply repand, ser- rate, pretty smooth on both sides, and glossy on the upper surface, veins large and parallel, from three to six inches long, and from one to two and a half broad. Stipules none. Racemes — axillary, and terminal, often several together, some of them ramous, much shorter than the leaves ; the terminal one gene- rally panicled. Flowers numerous, Serine: short-pedicel- led, small, pure white, Bractes one at the base of each pedicel, and two pressing on the calyx. Calyz single, semi-supera, permanent, five-parted, divisions obtuse. Coro/ one-petalled. Tube short, somewhat gibbous. Border of five equal, round- ish, expanded segments. Filaments short, inserted into the tube of the corol, immediately below the middle of the seg- ~ ments of the border, incurved, smooth. Anthers cordate, converging in form of a dome over the apex of the pistillum. Germ semi-inferior, broad-ovate, one-celled, containing nu- merous ovula from the bottom of the cell. Style short. Stigma tending to be lobate.. Berry inferior, crowned with the per- _ calyx, round, smooth, dry, size of a grain of black popper bas tela evalvular. Receptacle round-cordate, free, attached to the bottom of the cell, as in Primula, Ke, Gert, sem. i, 233. t. 50. Seeds numerous, angular, 2. B. ramentacea. R. _Shrubby. Leaves ere lanceolate, acuminate, entire, - smooth, . Panicles: terminal, axillary, and lateral, ramentnce- ous, Se ries minute, white, succulent, doriya is the vernacular name at Silliet, ne ft. Baeobotrys. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 559 digenous._ It_grows to be a pretty large shrub, blossoms i in March and April; and the seeds ripen in October mu Novem * ber. Leaves ae short-petioled, lanceolate, acuminate, e1 en- "tire, smooth, from two to six inches long. Panicles terminal, axillary, and lateral, numerous, small, crowded with small, abortive, ferruginous, ramentaceous branchlets. lowers small, greenish-yellow. Bractes ferruginous, small, subulate, Calyx five-parted, almost five-leaved. Corol; tube very small, Border of five orbicular, veined segments, Filaments five, short, inserted into the tube of the corol. Anthers two- lobed, broad-ovate. The germ may be called superior, ovate, smooth, one-celled ; ovuda numerous, on a sub-cylindric re- ceptacle, rising from the base of the cell, Style short. Stigma two or three-lobed.. Berries completely inferior, size. of a grain of black pepper, white, smooth, succulent, one-celled, Ceil formed by a white, pretty hard, but thin, nuciform inte- gument, Seeds several, minute, angular, black, pitted, at- tached to the free, central receptacle, as in the germ. Integu- ments uncertain, on account of the diminutive size of the seed, Perisperm soft, juicy, dark-coloured. Embryo sub-cylindric, transverse, oe “3. B. semoritieg: Willd. spec. i. 992. Shrubby. Leaves alternate, ovate-oblong, repand-dentate, smooth. Racemes axillary, short, and crowded, _ Mulmooriya is the vernacular name in Silhet, where it is in- digenous and grows tothe size of a pretty large, very ramous, upright shrub, It aoe in March, and the goods ripe in May. Branches and ‘brisibhis ‘numerous, Suki reek, aid and pretty smooth. Bark of the old woody parts brown, of the young shoots green, Leaves alternate, petioled, ovate- oblong, margins repand, serrate-dentate, (for there is a mix- ture of the whole,) in some acuminate, both sides smooth, tex- ture firm, three or four inches long, by two broad, Racemes 560° PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Verbascum, axillary, about twice the length of the petioles, ramous, and: crowded with minute white flowers. Bractes subulate, one- flowered, beside one or two broader on the short petioles, or pressing the calyx. Calyx campanulate, five-parted.. Corol with a very short tube, and a border of five oval segments, Filaments five, inserted into the tube, under the middle of the segments of the border, short, incurved. Germ superior, one-celled, containing numerous ovula, attached. to a free re- ceptacle, rising fromthe bottom of the cell, Style short, Stigma three-lobed. 48 be thy ~4. Bi glabra. Ro. Longs ’ Arboreous, Leaves alternate, scat tnlienlaie, entire, smooth. Panicles axillary, smooth, - A slender tree, with straight, smooth branches, and leaves ; a native of Chittagong, where it flowers in March. 6. B. tetrandra, R. : a pos ~ Leaves alternate, oblong, entire. Racemes sxifley, | Flee ers tetrandrous, 1 hi _ A native of the Moluccas, ; oe ae -VERBASCUM. Schreb. gen. N. 331. - Corol rotate, somewhat sid teh Capsules superior, two- called, two-valved. aos) 2) po ao pe 8 v. | Willd. spec. i. 1001. - Leaves decurrent, downy on. both sides. Stem simple, : Found by Captain’ Hardwicke amongst the mountains on his tour to Shreenugura. In the Botanic garden at;Calcutta it grows to the height of from six to eight feet, the stem still perfectly straight, but often ramous; it blossoms during the Physalis, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 561 DATURA. Schreb. gen. N. 332. Corol ihfundibuliform, plaited, Calyx phat, angular, deciduous. Capel four-val ved. 1. D, fastuosa, Willd. spec. i..1008, Fleming in Asiat, Res, xi. * Annyal, coloured. mail with the two sides unequally ovate, margins repand, lobate. Flowers double, Fruit round, ‘echinate, drooping. Beng. Kala-Dhootoora, _ Stramonia indica tertia, seu Datura rubra. Rumph, Amb. x. 243. t. 87: f. 2. A native of various parts of India. It flowers during the rainy and cool season. The dry root smoked is said to relieve spasmodic asthma. ; 2. D. Metel. Willd. spec. 1009. Fleming. Ibid, 165. Annual, Leaves with the two sides unequally ovate, mar- gins repand-lobate. Fruit round, spinous, : Beng. Dhootoora, Stramonia indica prima, seu Datura a Rumph., Amb. v. 242, ¢. 87. f. I. Hummatu. Rheed., Mal. ii, 47. t. 28. Very common every where over India produces flowers and seed the whole year, PHYSALIS. Schreb. gen. N. 336. ‘ Calyx gibbous, five-toothed, Corol rotate. Berry su aie within the inflated calyx, two-celled, rmany-seeded. LP. exuosa, Willd. epee: i. 1020. Shrubby ; branches flexuose, Leaves oblong, often pair- ed. Flowers axillary, crowded, sessile, Pevetti. Rheed. Mal. iv, 112. t. 55, VOL, I, Jj 562 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Physalis. Beng. Ushwa-gundha. Teling. Penneroo. This perennial species is to be found in almost every soil and situation. Flowers all the year round. Stems several, erect, shrubby, flexuose, two-forked, round, downy. Leaves double, short-petioled, ovate, a litde scol- loped, downy, from two to four inches long. Flowers axil- lary, sub-sessile, crowded, small, greenish, Cerol campa- ' nulate. Anthers split at the base. Berry red, smooth, size of a pea. The Telinga physicians reckon the roots alexipharmic ; indeed they are all much addicted to the belief of such powers being present in a great variety of their simples ; hence the name Naga, (i. e. the hooded snake, Coluber Naga of Linneus) being so often annexed to that of various plants. They are as fond of the study of antidotes as the Greek or Roman physicians were, which will appear the less surpriz- _ ing if we consider the great number of poisonous animals and plants which abound in the warmer part of Asia, to the dreadful effects of which they are very often eye-witnesses. At is therefore very natural for them to attend much more to this branch of medicine than is done in cold climates, where there is scarcely an animal of which the bite or sting can be said to be mortal. 2. PB; Alkekengi. Willd, spec. 1. WORD 355 32 BL oe _ Herbaceous; branches straggling. ined in pairs, entire, and somewhat angular. = : A native of Persia, In the Botanic penien at Calcutta it flowers during the cool season, but does not thrive in Bengal. Paks peruvianc, Willd. spec. i, 1022. _ Biennial or perennial, very ramous, diffuse, pubescent, eaves double, or single, and then with a branchlet; cor- | date, Aentate. Flowers eel ee. he cel twondet = Solanum. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 563 | Predulis, Sims’ Bot. Mag. 1068. 1 concur with the Mathor, in referring P. pubescens to the same species, Beng. Tepuriya, oe I have only found this in a cultivated state and that on ac- count of its large, yellowish, palatable berries ; although na- turally perennial yet the plants are reared annually from seed, _as they are not fruitful after the first year, The same is the case with the Capsicums and the many varieties of Solanum -Melongena, A. P. minima, Willd. spec. i. 1024. Annual, ramous, downy. Leaves double or single, and then with a brancblet, ovate, irregularly dentate. Flowers solitary, erect. Stigmas entire, Fruit pendulous, Inota-Inodien. Rheed, Mal. x, ceu Moetoe, _ te 70 _ Beng. Bun Tepuriya. Hind, Toolat?-pati. _ A small ramous annual, common on cultivated ground, both in Bengal and on the coast of Coromandel. Stem short, but distinct ; branches many, two-forked, striat- ed, a little downy. Leaves double, except at the divisions of the branchlets, where they are single, the smaller branch- Jets occupying the place of the other; unequal, petioled, cordate, irregularly toothed, downy. on both sides ; from two to four inches long. Peduneles solitary, axillary, erect, one- flowered, Flowers small, campanulate, uniform, pale yellow, and smooth, filaments a little hairy, yellow. © SOLANUM. Schreb. gen. N.337- Cal yx five-parted. Corol rotate. Anthers ot ey gaping at the ar with a quail pore. Berry superior, two- lays 564 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA; Solanum. SECT. ‘i Unarmed. 1. S. pubescens. Willd. spec. i. 1026. Sub-arboreous, unarmed, Leaves alternate, oblong, point- ed, entire, downy. Cymes dichotomous, _ Gandira* the Sanscrit name, see Asiat. Res, iv. 258. Beng. Urusa, Teling. Rusa-ghedi maun. Amongst the mountains in the Telinga country this grows to be a ‘acai or middle-sized tree, with a very thick shady head, Flowers during the hot season, | _ Leaves alternate, short-petioled, oblong, abies doanys from six to ten inches long. Cymes terminal or leaf-oppos- ed, two-cleft ; ramifications recurved. Flowers small, white, very numerous. Berry the size of a cherry, 2. S. auriculatum. Willd. spec. i. 1025, Sub-arboreous, every part downy. Leaves broad-lanceo- oe late, entire, Stipules axillary, obliquely ovate-cordate. Cymes in the forks of the branchlets, dichotomous. A native of Mauritius, and introduced by Captain Tennant, into the Botanic garden at Calcutta; where it blossoms dur- ing the rainy and cold seasons, and continues to ripen its fruit from December till May. Stem nearly erect, in six years as thick as a man’s leg, and about eight feet high. Bark smooth, ash-coloured. Branches dichotomous, spreading much, Branchlets and all the ten- der parts most completely clothed with sessile and pedicell- ed, hoary, ‘stellate. pubescence. Leaves alternate, petioled, broad-lanceolar, tapering to a rather obtuse point, entire ; clothed underneath like the branchlets ; ; upper surface a little hairy ; from four to eight inches long, ad two or three broad, Petioles channelled, downy like the branchlets, Stipules in sess ile, axillary pairs, obliquely ovate-cordate, large, and re- curvate round the branchlets, looking m more like small com- Zz . * Ties probably ee as eae eee pts Solanum. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 565 mon leaves than stipules, Cymes in the forks of the branchlets long-peduncled, dichotomous, Ramifications recurvate, sub- secund, lowers numerous, sub-sessile, small, lively blue- purple, Berry spherical, size of a small cherry, when ripe of a dull yellow. Obs. Independently of the colour of the flowers, the stipul or axillary leaves render this species readily known; in all other respects it almost exactly resembles the preceding ; in that plant there are no stipulz, and the flowers are white, 3. S. Lycopersicum. Willd, sp, i. 1033. Annual. Leaves pinnate, gashed. Racemes bipartite, leaf- less. #ruit smooth, vertically compressed, torulose, Pomum amoris. Rumph, Amb. v. t. 154. f..1. ! Although this is now very common in India, I suspect it is as little a native as the common potatoe, which is now very generally cultivated over India, even doy the natives for their own use, A, S. rubrum, Willd, sp. i. 1034. Annual, erect, unarmed. - Branches Bakowkes angular, Leaves ovate, dentate, lobate. Umbels short-peduncled, Flowers and berries drooping. Beng. Goorkhi, Nelen tsjunda. Rheed. Mal, x, t. 73. ~ A common weed in gardens all over India, with flowers and tipe seed the whole year round. Seeds. received fromthe Mauritius under des name of So- fanum nodiflorum, (Willd. sp. i, 1035,) produced | this: very plant. On that Island it is 5 called Brede, and very g gener cultivated asa pot herb. ~ a stp iad Bee eae, erect, ramous, hairy. Leaves in pairs or solitary it a branchilet, ovate, Peduncles axillary, from two to six together, one-flowered, Calyx ten-toothed. Jj3 - 566 PENTANPDRIA MONOGYNIA, Solanum, A native of China; from thence introduced into the Bota-— nic garden at Calcutta, where it blossoms and ripens its ber- ries most part of the year. It has the habit of a robust, pubescent variety of Soe = um. Stems annual, nearly erect, with alternate, flexuose, pubes- cent, round branches and branchlets ; general height two or three feet, Leaves in pairs or single, and accompanied with a branchlet, petioled, ovate-oblong, somewhat acute, villous, Peduncies axillary, from two to six together, one-flowered, drooping when in blossoms. Calyx ten-toothed, pole. Berries = size of a pea, smooth, bright red, when ri pe. : 6. S. ;. spirale R. Shrubby, void of siobenbeneks Leaves paired, lanceolar, entire. aczmes lateral, the unexpanded part = re- volute. Segments of the calyx glandalar, Bugua is the vernacular name in Silhet, where it is indi- genous, and in flower and fruit at various times of the year. Though rather foetid it is an ornamental species on account of its smooth, deep green leaves; spiral racemes of pretty white flowers ; and numerous small, round yellow berries. SECT. II. Armed. 7, S. Melongena, Willd. sp. i. 1036, Perennial. Leaves obliquely-ovate, vee Hi scallbbsicte: i Fertile flowers solitary, long pedancled, drooping ; the ae ren ones on small racemes, Fruit oval, smooth. : Beng. Begoon. Hind, Bangan. _Teling. Wangkai. Nila-Barudena, Rheed. Mal. x. 147, t. 74. hortense. Rumph. Amb. v, 238, t, 85. Za OF this very universally useful, exculent species, there are "varie Sheet etme) ea, Fs Solanum. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 567 renewed from seed, though all the varieties are perennial ; but like the Capsicums not so productive after the first L year, They continue to blossom and bear fruit the whole year, but chiefly during the cold season. In Bengal, in a rich soil, they have very few -— but in a poor one many. 8, S, longed R. i Perennial. Leaves irregularly ovate, scolloped.. Fruit cylindrical, smooth. Calyx sometimes armed... 3 Sans. Koolee. Beng. Kooli-begoon, Neer Wanga is the Telinga name of the plant, and Neer Wangkai the fruit. Long Brinjal of Europeans. I consider this to be a species clearly distinct from olen: gena, for the fruit is always cylindrical, never changing by culture into any other form. The plant is biennial, and in "every respect like /Melongena, the fruit excepted. I have on- ly met with it in gardens, where it is cultivated for the table, and have had it nine years in mine without producing any change in it. The cold season is the proper time for per it, The silent will exist several years, but are @-either dees up or neglected after the first. ; Stem short, erect, somewhat woody, Branches numerous, spreading, two-forked, downy, sometimes prickly ; the whole plant is from two to three feet high. Leaves alternate, pe- tioled, oblong, scolloped, or sub-lobate, downy ; from six to ten inches long ; sometimes the principal nerve is prickly on _ the under side. Fi lowers bowing, large, ofa beautiful, bright bluish-purple, they are of two kinds, abortive with a minute pistil on a small raceme or umbellet; and a single fertile one upon its own proper petiole, which generally stands im- mediately. below or close by the peduncle of the racemes, Calyx and petioles sometimes prickly, Berry pendulous, cylindric, generally a little curved, but never in the least club-_ : yja . * 568 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Solanum. bed, smooth, yellow ; from nine to eighteen inches long, and from one and a half to two and a half in diameter, it is gener- pe three-celled. 9. s. insanum. . Willd. sp. i, 1037. a5) Perennial, (in a poor soil) armed. Leaves ovate, sinuate, downy. Peduneles from one to four-flowered. -Calyx often armed. . Fruit from oval to spherical, polished, A native of Amboyna, yet I doubt whether Ramphius’s Trongum hortensi can be any other than the real Indian me- longena. From the same Island, the seeds of a variety of the above (insanum), were brought to the Botanic garden at Calcutta. Their plants are more spinous, and the {ruit- per= fectly round, white, and smooth, almost the size of a small Crab-apple, This I take to be Rumphius’s Trongum agreste, vol. v. p. 240. t. 86.,f. 1. and so far as my observation ex~ tends, it is not cultivated on the continent of India. 10. S. ethiopicum. Willd. sp. i. 1036. Annual, scarcely armed. Leaves oval, repand, downy. Peduncles one-flowered. Berries red, smooth, depressed, five-lobed, : From the Mauritius, where it is said to be imdiboneiil it has been introduced into the Botanic garden at) Calcutta, where it grows to the height of about two feet, with many spreading branches, clothed with short stellate pubescence, and here and_ a ca iMenteriapitny: and appear at all season. wn pavide. ve 11. S. diffusum. R, _ Diffuse, perennial, prickly. Leaves oval, deeply neal ‘ky downy and prickly on both sides. Peduncles passe a Berries round, es » Solanum incanum chinense. Pluck, Alm: 62. Ss 1. _ ims, Serputanon, Kehirkay, Peetstundeola, ere | Solanum. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 569 da, Buhoophula, Godhinee; papal. Kina, Kutoo varttakee, Kshetruja. iid iy. Teling. Nella Mollunga. | This is by far the most common species I know; every soil and situation seems to suit it equally well; itis in flower all the year round, and often perennial. Stem. none, but numerous, irregular, woody, diffuse, two- forked branches spread on, the ground, or near it; young: shoots covered, with stellate down ; all the branches ‘thickly armed with strong, sharp; compressed, somewhat recurved pricklets, Leaves alternate, petioled, oval, much scolloped, or slightly lobate; both sides covered with stellate down, and the veins armed with straight prickles. Flowers as in S, longum, except that here the raceme is sometimes wanting. Berry perfectly globular, smooth, about an inch in diameter, colour varying according as they have been exposed to the sun, or sheltered ; in the former case they are yellow, in the latter white ; the Teli people give the name of nella mol- lunga to the former, and tella mollunga to the latter. Obs. The fruits are much esteemed by the natives; all tribes eat them freely in their curries, for which reason the plant is often found cultivated in the Cirears. There is another sort, so exceedingly like this in almost every respect, that it was long before I discovered they were distinct; the chief distinguishing marks are, the leaves in this are longer, smoother, and deeply lobated, with the lobes sometimes scolloped, or sub-lobate, and the prickles much more numerous, longer, shapes, and all perfectl y straight, — 12, S. Jaequini. Willd, sp. i.1041. - Beige) ait - Biennial, armed, angular, creeping. — go shlong 2st. niate, armed on the sides with straight apier, Cale eee Berries globular, smooth, maregpedy: Beng. Kanthakaree. A native of Bengal, where it is generally phd on road 570 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Solanum. sides near villages, It is in blossom, and produces ripe fruit. most part of the year. Root at least biennial. Stem none, but several, flexuose, ramous branches, spreading close on the ground, for an ex- tent of some feet, often striking root at the insertion of the leaves ; angular, nearly void of pubescence. Leaves frequent- ly in pairs, oblong, pinnatifid, or laciniate, smooth, but arm- ed on both sides with long, strong, straight spines. Racemes between the leaves, and almost as long, bearing four, five, or six alternate, pedicelled, large, bright blue flowers, Calyx armed with straight spines. Berries spherical, size of a large gooseberry, very smooth, drooping, while immature variegat- ed with green and er: when ripe with different shades of _ yellow only, . 13. S. indicum. Willd. sp. i. 1042, Shrabby, armed, very ramous, Leaves ovate, lobate, Jews ny, armed on both sides. Racemes leaf-opposed. Calyx arm-. ed. Berries erect, round, smooth. . Beng. Vyakool, Vyakovor, Goorkamai, Cheru-chunda. Rheed, Mal. ii. t. 36, } _ Solanum fructescens, &e. Burm. Zeyl. p. 220. t. 102, isa pretty good representation of this plant, but I think Dille- nius’s S. indicum spinosum flore boragineo, t. 270. f. 349. must have been taken from a very different species, the flow-_ ers being much too large, and the leaves too ory atieatée for our East Indian plant. — — : Trunk trifling, but the branchds are Sauecrons; lean, and perennial, forming a large, very ramous shrub of several feet in height, armed with numerous very acute, somewhat recurved spines; the young parts are downy. Leaves solita- ry, or in pairs, petioled, ovate lobate, downy, and armed with a few straight spines on both sides, from two to four inches long. Racemes between or opposite to the leaves, support- ing several long-pedicélled, middle-sized, pale blue flowers. Calyx deeply five-cleft, armed. Berries erect, round, manna, Solanum. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, - 571 size of a marrowfat pea; while immature, variegated with deeper and lighter green, when ripe with deep orange yel- low. 6 14. S. trilobatum, Willd. sp. i. 1049, Shrubby, scandent, armed with recurved, acute prickles. Leaves ovate, three, four, or five lobed, smooth. Racemes terminal, or between the leaves, Berries drooping, round, smooth. : Teling. Oochinta-kura; kura means esculent, the leaves being one of their favourite pot herbs. Solanum trilobatum. Burm. Ind. 55, t. 22. f. 2. - Compare with Lamark’s S, acetosifolinm. A native of the coast of Coromandel, particenaiad fies Northern Circars, where it is found in abundance on the road sides, running over bushes, upon low trees, or whatever sup- port it meets; for it is by far too long and slender to i sh itself. In flower and seed the whole year. — Stems and larger branches ligneous, scandent ; armed witli numerous, very sharp, recarved prickles, otherwise perfect- ly smooth; general extent from one to two fathoms, and of- ten very ramous, Leaves scattered, remote, petioled, sub- ovate, three, four, or five-lobed, smooth, of a shining green on both sides. Petioles and veins armed. © Peduncles leaf- opposite, solitary, or accompanied with a single, one-flower- ed pedicel; armed, few-flowered. Flowers large, bluish- purple. Germ two-celled, Berries of the size and appear- anes of a ~~ currant, smooth, drooping. | 15. S. iicaumedis ior ss a Angual or biennial, ramous, Fortean ssid can Saleve double, one of the pair smaller, ovate-cordate, — ~ Calyx unarmed. © Berry round, very hairy, four-celled. sain ae Rheed. Mal. ii. 65, tab, 35, - Beng. Ram-b 572 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Solanum, Is a scarce plant, grows in the country about Calcutta, and is found in flower and fruit in August. Root perennial. Stem scarcely any, but many sub-ligne- ous branches covered with much down, and armed with in- numerable, small, erect spines, Leaves double, as in several of the Physali ; petioled, one of the pair always much larger than the other, but it is from the axills of the smallest that the branchlets issue; they are obcordate, irregularly angle-lob- ed ; the upper surface is thickly covered with much ereet, soft: hair, on the under side it is more distinctly stellate, and whitish ; nerve and larger veins armed on both sides with strong straight prickles, the largest from six to nine inches | long, and from four to'six broad, the smaller about half the size. Petioles rowid, hairy, prickly; those of the large leaves half their length, and. coloured. on the upper side ; those of the smaller ones about one-fourth part of their length. Umbel generally opposite, and below the leaves; sim- ple, few-flowered. Peduncles and pedicels short and hairy, but not prickly, Flowers white, pretty large. Calyx hairy, otherwise unarmed, Corol very hairy on the outside, An- thers sessile, conical. Germ hairy, Berries the size of a pes aca ae nae, hairy, fonrcpalhed, as in. ccaeumiane oe 16.8. aavswupnifo Tae luted i: BLD a: ~ Shrubby, erect, | Branches, petioles ae Sinan snasiaale beset! with. strong; flattened: prickles, Leaves alternate ot ninate, ovate, unequally cordate, deeply sinuate-lobate, with stellate pubescence on’ both sides.. Corymbs lateral, bitid, unarmed, with glandular, slightly viscous pubescence. Corolla flat, with undulate lacinie. Berry round, eager; on thickened, clavate peduneles, ies ae . Beng, Gota begoon. hantG This. is an exceedingly common. plant in aor wheal em near she, babitionnes ie Migs ventas i “ : ijadle ie esis isos fet G54 Capsicum, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 573 CAPSICUM. Schreb. gen. N. 338. Corol wheel-shaped. Anthers converging. Berry mgt rior, juiceless, from two to three-celled, 1. C. purpureum. R. _Shrubby. Leaves ovate-lanceolate. Bedunles solitary in the divisions of the branchlets; after the blossom drops erect. Berry erect, ovate, dark purple, In 1796, I found a single plant of this species in the gar- den, but from whence it came I could never learn ; most like- ly from the Molucea Islands, The seeds have for these thir- teen years continued to produce, in all situations, plants ex- actly the same as the original one; this circumstance, with the general colour and erect ovate fruit, leaves litle Toom to doubt its being a distinct species, ue Stem short, branches numerous, lichens! iycteng pahaots almost four-sided, and deeply tinged with dark purple; whole — height from two to four feet, Leaves solitary at the divisions of the branches, or in pairs where the branches do not divide, petioled, oyate-lanceolate ; they are also tinged with the pre- vailing dark purple colour of the whole plant, particularly the nerves and veins, Peduneles solitary in the divisions of the branches, as long as the petioles, | Flowers a, beautiful purple, drooping. Berry ovate, erect, of a dark-purple till ripe, then of a dull reddish colour, generally three-celled, but _ the partitions are often discontinued towards the apex. _ The envelope of the seed is rather less acrid than that of tthe ortienaartanipebenat- camlahien phi bee: pea Deere ae Py ro annuum. Willd, sp. i. 1050, Shrubby. Leaves Pt iE Peduncles slit. Flowers drooping. Fruit oblong, reflex. This does not appear to be anative ciiaethe: Hindoos have no name for it, nor is it even found in their gardens. In : India the Capsicums are all shrubby, but produce so bedi 574 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAy Capsicum, after the first year, and begin to look.so scraggy, that they are seldom suffered to remain longer than one season. — 3. C. grossum, Willd, sp. i. 1051. ; Shrubby. Leaves evate-oblong. Peduncles solidieese one- - flowered, drooping. Fruit reflex,swelled into various shapes, Beng. Kaftree-murich, Caffree-chilly is the name by ene this sort is content known amongst Europeans; the plant does not appear to me to be a native of India. ‘Ihe thick fleshy-skin of this species is but triflingly acrid, and a palatable condiment is made of them. _4. C. frutescens, Willd. sp. i. 1051. Shrubby. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, Peduncles solitary. Flowers drooping. Fruit tapering, curved, reflex. Beng. Lal gacbh Lanka murich, or Lal Lunka maurich. Hind, Lal gachh marich. There is a pointed variety, with the fruit io or - a bright orange:colour when ripe, which the Hindoos call sim- ply gachh murich, it is the sort most used ; particularly when eemeretientnn it is to be found in every market. 5. C. minimum, Re ai ae . Leaves oneneniekn Ficlenelbia in pairs. Fae: é ers oo Ect with subulate, apenas — sie pee: had i East indiot Bird chilly or Sagaserp pepper pees * 6. C. cerasiforme. Wiild, spec..i, 1051. Shrubby, fruit globular, _ I doubt much whether this be a native of ‘India fr Hive — rien a it in nm = of ~ curidug,' {38 0: _Strychnos, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 575 STRYCHNOS. Schreb. gen. N. 339. Calyx five-parted, Corol funnel-shaped. Germ two-cell- ed ; ovu/a many, attached to the middle of the partition. Ber- ry superior, one-celled. Seeds nestling in soft pulp. Embryo furnished with a perisperm, and the radicle pointing to the receptacle, now obliterated (centripetal.) 1, S. Nux-vomica, Willd. sp. i. 1052. Roxb, Corom. i. 4, ' Leaves opposite, three and five-nerved, oval, lucid. Ber- ries many-seeded. 3 Cariram. Rheed, Mal. i. t. 37. Beng. Koochila. - Teling. Musadi. A middling-sized tree, common on almost every pat of the coast of Coromandel ;_ in flower during the cold season. * Trunk short, often drool but pretty thick. Branches ir- regular, both are covered with smooth, ash-coloured bark ; young shoots highly polished, deep green. Wood white, Gad; close-grained, and bitter. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oval, shining, smooth on both sides, entire, from three to five- nerved, or rather between that and triple, or quintuple, dif- fering in size from one and a half to four inches long, and from one to three broad. Stipules none. Flowers small, greenish- white, collected on small, terminal corymbs. Calyx five-tooth- ed, permanent. | Corol infundibuliform, as in the genus, Fi- laments scarcely any, or exceedingly short, inserted over the bottom of the divisions of the corol. Anthers oblong, halt within the tube, and half out. Germ two-celled, with many ovula in each, attached to the thickened centre of the parti- tion. Style the length of the tube of the corol. Stigma capi- tate, Berry’ roan, smooth, size of a pretty large apple, co- 1a sm somewhat hard shell, of a rich, beauti- olour when ripe ; filled with a white, soft, gelati- nous val: Seeds several, immersed in the pulp of the berry, _ The ‘wood of this tree being hard and durable is used for 576 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Strychnos. many purposes by the natives. It is exceedingly bitter, par- ticularly that of the root, which is used to cure’ intermitting fevers, and the bites of venomous snakes ; when that of Naga musadi cannot be had, The seeds are employed in the distil- Jation of country spirits, to render them more intoxicating. The pulp of the fruit seems perfectly innocent, as it is greedi- ly eaten by many sorts of birds, 2. S. potatorum, Willd. sp. i. 1052, Corom. pl. ¥. NM. 5, Leaves opposite, from ovate to oval, smooth, pointed. Bark deeply cracked. Berries one-seeded, Beng. and Hind, Nirmulee. S. potatorum, Asiat, Res, xi, p. 178. Teling. Induga. Tam. Tettan-kotta. Eng. Clearing-nut. This species grows to be a larger tree than Mux-vomica, It is much scarcer, being only found amongst mountains and woods of great extent. It flowers during the hot season, _ Dr. Konig’s description of this tree in the supplementum plantarum of Linneeus, page 148, is so perfect, as to leave me little to. add, the only observation I have to make is, that the leaves cannot be said to be either three or five-nerved. _ a Stipules entire, connecting. Corymbs from the extremi- tes of sid last seme shoots, round the base of this slain Berry abaiings leek phen sipe.. The wood of this, like that of the ee is ion and dur- able, and is used for various economical. purposes, . The pulp of the fruit, when ripe, is eaten by the natives to me the taste is rather disagreeable. a The ripe seeds are dried, and sold in every sorkessocient m water, The natives never drink clear well water if they nae: pond or river water, which sealer, nore Solanum, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 577 less impure according’ to circumstances. One of the:seeds is well rubbed for a minute or two round the inside of the ves- sel containing the water, generally an unglazed earthen one, which is then left to settle; in a very short time the impuri- ties fall to the bottom, leaving the water clear and, so far as I have been able to learn, perfectly wholesome. These seeds are constantly carried about by the more provident part of our officers and soldiers, in time of war, to enable them to purify their water. They are easier to be obtained than alum, and are probably less hurtful to the constitution, 3. S. colubrina.* Willd. sp. i. 1052. Scandent ; tendrils simple. Leaves from oval to oblong, obtusely acuminate, triple-nerved, polished. Semin =o seeded. ** The following note was written by Dr. Bene: ele years before this species was discovered in Bengal, and attached to S. Nuax-vomica.. I have therefore Shonghs it best to insert it here.—W..C....5. o» . There is a tree, but jen rare on this coast, which the Telingas, call Naga musadi (Naga, or*Tansoopaum in the Telin« ga language, means the Cobra de Capella, or Coluber naga of Linnus, Tunsoo means dancing, and paum a serpent ; this sort being famous for erecting its head and moving it from side to side : at the sound of music.) I have only once met with this tree, and then i it was Bs petit out nd me by: a Telinga Doctor. ‘The tree had - about'two, vel teocialaheahid ladle clee ree-fourths broad. - Tansy eases dtactlieanereadcs nic - gertions by a membrane. I took up this root with the greatest care, cutoff the upper part ‘from whence the shoots grew, and -4 planted it: in my garden, but it'soon perished. From’ the above cireumstances I am inclined to think there is.a-species different . from the third, or scandent species oe Colubrina, as well as VOL, I, Kk 578 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Solanum, Modira Caneram, Rheed, Mal. 8. t. 24, Beng. Koochila-luta. Found by Mr. M. R. Smith, indigenes’ on the hills near Silhet, where it blossoms in April, and the seeds spe in September and October. Stem of great size, often from eight to twelve inches in diameter ; the wood hard, intensely bitter and of a light gray colour; this with its numerous ramifications climbs over the highest trees. Bark ash-coloured, more or less scabrous, ac- cording to the age and size of the part of the young shoots, smoothand green, Tendrils lateral, simple, becoming thick _ and ligneous, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, from oval to oblong, entire, obtusely acuminate, triple-nerved ; nerves ex- tending to the apex, texture rather thin; glossy ; from three to six inches long, by two or three broad. Stipu/es none. Corymbs terminal, small ; composed of two or three pairs of opposite, few-flowered, short, villous branches. Flowers small, greenish yellow, in a sub-ternary order, Bractes one under each division and sub-division of the corymb, tapering, » villous. Calyx five-parted, clammy, with glandular pubes- cence. Corol infundibuliform, smooth. Tube cylindric, Border five-parted ; segments linear-oblong, spreading. F%- laments five, short, inserted into the mouth of the tube of the corol under the fissures of its border. Anthers sub-sagittate. Germ superior, ovate, smooth, two-celled, with many ovula h, attached to a fleshy ae. down the middle of the from the Nux-vomica tree, which yields the real or at least another sort of the Lignum colubrinum. The wood of the root of this sort is esteemed by the Telinga Physicians an infallible remedy for the ee Naya, as well as for that. of every other venomous ce. It is . Apphied externally, and at the same Aigne, given ine Ardisia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 579 - one cell only can be detected. Cortex rather hard and brit- tle; colour from a bright yellow to a dirty looking mixture of yellow and rough brown. Pulp gelatinous and yellow. Seeds from two to twelve, orbicular, much flattened as in the Nux-vomica, peltate, nearly an inch broad. Integuments two; the exterior®one thin, but tough, and most densely clothed with soft, short hairs, like the softest velvet; the in- terior one a very thin brown membrane. Perisperm oti to the seed, united round the margins, the middle free, resem- bling two cotyledons, horny. Embryo straight, much small- er than the perisperm, and lodged close to the umbilicus, which may be readily known by the hair being longer at that part, forming a tuft round it. Cotyledons cordate, three- nerved, Radicle oval, pointing to the umbilicus, (centripetal.) SERISSA.. Juss. Corol one-petalled, funnel-shaped ; throat esti segments of the border su barisloligse Berry oben two-seeded. 1, s. s fetid Willd. sp. i. 1061. . Dysoda fasiculata, Louriero Cochin Ch. 181. ~Byyeium japonicum, Thunb. Jap. 93. t. 17. Lycium fetidum, Linn, suppl. 150. Lycium indicum. Retz. Obs. ii. p. 12. Introduced into our gardens in India from China, which accounts for the natives having no name for it. In the Bota- nie garden at Calcutta it blossoms the whole year round, but never eamelec © fruit; the flowers anal geen, Seahiae metrics heey : “ARDISIA. oe N. 1735. cacti: Calyx fiverleaved. Corol hypocrateriform. | eck sips’ rior, one-celled, one-seeded ; attachment inferior. Stigma subulate. Barry superior, one-seeded, Embryo transversely : Serpentine in an ample perisperm, Kk2 680 . PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Ardisia, 1. A. solanacea. Willd. sp. i. 1063. Roxb, Corom. 1, 27. Shrubby. Leaves alternate, oblong, entire, glossy. Ra- _cemes axillary, corymbiform, Segments of the corol ovate. Beng. Bun-jam. z - Teling. Conda-mayoor. ‘ : _A small tree, or large shrub, a native ®f moist places in the _vallies amongst the Circar mountains. In flower and seed -nearly the whole year. Trunk one or more from the same root, erect. Bork ail coloured, Leaves alternate, short-petioled, oblong, and cu- eate-oblong, pointed, entire, smoeth, glossy, somewhat suc- -eulent; from four to six inches long, by two or three broad, -Racemes corymbiform, axillary, shorter then the leaves. -Pe- duncles round, smooth. Pedicels clubbed, round, smooth, Bractes a concave one below each pedicel. Flowers pretty large, rose-coloured. Calyx five-leaved ; leaflets imbricat- ed, concave, roundish ; permanent. Corol one-petalled. Tube exceedingly short. Border five-cleft; divisions spreading, cordate, Filaments five, exceedingly short, from the bottom of the tube. Anthers oblong, acute. Germ superior, oblong. Style awled. Stigma acute. Berry size of a small — round, juicy, black, one-seeded. The juice of the berries is of a very beautiful bright red colour; upon paper it aig to adurable brown, ‘ 2A. paniculata, Re beeke a7 iii: WON A smo bachte Pence teria sialy claipoced' ef oF ed alternate, compound branches. A large shrub, or small tree, a native of the hilly aca Chittagong, and particularly conspicuous on account of its large reflexed leaves, (from six to twelve inches long ;) and very large, elegant panicles of innumerable, lively rose-co- Tour flowers. Like most of the other species, it nice 0 blossom | nd ripen its seed most. part of the year, | eage shoots thick, pemew hat succulent, with sooth Ardisia, . PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, - 581 - clear, greén: bark. . Leaves crowded about the ends of the branchlets, sub-sessile, from lanceolar to.cuneate-oblong, ra-. ther obtuse, entire, smooth, from six to twelve inches long, and from three to five broad. Panicles terminal, very large, oval ; composed of numerous, patent, compound branches, all are round, smooth and» green, . Flowers very numerous, pretty - large, rose-coloured, Bracies oblong. Calyx the border. di-. _ vided into five broad-ovate segments, Corol sub-rotate; seg- ments of the border ovate... Filaments five, short, inserted _ into the base of the corol. Anthers sagittate, united into.a. cone, Germ ovate, one-celled, containing one ovulum attached to the bottom of the cell... Styde longer than the stamina, “een simple. 3. A. colonaten R. gate, Shrubby. Leaves linear-lanceolar, entire; wail: veins - hearly diverging. Panicles. terminal, (large and. high vt coloured,) composed of.a Pt _decompound, expanding branches, wer e - OUmur-kulli, the saiacnion name at Silhet; where the iad is indigenous, and. one of the most desirable species of the | genus I have-yet met with. It is in flower and seed the ar est part of the year. , Trunk erect, with numerous, smooth, expanding, enidlies : and: branchlets ; general height, in its native soil, about twelve feet... Leaves alternate, short-petioled, linear-lanceolar, en- tire; acute, veins parallel, and nearly diverging from the rib,’ about six or seven inches long, and about two broad. Floral leaves minute, Panicles terminal, solitary, very large ; com- posed ofseveral large, compound and decompound br all of which with: their| sub-divisions are. smooth, aud: ion a pretty deep, bright red colour. Bractes. lanceolate, Calyx,” corol, &c, as in the family. Berries somewhat oblate, smooth, - succulent, red, size ofa pea. Seed solitary, of adeep yellow in the base. Perisperm conform to the seed, very hard, some‘ small rust-coloured specks on the surface, which in some Kk3 582 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Ardisia. places penetrate a little. Embryo transverse, serpentine, &c, as in Geertner’s Anguillaria, i, 372. t. 77. A. A. umbellata, R. esralt; sr ‘Shrubby, erect. Leaves short-petioled, oblong, mites _ veinless, entire. Umbels axillary, drooping. — five- parted. Berries vertically compressed. A native of Sumatra, from thence Dr, Charles Campbell sent the seeds to this garden, where the plants thrive luxaré antly, and blossom most part of the year. ae Stem shrubby, erect, with alternate, ascending minions all are covered with a smooth bark ; general height of the full grown shrubs about eight feet. Leaves alternate, short- petioled, oblong, entire, polished on both sides, deep green, and almost destitute of veins; length from thrée to four inches, and about two broad. Peduneles axillary, solitary, shorter than the leaves, bearing in a simple umbellet, many pretty large, drooping, rose-coloured flowers. Calyx five-parted ; divisions short, and rounded, Corol, Tube very short; divisions of the border lanceolate, first recurved, then revo- lute. Filaments short, inserted on the mouth of the tube of the corol. Anthers united by their heads intoa cone. Germ superior, round. Style tapering. Stigma simple, appearing without the points of the anthexs. Berry depressed, smooth, shining black, size of a large pea, succulent; the pulp being ine considerable a and: pepe with purple» page 2 ee hacen Se = a ne diate Pas 5 xe 7 5. hy villosa, R. . Shrubby, erect, with Spader villous linlaiebibieiahs Stee lanceolate, crenulate, — underneath, sg nptaannneRe nal, compound, hairy. — ba A native of the forests of Pulo Piindpes tebe Mr. R: wet it in blossom in July. pines oe = pi a a Lourier, Cochin Ch. 149. eg | 7 Ardisia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 583 _ 6, A. lanceolata. R, Shrubby, with diverging branches, Leaves rece lar, polished. Panicles terminal, axillary, composed of a hes simple racemes. A native.of the forests of Pulo Pinang, where Mr. W. Roxhusghs found it in blossom in July. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, broad- siete acumi- nate, smooth, entire; from six to nine inches long, and two or. _ three broad, _ Panicles termmal and axillary, shorter than the leaves, composed of a few diverging branches. Flow- ers numerous, pedicelled, of a middling size, diverging, Bractes solitary, under each pedicel, lanceolate. Calyx deep-. ly divided.into five ovate segments, Corol rotate ; segments. five, ovate-acuminate. Anthers sub-sessile, sagittate, open’ near the acute apex on the inside. Germ ovate, one-celled, containing one ovulumattached to the bottom of ioe cell, teat length of the stamina. Stigma simple, acute, © 3% A, dinenomaec ie Ry ah 2 Shrubby, with diverging saceehiats Leaves mae ipial lenesoleta: smooth, entire. Umbelleis terminal, sessile, mA naline: of the. Molagnes, 8, A, crenata, R. _ Leaves lanceolate, crenate. Racemes terminal, often com- pound. Flowers drooping. 2) * . From Pulo Pinang, where it is a native. Shrubby, erect. Leaves short-petioled, alternate, lanceo~ late, margins smooth, somewhat obtuse, crenate. Racemes generally solitary, from the extremities of the corymbifor lateral branchlets, and’ always accompanied with a leaf or two, sometimes they are proliferous. lowers numerous, small, drooping. Calyx, corol, stamens and pistillum as in: A, solanacea, site sleet pean size of ermine seeded, ARNEL é is ge i" D remakes 584° PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Chironias 9. A. glandulosa, R. Shrubby. Leaves lanceolar, margins coloured and glan- dular. » Umbedlets sub-terminal, numerous, sp erage globular. Bun-nurukalee the vernacular name in Silhet, where the shrub is indigenous, flowering in the rainy season. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, lanceolar, smooth, margins coloured, somewhat repand, and strongly marked with little, elevated, dark-coloured glands on and rather under the margin ; from four to six inches long, and an inch or an inch and half broad. Umbelleis generally from four to eight, alternate at and round the extremities of the numerous smooth branchlets, long-peduncled, few-flowered, and glo- bular.. Flowers small, white, short-pedicelled. Calya' five- parted, marked with ferruginous spots. Corol alternate, the tube being very short; segments of the border five, round, emarginate ; imbricated in the bud. Filaments in- serted on the base of the tube. Anthers large, sub-sagittate, sides firmly united, forming a little dome over the mouth of the tube. Germ ovate, one-celled, and containing one ovu- lum, attached to the bottom of the cell, ‘Style slender. Stig- ma rather enlarged, and even with the top of the anthers, - CHIRONIA. Schreb. gen. N. 349. —— rotate. Pistil declined, Stamina inserted on the tube of the corol, Ee tga ea coal : assanirenan Sas: . i= C. selinamrteidss:- R. ; Annual, erect, four-sided, first brachiate, afterwards dicho- tomous, Leaflets of the calyx keeled and acute. Leaves’ seis ls eee to dame pb -teienaty eds ete two- 4 wl Erycibe. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 585 - A native of frail: appears pate the end of the ‘cold, and beginning of the hot season. _ Stems erect, four-sided, often very ramous, smootli, fro three to ‘twelve inches high ; below brachiate, dichotomous, _ with a flower in the fork. Zeisied opposite, sessile ; the low- ermost from oval to oblong, and three-nerved, the superior linear, and half stem-clasping ; all are smooth, and entire ; about an inch lone, Flowers long-peduncled, solitary in the divisions of the branches and two or three-fold at their terminations. Calyx nearly as long as the tube of the corol, five-cleft to the base ; divisions keeled and acute. Corol and stamens as inthe genus, the anthers becoming much twisted. Germ oblong. Stigma of two large, round plates, each sur- rounded with a thick, glandular, pubescent, horse-shoe-like margin. Capsules oblong, one-celled, two-valved. ‘Seeds numerous, affixed to two longitudinal a as in Gen” tiana, Obs. I attend to the spirally twisted anthers, otherwise I should from the structure of the capsules and two-lobed stig- ma have considered it a gentiana, The fresh plant is consi- derably bitter, consequently when dry much moreso, In the Banksian Herbarium 1 found specimens both of this and -C, carinata under my name. _ERYCIBE. Roxb: ees five-toothed. Coro! one-petalled ; border ten-part- ed. Germ superior, one-celled, from three to fours atinchee to the bottom of the cell. Batt bee ee. 1. E. paniculata. Roxb. Corom. ii. 159. _ Erimia-Tali, Rheed. Mal. vii. 73. t. 39. — _A very large, climbing shrub ; a native of the mountain forests, the Circars, and the eastern horder of Bengal ; young shoots covered with much rust-coloured farina. “pads al- ternate, short-petioled, reflexed, linear, oblong, pointed, en- ‘a 586 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Embelia, tire, smooth, from four to five inches long, and about two broad. Panicles terminal, large, oblong, covered with some rust-coloured farina. Flowers numerous, small, rust-colour- ed; border yellow. The ten divisions of the border.of the corol unequal and orbicular. Filaments from the base of the tube of the corol, short. Anthers ovate, pointed, Germ superior, round, smooth, one-celled, containing three, four, or five ovuda, attached to the bottom of the cell. Style scarcely any, Stigma large, five-grooved. Berry the size of a small cherry, black, pulpy, one-seeded. 7 _EMBELI A. Juss. Calyx five-parted, Corol five-petalled, on which the sta mina are inserted. Germ superior, one-seeded ; attachment inferior, Drupe one-seeded. Embryo transversely. sabia and furnished with a perisperm. git um 1. E, Ribes, Burm, Ind, 62, t. 23. Shrubby, scandent. Leaves alternate, petioled, eblone en- tire, smooth, Panicles terminal, hairy. oneed _ Ribesioides, Linn, fl. zeyl. N. 403. sis Baberung, the vernacular name in the Silhet lethigbes ry An immense climber, a native of the forests on the east his der of Bengal, where it blossoms in February and March ; one the seeds a9 tomante the close of the sain season, oneat wak pokes light brown. bark..-.Branches and, branchlets very numerous, and of ‘great extent, the tender shoots hoary. Leaves alternate, petioled, oblong and elliptic, obtuse, finely veined, smooth ; from two to three inchesJong, and one or one and half eile Petioles one-tifth or one-sixth. the length of the leaves, margins:somewhat winged, Stipules none, . Panicles terminal, large, open, and. sherry: sPencteny 2 ary, of a greenish yellow colowty, Calva, piss Lmbelia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 587. - clothed with short, white hairs, Petals five, oblong, con- cave, spreading, hoary with short, soft, white hairs. Fila ments five, very short, and inserted into the middle of the petals. Anthers sub-sagittate, resting on the exterior half of the petals. Germ round, one-celled, containing a single ovu- lum attached to the bottom of the cell. Style short. Stigma headed, sub-truncate. Drupe the size of a grain of black- pepper, round, crowned with a small point, smooth, succu- lent, when ripe black, when dry wrinkled and very much like that spice, one-celled, Nut brittle, rugose, one-celled. Seeds solitary, roundish, with a cavity at the base. Integu- ments two. Perisperm contorm to the seed. Embryo cury- ed transversely, with the convexity up. Cotyledons two, minute, oval, lodged on the side of the base of the perisperm. Radicle filiform, of a curved, serpentine form, with its apex near the margin of the perisperm considerably above its base, on the side opposite to where the cotyledons are lodged, nearly as in Grertner’s Anguillaria, and in Ardisia. The natives of the hills in the vicinity of Silhet, where the plants grow abundantly, gather the little drupes, and when dry sell them to the small traders in black-pepper, who frau- dulently mix them with that spice, which they so resemble as to render it almost impossible to distinguish them by selfe . and they are somewhat art withal. 2.:E. vebinies R. Arboreous. Leaves from oblong to oval, smooth. Racemes axillary and terminal, solitary. 2 : Found. by Mr. Roxburgh on the Rajamahu! hills;_ from: thence he sent. the seeds to this garden, where in six years. the plants produced from them were about ten feet high, with an erect stem, many nearly erect, and spreading branches, covered with smooth, ash-coloured bark. The YOURE shoots are somewhat angularand downy, = _ Leaves alternate, short-petioled, oval, aia entire, Pat two to three inches long, by one aud half or two broad, Jéa~ 588 — PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, Cordia. cemes axillary, solitary, simple, much shorter than the leaves. : Bractes solitary, subulate, one-flowered. Flowers small, short-pedicelled, greenish white, rather inconspicuous, Calyz. five-leaved, or deeply five-cleft, ovate, villous. Corol five- petalled, ovate, first spreading, afterwards revolute; thrice the length of the calyx, villous. Filaments five, short; in- serted on the petals, Anthers cordate. Germ superior, ovate, one-celled, containing one ovudum, attached to the bottom:of the cell. Style short. Stigma rather enlarged, but simple. Berry dry, spherical, size of a grain of pepper, one-celled, — one-seeded.’ Seed, perisperm and embryo as in the former. species, viz. copious perisperm, with transverse, serpentine. embryo, as in Enotes Angyillaria, i, 372. t. 77. 3. E. vestita. Roxb: “Shrubby, scandent, very ramous. Leaves’ oblong-aneelate, attenuate, sub-serrulate. Racemes axillary. hs Oauor Baberung, the vernacular name in Silhet, taeliibe it 48 Indigenous in the forests, climbing over trees and shrubs for support. It is uncommonly well Farntsed with branch-; lets and foliage. The flowers are particularly small and de-. licate, collected in little oblong, sub-sessile, axillary racemes. : They appear in January. ; a8 Obes Suis He CORDIA. Schreb. gen. N. 350. Eri tee Calyx (ecditeaety Satinitishaaiabaabevie aaieatiack Germ four-celled’: cells” one-seeded; — attachment. lateral. : Drupe superior, with a four-celled nut, one or two of which oy are fertile. ——_ inverse, without ROE “RC; Aatifotia, R. “1a gee Te Polygamous. Leaves sbeambbrdnts, entire and cpeid iiivee-nerved. Panicles terminal and lateral. _ Drupes oblate-: e, . Nat from one to four-seeded, — Cordia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 589 A native of Hindoosthan and introduced by the late Gene- -ral Martin, into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it blos- ‘soms during: the cold season ; and the fruits ripen in June and ‘July. They are much larger than those of C. Myxa, smooth, ‘and of a beautiful pale straw colour covered with a whitish bloom. | Trunk short and generally crooked, asin Myxa; the bark also scabrous and crooked, Branches numerous, spreading, ‘and drooping ; young shoots angular and smooth; the general height of trees ten or twelve years old is about twenty feet. Leaves alternate, petioled, from round to cordate and ovate, often slightly repand, three-nerved ; texture hard, smooth above, scabrous and pale underneath, from three to seven, or even eight inches long, and rather less in breadth, Petioles nearly round, and smooth. Stipules none... Panicles short, ‘terminal and lateral, roundish ; ramifications alternate, diver- ging, and once or more dichotomous. _/dowers numerous, small, white. Bractes minute, villous. Calyx villous, cam- panulate, leathery ; mouth unequally dentate. _Corol short, campanulate ; segments five, linear-oblong. Filaments as long as the segments of the corol, and inserted immediately under their fissures, Anthers incumbent. Germ ovate, four-celled; with one ovulum in each attached to the upper end of the axis. Style short. Stigma four-cleft ; segments four-cleft, long, rugose, and recurvate. Drupe oblate-spheroidal, about an inch or an inch and a quarter in diameter, smooth, when ripe yellow. Pulp in large quantity, soft, clear, and very clam- my ; (the natives eat it freely,) one-celled. ud nearly cir- cular, laterally compressed, rugose on the outside, with a ca- vity at each end, the lower one deeper than the other, exceed- ingly hard, four-celled, though rarely all fertile. Seed solitary, ovate-oblong. Integument single, white, soft and oily.) Plu- mula very small, Radicle conic, superior. ; -. Mr. Henry Colebrooke, who is intimately secpoeinted with Hindoo literature, informs me that the writers on Indian Materia Medica notice two sorts of Sepistan. The first as 599 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA! Cordia. large asa prune, with its nut immersed in mucilaginous pulp, ‘and separable from it. The second smaller, with its nut ad- hering to the pulp (as described by our writers on Materia Medica in Europe), but with less mucilage, and sweeter than the large one. The rest of the descriptions, he observes, is common to both kinds, viz. The leaf round, the fruit grow- ing in clusters, when ripe yellow, but afterwards — ; black, &e. The first, or large sort, is no doubt, the fruit of the tree — just now described ; and the small sort that of Cordia Myzxa, which has Hitherto}. I believe, been considered in Europe, as the only tree which produces this drug; but from the infor-_ mation furnished by Mr. Colebrooke we have reason to be-— lieve there are two sorts used in medicine by the Asiatics, — which are the produce of two trees of the same genus, and that the Arabic and Persian names — and Pistan, are applicable to both sorts. It might be well to give the trivial or viteihes siipatiol Sepistana to this broad-leaved tree, which for the present I” have called /atifolia ; and the scarlet-flowered West India tree, now called Sebestena, 1 would term coccinea, Novella nigra, Rumph. Amb, 2. p, 226, t. 75. is no doubt a distinct — species, which I have seen and eiquenined; and call Cordia ee ee a see eo” | 20) Mya, Willd. 21072 eh” aint iceneat ive rb erak ite Vida-marum. Rhiedé Mal. A. t. 387. fies Sebestena officinalis, Gert. sem. 1. P- 363, 0 71Be 43 Beng. Bohooari. ; Hind. Lusora, or Lesoora, -Teling. Nekra. | " ~The dried fruit of this tree is the © Schosteha of ee Materia Tee ety anges ut ow re, sroming ia mot prs Cordia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 591 the Cirears, but chiefly in gardens, hedges, &c. near villages, ~ Flowers about the end of the temperate, (or cold). season, and the fruit is ripe in May and June. — Trunk generally crooked, from eight. to pilin feet high, and as thick or thicker than a man’s body. Bark gray, cracked in various directions. Branches numerous, spreading, and bent in every possible direction, forming a dense shady head. Leaves scattered, petioled, ovate, oval, or obovate, exterior half slightly scolloped, or toothed, smooth above, below a little scabrous when old; from two to three inches long, and from one and a half to two broad. Petioles about one-third the length of the leaves. Stipules none... Panicles terminal, and also lateral, globular, dicho- tomous. Bractesnone, Flowers numerous, small, white, a very large proportion of them are sterile, and they always | want the style, Calyx tubular, widening towards the mouth — and there torn as it were into three or five divisions, smooth, not in the least striated. Corol, divisions of the border re- volute. Style in the fertile flowers as in the genus, in the barren flowers wanting. Drupe globular, smooth, the size of a cherry, sitting in the enlarged calyx, when ripe yellow, the pulp is almost transparent, very tough and viscid. Nut cordate, at both ends bidentate and perforated, rugose, some- what four-sided, four-celled, but it rarely happens that all prove fertile. Seeds solitary. - The smell of the nut when cut, is heavy and Aexansotb: the taste of the kernels like that of fresh filberts, The fruits - are not used in this part of India, (the Northern Circars), fox: any medicinal purpose. When ripe they are eaten by 1 natives and also, most greedily, ere sconces: of birds, be- ing of a sweetish taste. | The wood is soft, and of little use except for fael.: Itis | Tockoned:one 6 pains Be kieting tes daca Past toa. es Fat Bake ve - : +? 3. C. serrata, LR. . i cstesalioas tender parts hairy, Leaves ovate-cordate, ser- 592 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Cordia. rate, acuminate. Corymbs lateral. Flowers sub-octandrous ; with from seven to nine-cleft corol. re A native of Travancore, from thence the needa were sent by Dr. A. Berry to the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where — the plants reared from them blossomed in August, when four _ ‘years old, 15759 Trunk in our young trees from eight to ten feet high, and -about as thick as a man’s thigh. Branches very numerous, spreading in every direction, Bark of the old woody parts smooth, olive-colour, that of the young shoots green,and hairy. Leaves alternate, rather long-petioled, ovate-cordate, serrate, acuminate, a little harsh, with few hairs, from four to six inches long, and from two to four broad. Stipules none. Corymbs lateral, and about the forks of the branchlets, long-pedun- cled, dichotomous. Flowers white, of a middling size, Calyx sub-cylindric ; mouth from three to five-toothed, with the inside hairy. Corod with a cylindric tube, the length of the calyx, border about eight-cleft; segments oblong, re- curved, Filaments about eight, hairy, inserted on the tube of the corol below its middle. Anthers ovate, small, Germ superior, conical, four-celled, with one ovudwm in each, at-, tached to the axis, Style two-parted, as are also the seg- ments. 4. C. monoica, Willd. i. 1072, R. Corom. 1. 58. | a4 . 4 a Reewee: ries theesaeirved, scabrous, oe axillary " Teling. Pani Hind, Pida. A small, irregular, poor Jobing. tree, with gray bark, chiefly a native of the Circar forests, where barren land. pre- dominates, Leaves deciduous during the cold season. The Seters are produced during the rainy season. — ’ _ Leaves alternate, petioled, ovate, three-nerved, very scab- | Tous; pions three inches long, and two. broad, . Petia . Cordia. PENTANDRIA. MONOGYNIAs- 593 from the divisions of the branchlets, or. terminal, small, two- forked, composed of short, recurved one-ranked. spikes, Flowers white. There is a very large share of male or bar- ren flowers which generally occupy distinct parts.of the co- rymbs, and frequently the whole. Hermaphroditie flowers as in the family, Drupe the size of a cherry, pointed, yellow, pulpy: pulp glutinous, as in Myra, .Nut perforated at the apex, four.celled. The male flowers want the style entirely, bat have the rudiment of a germ. B.C. grandis. R Leaves round- nilaies obtuse, entire, 5 sub-triple- nerved, Panic/es terminal, drooping. //owers tetrandrous, A large quick growing tree, native of Chittagong ; in the Hon. Company’s Botanic garden its leaves are often a foot Jong ; its immensely large, dichotomous, very ramous panicle nearly as much; the calyx has an even surface and four- toothed mouth, 6. C. iienmaiin R _ Leaves long-petioled, ovate-cordate, repand, acute, ‘Pani- eles lateral, Corol campanulate. -Drupes ovate, dry, hid in the permanent calyx. Novella nigra. Rumph. Amb. 2. 75, is no doubt this plant, though it has hitherto been quoted for Cordia Sebestena, which is also now before me from the West Indies, in full ‘blossom in the Botanic garden.at Calcutta, and differs from Novella nigra in the following respects, Ist. In having larger, cordate, almost entire, obtuse, seab- rous leaves ; ‘etait campanulat y are smaller, Jonger-petioled; more ovate ; repand, and ag acute, _ 2d. In having corymbiform terminal panicles, wih iniow- dibuliform corols ; on the other hand in campanulata the ~ panicles are lateral, and the corol ecampanulate. In both, = the calyx, stamina, and insite are nearly alike. <2 ayo dee: 3 #! eae ea * 594 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cordia.: Drupe (in campanulata) ovate, pointed with the perma- nent base of the style, and completely covered with the thin dry permanent calyx; instead of pulp, as in the other spe- cies, there is a thick coat of a dry, firm, friable texture, scarce- ly differing in colour from the nut, Mut five-ribbed, with as many fluted grooves between, very hard, light brown, ad- ~ hering firmly to its friable covering, four-celled, though it is rare to find all fertile, perforated up through the centre. Seed solitary, ovate, pointed. Integument single, pure white, thick, soft, and tender. Perisperm none. Embryo inverse, pure white. Cotyledons deeply grooved, as in Sebestena officina- lis, Gert, sem. 1, 364. t. 76. p. 1. Plumula small, two-lobed. Radicle roundish, superior. 7. C. muluecana, R. Leaves long-petioled, ovate-cordate, obtuse, entire, smooth. Panieles axillary and terminal, shorter than the leaves ; calyx gibbous, inside hairy. Style twice two-cleft.. Drupe point- ed, and nearly hid in the calyx ; nut four-celled. A native of the Moluccas. This species is often tetran- drous. - The filaments are short, and very hairy; as is also a rim round the mouth of the gibbous tube of the corol, where they are inserted. ' 28°C: polygama. R. PE rl oe saferssntecbrsa, entire eumicies Pa- often pentand A tree, a "tintlve of f the 1 dsbatptainn of Carornandel. Flowers. about the month of May, and the seeds ripen in August. Trunk tolerably straight, but short. Bark pretty smooth, of a dark olive colour. Branches spreading; young shoots round and scabrous, Leaves alternate, petioled, from ovate to cordate, entire, or slightly scollop-toothed ; when young soft and villous, when old scabrous, from one to six inches’ nd about three-fourths of that broad, Stipules none. Cordia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 595 Panicles terminal, in the male more divided, pubescent er lowers sniatl, White: ours) See ate HERMAPHRODITE FLOWERS on a ‘separate tree. Calyx - narrow-campantilate ; mouth irregularly four or five-tooth- ed, villous on the outside. Corol funnel-shaped. | Border four or five-cleft ; divisions linear, revolute. Filaments four, or five, shorter than the seg'ments of the border of the corol. Anthers incumbent. Germ superior, ovate, four-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the axis, Style twice two- cleft, Stigma rather small, but rounded, Drupes oval, the size of a black currant, smooth, when ripe yellow. Pulp mucilaginous, as in the officinal fruit of C. myxa, one-celled. Nut very hard, ovate, longitudinally perforated through the centre, four-celled, Seed solitary, ovate, &c. &c. almost ex- actly as in Sebestina officinilis, Gert. sem. 1. p- 364. ‘. 76. p. tl. Mate Frowers on a different plant. — Cdtie tna corol as in the hermaphrodite, but more generally divided into four, Filaments generally four, as long as the corol. Germ a sphe- rical, abortive body, without style or stigma. Obs. In the early part of my botanical career, a very short description and drawing of the male plant were sent with my other dispatches of the same nature, to the Honourable the Court of Directors under the name a alternifolia, pers. Ne 165. me CU: eajuizpohac n : Leaves sub-opposite, lanceolate, scabrous. Panicles ter- minal. Flowers tetrandrous. Bsa twice two-cle . | Nu four-celled, ee A native of Mysore, Fil thence Dr. atta sent the seeds to the Botanic garden at Calcutta, in 1800, and in May 1803, the trees were in blossom for the first time. Trunk short. Branches numerous, spreading in every di- ction, with their long, slender extremities often drooping. Bark ash-coloured and pretty smooth, Leaves sub-opposite, Li2 696 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Ehretia, petioled, lanceolate, generally entire, obtuse, scabrous, parti- cularly when dry ; about four inches long, ‘by one broad, Pe- — tioles short, channelled. Stipules none, Panicles terminal, corybiform, Flowers numerous, small, white. Calya cylin- _dric ; mouth obscurely four-toothed. Corol ; tube longer than the calyx. Border of four linear, revolute divisions, Fila- ments four, inserted just below the divisions of the border. Style two-cleft, with two-cleft divisions, Drupe the size ofa large pea, round, smooth, yellow, when ripe the pulp is yel- how gelatinous, and pellucid. Nut four-celled, though sel- dom more than one seed comes to maturity. EHRETIA. Schreb. gen. N..352. Calyx five-parted. Corol one-petalled, five-parted. Stig- _ ma two-cleft. Drupe superior, with a four-partible nut, or with one or two from two to six-celled nuts. 1. E. serrata, R. Leaves broad-lanceolate, serrate, five-pointed, smooth, Flowers panicled. Style half two-cleft. Drupes vik two two-celled nuts. This tree has been introduced from Bhotan, ad is now growing and bearing fruit in Dr. Glass’s garden at Bhagzwl- poora, It is also a native of the eastern part of Bengal: Riuitesing time the beginning of the hot season. Leaves alternate, petioled, oblong, and bbroad-lanceolate, acutely. serrate, smooth on both sides ; from two to five inches long, and from one to two anda half broad. Petioles short, slen- der, and smooth, Stipules none. Panicles terminal, and from theexterior axills, ovate-oblong, with numerous, short, spread- ing, compound, and simple ramifications, lowers small, numerous, collected into small, somewhat remote, sub-sessile fascicles ; some of them hexandrous. Bractes ovate, small, ssin on the calyx, Calyx five-cleft, Corol; tube ‘as long « calyx; ¢ divisions of the beni oblong and s reading Elvretia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAs 697 Filaments in the’ mouth of the tube of the corol, and tather shorter than the border. Anthers ovate. Germ roundish, Style as long as the stamens, half two-cleft. Stigma obtuse. _ Drupes round, pulpy, when ripe red, and about the size of a pea. Nuts two-celled, they are flat on one side, and con- vex on the other. The above description is taken from trees sent to the Botanic garden by Dr. Glass, who:says the fruit is delicious. Plants of the same have also been received from Dr. Buchanan, but with him, about Lukshmeepoora where the tree is indigenous the fruit is not esteemed, indeed they have little orno pulp onthem. The others have but little, what they have is, however, palatable. Both now have been twelve years in the Botanic garden, The trees are about divisions ovate, outside downy. Corol ; tube gibbous. Style two-cleft. Stigma simple. Berry the size of a grain of pep- per, red, marked with four angular elevations corresponding with the angles of the four-celled nut. Nut four-celled, or by exposure four-partible, smooth. $5. _ A, E. uniflora, R. _ Shrubby, twiggy. Leaves crowded, sub-sessile, Sbldingy entire, hairy. Flowers solitary, sub-sessile, Drupe with four one-celled nuts. _ A native of the Moluceas. ity Epona: Re: Bais. 3 Tender parts bristly. ‘Eabiae eectatenaha a es Panicle terminal, composed of dichotomous, secund, recury- ed spikes. Drupe with four one-celled nuts. _ A native of the Island of Hamoa. _ 6. E. buxifolia, Willd, i. 1079. R. Corom. pl. 1. N. BT. - Shrubby. Leaves wedge-shaped, apex tridentate, scab- toe eetntles from two-to six-flowered. Ni uts five or ‘six- Chrysophyllum, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA. 599 Cordia retusa, Vahl, symb. ii. p. 42, Teling. Bapana-booree. A middling-sized, ramous shrub or small tree, very com- mon on barren lands and in forests. Flowering time the wet season, _, Leaves on the young shoots alternate, on the former branch- — lets fascicled, sessile, reflexed, wedge-formed, very scabrous, very hard above, shining, from half an inch to an inch long, and a quarter or half an inch broad, Peduncles from amongst the leaves on the woody branchlets, from two to six-flower- ed, Pedicels very short. Flowers small, white. Calyx five-parted ; divisions lanceolate, as long as the corol. Corol campanulate. Border five or six-cleft. Stamens five or six, shorter than the corol, Style two-cleft. Stigmas simple. Berry the size of a pea, succulent, red. Nut five or six-celled. 7. EB. wrens Willd. i, 1077, j Arboreous. Leaves oblong, entire, coh. , Deaiales terminal and lateral. Found iadearecan. at the Mauritins by Colonel Hard- wicke, “CHRYSOPHYLLUM. Schreb. gen. N. 355. Calyx five-leaved. Corol campanulate, five-parted, (ten, Linn.) Germ five-celled ; cells one-seeded ; attachment inte- rior. Berry superior, Sveanelod, (ten, Linn. one or ten, Gert.) Embryo erect, and furnished with a perisperm, ares acuminatum. £. Leaves lanceolate, smooth, -Flimers ey: Peal glo- bose, five-seeded. Pitakara is the vernacular name about Silhet, vicae the tree is indigenous, and blossoms in April, The fruit ripens in October, and is greedily eaten by the natives; though to me the taste is by no means agreeable; the iin being al- Li4 600 _- PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Tectona, « most insipid, and though tolerably firm, uncommonly clam- my, adhering to the lips or knife, with great tenacity, - A sasahdtangcized tree, with numerous slender, emodth, round branchlets, Leaves alternate, short-petioled, lanceolate, entire, acumi- nate, polished on both sides, except while young, then cloth- ed with ferruginous down; veins small, simple and parallel ; from three to four inches long, and one and a quarter broad. Peduncles axillary, several together, recurved, one-flowered, Flowers minute, pale yellow. Calyx five-leaved, leaflets oval. Corol one-petalled. Tube the length of the calyx, border five-parted, segments oval. Filaments five, inserted into the tube of the corol near the base. Anthers in the mouth of the tube. Germ inferior, ovate, very hairy, five-celled, with one oyulum in each, attached to the middle of the axis, Style short. Stigma five-lobed. Berries spherical, size of a small crab-apple, smooth, when ripe yellow. Pu/p in con- siderable quantity, five-celled. Seeds solitary, attached to the axis by the greater part of the length of the thin inner edge, smooth, polished, of a shining brown colour. _Peris- perm conform to the seed, yellowish. Embryo extended through the whole perisperm, erect. | Cotyledons obliquely ovate, thin, three-nerved, Radicle curved, sub-cylindrie, inferior, . ae _ TECTONA. | Sched. be gen: N. 856. 3 pericarp. “Corol psa Som Sar velled ; ; cell one- seeded ; attachment central. Drupe superior, dry, hid in the calyx. Mut four-seeded, Seed solitary. Embryo eres, without perisperm. saat T. grandis. Willd. sp. i. 1088. Roxb, a Lae Ge ee omar: “Laie 24 Tectona, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAy 601 z 4 Teling. Teck. Can. Jaadi, Beng. Sagoon, or Segoon, . This most useful tree is a native of various jo purts of India, viz. the mountainous parts of the Malabar and Coromandel coasts, of the mountains bordering on the banks of the Go- davuree above Rajamundri, and. of Pegu. Lord Cornwallis and Colonel Kyd have sometime since begun to introduce it into Bengal, where it thrives well. Ow this coast it flowers in. June and July. The seeds ripen in September and October, - In Bengal, the leaves are deciduons during the cool'season; _ and the new foliage appears in May, a few weeks before the — flowers. 4 Trunk erect, growing to an immense size. Bark asheco: loured and scaly. Branches numerous, spreading ; young shoots four-sided, sides channelled. Leaves opposite-petiol- ed, spreading, oval, a little scolloped, above scabrous, below covered with whitish, rather soft down, they are larger at a distance from the flowers and on young trees, viz. from twelve to twenty-four inches long, and’ from eight to sixteen broad. Petioles short, thick, Jaterally compressed. Pani- cles terminal, very large, cross-armed ; divisions dichotomous, with a sessile fertile flower in each cleft ; the whole covered - with a hoary coloured, farinaceous substance, Peduneles common, quadrangular ; sides deeply chamnelled, angles ob- tuse. Bractes opposite, lanceolate, two at each sub-division, Flowers small, white, very numerous. Calyx and corol as described by Konig, only oftener six than five-cleft. Nee- tary very small, frsqacinly wanting. Stamens often’ six, Germ superior, round; hairy, ianceatiéd} witeyné-ovdion in each attached to the axis, Stigma two-cleft, divided, ob+ tuse, spreading. Drupe within the enlarged, inflated, dry calyx, obtusely four-sided, woolly, spongy, dry. Nut ex- ceedingly hard, four-celled, &e, as sr en by ar scoethe carp. i, 257. t. 7. The wood of: this tree, the only useful part-of it; has from ~ 602 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, § Sideroxylon. Jotig experience been found to be by far the most useful timber in Asia; it is light, easily worked, and at the same time both strong and durable. That which grows. on the mountains on the banks of the Goduvuree, is beautifully vein- ed, and considerably closer in the grain, and heavier than any other I have seen. It is therefore particularly fit for furniture, gun-carriages, &c. For ship-building it is reckon- ed superior to every other sort of Wood ; being light, strong, and very durable, either in or out of the water. - Pegu produces the largest quantity, and their large rivers eanble the natives to bring it down to the sea-ports froin the interior mountainous parts of the country, where it grows, at a cheap rate ; which enables them to sell it lower than in any other part of India, = STDEROXYLON. Schreb. gen. N. 357... Calya five-cleft, Corol rotate, five-cleft, Nectary five- leaved, inserted on the fissures of the corol, alternate with the stamina. Stigma simple. Berry superior, five-seeded. Embryo erect. — coy 1.8. tomentosum. Willd. i. p. 1090. R. Corom. pl. 1. N. 23. _ Unarmed. Leaves alternate, oblong;waved,downy. Flow- ers axillary, fascicled. _ Berry with from one to five seeds. - . A-small tree, a native of the tops of mountains phielie | Flowering during the hot season, . Trunk erect. Bark ash-coloured. asian naa ink numerous, Leaves alternate, short-petioled, oval, a little scolloped, when full grown smooth ; when’ young covered with much rust-coloured down ; re three to five inches long, and one and a half broad. Peduneles axillary, numer- ous, short, downy, bowing, undivided, one-flowered. Flowers . small, dull white. Calyx below, five-leaved ; leaflets imbri-_ cated, downy, permanent, Coro/l one-petalled, Tube short, inside. eerie: —— mercies fi Rhamnus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 603 ing, half Janceolate, acute, waved. Nectary leaflets five, al- ternate, with the filaments, waved, length of the stamens, Stamens five. Germ ovate, hid in the tube of the corol. Ber- ry ovate, size of an olive, Seeds generally one or two, though there are the rudiments of five in the germ, RHAMNUS. Schreb. gen. N. 358. Calyx. five-parted. . Corol five-petalled. Germ sunk in the saucer-shaped ‘nectary ; from two to three-celled ; cells one-seeded ; aitachment inferior. Berry superior, from one to three-seeded. . Embryo erect ; perisperm scanty. 1. R. incanus. R. Unarmed, odorous, Leaves ovate-lanceolate, entire, Gen above, hoary underneath. Stipules filiform. Corymbs on smal] axillary branchlets. Style three-cleft. . Reared in the Botanic garden at Caleuita from seed receiv- ed from the Moluccas. Flowering time the cold season, Trunk straight. Branches numerous, nearly horizontal. Branchlets alternate, bifarious. Bark smooth ; that of the woody parts ash-coloured, that of the young shoots green, Leaves alternate, bifarious, petioled, ovate-lanceolate, entire, smooth above, very white underneath; length from two to twelve inches, and from one to five broad. Stipules filiform. Corymbs alternate, on small, sub-erect, axillary branchlets, Flowers very numerous, small, greenish yellow. Calyx vil- lous on the outside, and, keeled on the inside. Corol petals (scalets, Linn.) cuneate, concave. Style three-cleft. Berries round, smooth, united to, and resting on the remaining calyx, the size of a small cherry, when ripe black, and filled round the seeds with a dry mealy substance. Seeds three when all come to eats which is seldom the case, slightly united. 2, R. cireumscissus, Willd. sp. i. 1001. +5 (-Shrubby; armed. with sub-opposite recurved. prickles. «604 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Rhamnus, Leaves sub-opposite, round-obcordate, dentate, polished. Umbellets axillary. A native of the forests of India, where its long straggling branches armed with the most acute, strong, poouiead iti give the most cautious travellers infinite pain and trouble. Flowering season the months of January, February, and — March; the seeds take nearly a year to ripen. Trunk short, soon dividing into many, long, straggling, scandent branches; with numerous, diverging, alternate, round, smooth, armed branchlets. Spines on the lateral branches axillary, solitary, rather longer than the petioles, coloured, very sharp,anda little recurved ; the leading shoots are unarmed. Leaves sub-opposite, short-petioled, round- cordate, dentate, firm and polished on both sides; about three- quarters of an inch each way. Stipules small, caducous. Umbellets axillary, solitary, very small; from ten to twelve- flowered, the floriferous axills bear no thorns. Calyx globe- campanulate, five-toothed. Petals or scales erescentésha p- ed. . Germ ovate, Style scarcely any. Stigma somewhat two-lobed. Berry a little depressed and umbilicate, smooth, the size of a marrowfat pea, having the base covered by the remaining calyx. Séeds five when all come to maturity. 3. R. virgatus. R. ~ Shrubby, erect, spines terminal. Leaves oblong-ventri- pes ‘portate; Flowers round the base of the young shoots , tern; heey gatiacites frame, two or three- A mative or f Nepal from. hase Dr. Sackiucn, sent ¢ suet to the Botanic garden at Calcutta in 1802, where the plants grow freely to the size of a very large shrub; they bicends in March, and ripen their seed in Setnier ind November: | Trunk not very short, distinet from the — all are 6 62% = unarmed twigs, and. short; rigid, saa ieieaen pointed branchlets, bark of the old woody patirticinsialtyetnge 2 Rhamnius. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 605 with ash-colour and brown, that of the young shoots smooth and green, Leaves alternate, rarely sub-opposite, short-pe- tioled, reclinate, oblong-ventrivose, serrate, pretty smooth on both sides; from one to three inches long, and from half an -inchto aninch broad. Stipules petiolary, ensiform, ciliate, base permanent, Peduncles from the scales which embrace the base of the young shoots, and axillary, generally tern, slen- der, one-flowered. Flowers very small, yellow. Calyx campa- nulate, more generally four than five-cleft. Corol no other than the little scales of the genus, which are:here very imper- fect. Filaments four or five, as there are divisions in the border of the calyx, small. .4uthers often imperfect. Germ two or three-lobed, ovate, smooth, from two to three-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the lower and inner ane gle of its cell. Style short. Stigma two or three-cleft; segments recurved, BOS ELGG: It differs from R. catharticus; the only species known to me which it approaches i in having a two or three-cleft stig- ma, with just as many lobes, cells, and seeds as in the germ, consequently the number of seeds in the berry can never ex- ceed the contents of the germ, it cannot therefore be catharti- cus, which has a four-cleft stigma, and four-seeded berry. 4. R. lucidus. R. - Sub-arboreous, armed with short, pyitedle and solitary, seal aculei, Leaves opposite, from round to oblong, emarginate, entire, polished and firm, Peduncles iztHadgs short, from two to four-flowered. Berries gintinles, general- . ly two-seeded. : a8 A ‘small, very” ramous free, with faxepaiati and 'strage gling, some what scandent branches ; a native of Mauritius, It is very: nearly allied to R. circumscissus, the chief differ- ence is in the leaves — entire and retuse, or emarginate in a this species. — - 606 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Ziziphus, ZI ZI PHUS, Lamarck. Calyx five-parted. Corol five- petalled. Germ hid i ina crenulate, flat nectary, from two to three-celled ; cells one- seeded ; attachment inferior. Drupe superior, nut from one to three, or more, one-seeded. Embryo erect, with scanty perisperm, or none, 1. Z. trinervia. R. Arboreous, unarmed, Leaves ovate-oblong, three-nerved, ~ obtiisaly serrate, glossy. Flowers in axillary fancies Stig- | ma two-cleft. Drupes spherical. ee A native of Mysore ; from whence Dr. Buchanan sent seed, — to the Botanic garden at Calcutta in 1800, and in eight years the plants therefrom have grown to be beautiful small trees, _ of about twenty feet in height, with innumerable branches and branchlets spreading in every directions, with extremities often pendulous, and crowded with beautiful, dark green, glossy foliage. Flowering time in the Botanic garden March and April, the fruit ripens in September, October, and No- vember, - Leaves alternate, bifarious, short-petioled, broad-lanceo-— late, or ovate-oblong, obtuse, strongly marked with three nerves, smooth, firm and glossy, obtusely serrulate, from one to five inches long, and from one to two and a half broad. Stipules filiform, caducous. Flowers numerous, small, green- ish yellow, collected in little axillary fascicles, Seales of — the corol small, and shorter than the reeurved stamens: Gerin ovate, immersed in the large, convex, fleshy receptacle, two-- celled, with one ovulum in each, attached from the base to the bottom of the partition. Style scarcely any. Stigma two-cleft, divisions short and recurved. | Drupes spherical, the size of a cherry, polished, of a lively yellow, one-celled. ilp ‘soft, gelatinous and sweet, Nut obovate, -consider-— bly flattened, a little rugose, one or two-celled. Seed con- form to the cell, of a rownish colour, and rather soft, Em- Ziziphus, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, » 607 éryo nearly as long, and broad as the perisperm, and of the same colour, erect. Cotyledons two, nearly orbicular. Ra- dicle obovate, inferior. 2. Z, albens. R. Arboreous. Prickles solitary, recurved. Leaves oblique- ly oval, serrulate, downy underneath. Corymbs axillary, long-peduncled. Corol none, Style two-cleft. Drupes drooping, smooth, white. ; Found by Dr. Hunter in Col. Palmer’s garden, near Cal- cutta, in full flower, and with ripe fruit in April 1803. It was originally brought from China, Trunk arboreous, with spreading branches. Prickles so- litary on the under side, short, recurved, being nothing more_ than the indurated stipules. Leaves alternate, bifarions, — short-petioled, three-nerved, obliquely oval, most slightly ser- rulate, downy underneath, _Stipudes subulate, the lower one hardens into a prickle, the other is caducous. Peduneles axillary, solitary, three or four times longer than the petioles, many-flowered, Calyx five-cleft. Corol none, nor any thing like the usual scales of the genus, Style two-cleft, Ting round, the size of a small cherry, smooth, when ripe white, and pendulous, The pulp rather mealy and sweet, . Nut turbinate, thin, two-celled, with a single seed in each. _ 3. Bis latifolia, R. _Arboreous, prickles stipulary, short and recurved, Leaves oval, serrate, three-nerved, downy underneath. Panicles ter- minal. Petals wanting. Drupe turbinate. Nut one-celled.— This species is very rare., ‘It isa native of mountainous _ tracts in the Cirears and grows to be asmall tree. _ ws Prickles solitary, very thick, but short, recurved, a rigid pointed. thorn-like stipule occupies the other side of the in- sertion of the petiole. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, bi- farious, oval, serrate, three-nerved, smooth, from four to six inches long. Corymbs terminal, and from the exterior axills, _ . 608 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Ziziphus, forming a large oblong panicle. Corol none. Nectary as in the other species. Anthers three-lobed. Germ two-cell- ed, one ovulum in each, attached to the bottom of the cell. Drupe turbinate, size ofa cherry, yellow. Nut generally one- celled. 4. Z. Jnjuba, Wilid. sp. i. 1104. Arboreous. Leaves obliquely-ovate, serrate. Peduncles axillary, many-flowered. Thorns stipulary, one recurved, the other straight, Muts two-celled. -Perim Toddali. Rheed. Mal. iv. 85. t. 41. - Malum mdicum. Rumph. Amb, ii. 117. t. 36. Beng. Kool. : Hind, Bier. Teling. Rengha. Ona the coast of Coromandel this grows to be a small tree. Flowering time the rainy season; the finit npeer nine is rains, : Trunk seldom straight, yet not much bent. Bark E sisabe rous, much and deeply cracked. Branches spreading in every direction ; branchlets bifarious, flexuose; young parts. a little downy. Thorns stipulary, very sharp; the under one recurved, the upper one straight. —Leayes short-petiol- ed, alternate, bifarious, obliquely-oval, serrate, with the apex often three-toothed, _above smooth, below downy ; from one to two aon sets . Flowers axillary, crowded on sub-ses- : > Calya ‘one-leaved, spreading, tive-parted, aaniar Saal ‘Petals (scales of Linn.) five, wedge*shap- ed, apex large, concave, spoon-like, with its margin slightly crenulate ; they are inserted on the inside of the divisions of the calyx. Nectary saucer-shaped, perforated for the pistil- Tum, ‘margin ten-notched. Filaments five, rather shorter than the petals, and inserted immediately over them, so that ‘staal oval anthers rest in their concave apices. “Germ fHarrot ety eng? aa be sero l eat i s ie ee < Sea sil hee. =} 3 divisions recurved, Seine” 4 Ziziphus, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 609° lar, size of a large cherry, smooth, yellow when ripe, ut rough, two-celled. Seed solitary, affixed at the base, The fruit is eaten by all classes of persons, 5. Z. vulgaris, Willd. sp. i. 1105. Leaves obliquely oval, serrulate, three-nerved, hoary un- derneath. Thorns stipulary, one straight, the other recurv- ed. Drupe oblong. Nut sharp-pointed, two-celled. Z. sativa, Gert. i. p, 202. t. 43. f. 4. A pretty large tree, often as large asa full-grown apple tree in England, a native of Persia and Hindoost’han ; only found in gardens in Bengal, where it blossoms in August, and the fruit ripens in January. 6. Z. nitida, R. Arboreous. Thorns stipulary, one projecting, one recurv- ed. Leaves obliquely ovate-oblong, three-nerved, obtusely serrate, smooth, Fruits sub-cylindric; nuts two-celled, Introduced from China inte the Botanic garden at Calcut- ta, where it grows to be a small tree, Flowering time the hot season. Root superficial, sending up many suckers for some yards round the tree. Trunk generally crooked. Bark brown, pretty smooth; branches few, flexuose, and thin of leaves, Spines stipulary, the upper one straight, long, and pointing much forward, the other shorter and recurved, Leaves al- ternate, short-petioled, obliquely oblong, emarginate, three- nerved, serrate, smooth, of a shining green on both sides, from one to two inches long. Flowers axillary, few, sallest- ed on short common peduncles ; they are small, yellow, semi- digynous. Drupe oblong, pendulous and smooth, about a an ~ inch long, when ripe pale-yellow, Nut lanceolate, pointed at both ends, a little compressed, rugose, two-celled, The fruits are eaten, but to my taste they are rather insi- pid. Innumerable suckers constantly rise from the root which ran to a great distance from the parent tree, and make ‘VOL, I. ogg 610 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA,. Ziziphus: it a troublesome plant in a garden, but at the same time they render it easily yeeros if necessary. 7. Z. Lotus. ieakied Encyclop. iii. 304. [Mlustr. 1. 18h. SFu®e - Arboreous; spines stipulary, one long alates and ee the other recurved. Leaves oval, three-nerved, most. slightly crenulate serrate, smooth on both sides, Flowers axillary ; style two-cleft. Z. Lotus, Willd, i. 1103. A native of Persia, &c. ; blossoms in the hot season in the Botanic garden at Calcutta. It is readily known from its Indian congeners by the whiteness of its bark, and the pale. yellow tinge of its long and very slender prickles. 8. Z. elliptica. R. Arboreous. . Thorns paired, the upper one rather incurv- ed, the under one recurved. Leaves elliptically oval, serru-. late, three-nerved, pale underneath. Corymbs axillary, di- chotomous, lowers semi-trigynous, A stout straight tree, a native of Travancore, from thence introduced by Dr. A. Berry, into the Botanic garden at Cal- cutta, where it blossoms,in May and June. . Trunk straight, but slightly bent to one side, covered with pretty smooth, brown bark. Branches and branchlets nu- merous, spreading much while young, and divaricated when old. Young shoots slightly villous, and flexuose, Prickles, paired and stipulary ; the upper one straighter and pointed. forward ; the under one much recurved. Leaves alternate, bifarious, short-petioled, elliptically oval with the base ob- liquely cordate, finely serrulate, three-nerved, smooth above, pale and soft underneath, from one to two inches long. Sti- pules subulate, soon becoming the sharp thorns above de- scribed. : femme axillary, much shorter than the leaves, hotomous, villous, many-flowered. Palate ; 3 a, as in the genus, _ Paepornies immers- 7 % ae ee Ziziphus, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 611 i ed in the receptacle, three-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the bottom of the cell. Style short, three-cleft, 9. Z. Oenoplia, Willd. spec. i.-1105. ‘Shrubby. Thorns solitary, recurved. Leaves unequally ovate-cordate, entire, acute ; three-nerved, downy underneath. Flowers minute, crowded in the axills, _ Native of various parts of India, Flowering time the close of the rains. ¥. 10. Z. tomentosa. R. Shrubby. Thorns solitary, scarcely curved. Leaves un- equally ovate-cordate, three-nerved, obtuse, minutely serru- late, hairy above, and tomentose underneath. Panicles la- teral, A short, very ramous shrub, a native ss! f Chitagong, and there used for fences. 11. Z. xylopyrus. Willd. spec. i. 1104, Arboreous. Leaves obliquely cordate, three-nerved, ser- rate, downy. Thorns when present stipulary, one recurv- _ ed, the other straight. Nuts three-celled, three-val ved, Rhamnus Xylopyrus. Retz. Obs. ii. 11. Telinga, Goti. Common in every forest on the coast of Coromandel. In a good soil it grows to be a pretty large tree, with a tolerably erect trunk, but in general it is found in the state of a large straggling shrub. Bark light ash-coloured, much cracked, corky ; young parts covet with soft white down, The prickles in a poor soil are always pr pres D ry, the under one recurved, the upper one erect and straight. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, bifarious, obliquely-cor- date, serrate, three-nerved, downy, particularly on the under side, about two inches long. Corymbs axillary, small, many- flowered. Flowers as in the genus. Style three-clett. Drupe the size of a large cherry, greenish and downy, marked : Mm2 612 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNDIA. Ziziphus, round the base with the remains of the nectary. Nut three- celled, three-valved, the valves separating when the nut has been sometime exposed to the weather, leaving a centrical three-sided receptacle, Seeds one in each cell, orbicular, compressed, affixed at the base to the receptacle, Cattle eat the leaves, young shoots, and fruit. The kernels taste like filberts, and are eaten by the natives, The wood of the largest trees is much esteemed by the na- tives; being yellowish or orange-coloured, very hard and deisbls; and at the same time not very heavy. 12. Z. Caracutta, Buch. Arboreous, Thorns in pairs ; the under one recurved, the. upper one straight, Leaves round, serrulate, three-nerved. Peduncles axillary, very short, many-flowered, sabi three- left. Drupe oval, with a three-celled nut. A native of the southern parts of Mysore, and there known to the natives by the name Xarakutta, Seeds sent from thence by Dr. Buchanan to the Botanic garden at Calcutta produced plants, which in four years were about ten feet high, with a tolerably erect, stout trunk, and many spread- ing crooked branches; covered with smooth, dark ash-co- loured bark. The young shoots are round, and villous. They blossom in April, and the fruit ripens in December, Thorns in stipulary pairs, the lower one recurved, the up- _ per one straight, both are hard, smooth, and acute; where the flowers are, the thorns are generally deficient. Leaves short-petioled, obliquely round-cordate, or nearly round, obtuse, or retuse, serrulate, three-nerved ; while young some- what villous; from one to two inches long, and nearly as broad. Satapaies axillary, very short, bearing many small, short-pedicelled, greenish-yellow flowers. Style three-cleft, Drupe the size of a large cherry, oval, depressed a little at both ends, smooth, dark-brown ; fleshy part tough, firm, and yellowish, Mud roundish, a little uneven on the outside, | very y hard fed thick, hreeceled, foot, malisers, aici Ziziphus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 613 to the bottom of the cell, nearly round, compressed, convex on the inside, Integuments two; the exterior firm, light, brown, and polished ; the inner thin and softer. Perisperm; when the seed is ripe, there is only on each side of the em- _bryo a white, fleshy lamina; but at this period not connect- ed round its margins, as before maturity. Embryo erect ; cotyledons two, nearly five-nerved. Radicle inferior, esses just within the ambilicus. 13. Z. microphylla, R. Shrubby ; branchlets bifarious, flexuose. Thorns stipula-_ ry, one straight, the other recurved. Leaves ovate, three- nerved, serrulate, woolly underneath. Flowers fascicled. Stigma two-cleft, -Jujubas zizyphus zeylanica. Pluck, me 199, t. 197. SE Rhamnus nummularia. Burm. Ind. 61.- ~ | Common on barren uncultivated lands on the Coroman- deb coast. - Flowering time the beginning of the rainy sea- ‘son. | Stem scarcely any, but many slender, rigid, bifarious, flexuose branches spreading in all directions, and forming a small bush. Bark covered with a light-coloured, almost white pellicle. Thorns stipulary, the upper one straight, slender, but very sharp, and as long as the leaves. The under one shorter, and much recurved. Leaves alternate, bifarious, very short-petioled, ovate and oval, serrulate, above pretty smooth, woolly underneath ; about half an inch long, ¥ lowers collected in the axills of the leaves, short~ peduneled. Calyx tomentose on the outside. _ meguann clawed, oval. — two-cleft, te 14. Z. apes Willd. spee.i. 1104. | -“Shrubby, climbing. Leaves obliquely dordate; serrate, ree-nerved, downy underneath,” Thorns eer: Nuts two-celled. ae Mm3 * 614 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Ziziphus, Sans, Sookshmuphula, Diiokainliik, Sookshmuputruka, Doospursha, Mudhoora, Shuvurahara, Shikhipriya, Kur- kundhoo, Shrigalukoli, Beng. Shea-kool. Telinga. Paramie. This is the most common species of the genus; it is to be found in every hedge throughout India, and always with scarcely any thing that can be called a trank, but many large, straggling, climbing branches, which are too weak to support themselves. Bark dark, rust-coloured, pretty smooth; young shoots downy. Prickles always present, stipulary, large, and exceedingly sharp; the lower one is _ much recurved, the upper one straight. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, bifarious, very obliquely ‘ovate, serrate, three- nerved ; downy underneath, from one to two inches long. - Corymbs axillary, many-flowered. Style two-cleft. Drupe the size of a pea, smooth, shining black, marked round the base with a circular scar. Nut rugose, obcordate, two-cell- ed ; generally one of the cells is obliterated, or abortive. Seed solitary, affixed to the bottom of the cell. ‘The fruit is eaten by the natives; the taste a very pleasant acid.. A decoction of the bark of the fresh root is said to — promote the —— of fresh wounds, 16, Z. glabra, R _ Shrubby, ansiindenty smooth. Thorns slides recurved, eave. ovate-cordate, long, obtuse, pointed, serrulate. agi strongly marked with three nerves, Drupes oval. A native of Chittagong, where it flowers in the Sook season, | and the fruit, which is about the size of a — in May. 16. Z. incurva. R. 7 Arboreous, Thorns eles one straight and patent, the Ceanothus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA. “615 ‘ed, serrulate; obtusely acuminate. Peduncles sais, few or many-flowered ; flowers semi-digynous, A native of Nepal, from thence introduced by Dr. Buch. anan into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, in 1802, where in ten years they had grown to be slender trees, of about fifteen feet in height, with innumerable well armed branches, and smooth branchlets spreading in every direction, Flowering time the rainy season, CEANOTHUS. Linn. Petals five, vaulted, opposite to the stamens, Berry dry, three-celled, three-seeded. ; 1. 'C. asiatica, Linn. oe Erect, smooth. Leaves ovate, serrulate, glossy, lence at the base; peduncles axillary, ramous, many-flowered, shorter than sa leaves. : _Grossularia spinis vidua, baccis in racemo congestis spa- hee foliis crenatis ovato-acuminatis. Burm. Zeyl. 111. t, 48, _ Rhamnus acuminata, Colebr. Mss. fide ic. pict. in horto bot. Cale. asservata. ~ Thave found this small tree in flower and fruit in October at Singapore. In the Honourable Company’s Botanic gar- ~ den, where it was introduced from the garden at Reduite in the Mauritius in 1813, it blossoms in April and May, and ripens its fruit in June. _ A small branchy tree or large shrub: the largest of those that were reared from the seeds measure at the present time (1823), about sixteen feet in height, with a stem scarcely more than four inches in diameter. Branches long, slender, round, with green bark, slightly flexuose, perfectly smooth ; while young a little pubescent. Leaves deugulatiy aeatesr- ed, ovate, or ovate-lanceolate, tapering into a blunt acumen ; serrulate, serratures small, gibbous, incurved, cuspidate, atid undulate, base rounded or retuse, from two or shee Mm4 616_ PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Scopolia, inches long; perfectly smooth, very glossy and lucid, of a — dark green colour above; pallid and shining underneath, with a whitish slender rib and a few oblique nerves, the lowermost pair of which are opposite; the base rising a little above the rib, in consequence of which the leaf appears triple-nerved ; veins capillary, transversal, reticulate. Pe- tiole slender, a little compressed, channelled, slightly pubes- _ cent, about an inch long, Stipules minute, withering, ad- pressed, Janceolate, with a broad fleshy base and glandular apex. lowers small, yellowish green, fragrant, collected in rounded, axillary, ramous fascicles which are shorter than. the petals. Peduncles pubescent; bractes very small; pe- dicels capillary, two or three times longer than the flower, yellowish. Calyx cup-shaped, with five broad, cuspidate, | somewhat margined, deciduous dacinie, equalling in length the cuneate, fornicate, narrow petals, Vertex of the ovary | covered with a broad rugose yellow disc. Style short, deeply three-lobed, deciduous, Stigmas convex, scabrous, | Capsules round-obovate, about the size of a small gooseber- : Ty, pale-brown, its. vertex retuse, its base supported by the persistent circularly-truncate bottom of the calyx, three- furrowed, three-celled, three-valved. Seeds triangular, with gibbous back, ash-coloured, The rest as in C. circumscissa- (Rhamnus Linn.) Gert. carp, ii. 110. t. 106. r, : ‘ ee SCOPOLIA. Smith. : Calyx Accintinee Corel pee Gusti sebertorj: five-celled; cells two-seeded ; attachment interior, Berry five-celled, with generally one seed in each cell, — 1. S, aculeata, Smith, ic, ined, ii, 34, Willd. sp.ic WIS. Seandent, armed, Leaves ternate ; leaflets crenulate. ae eo esi er te” aes es ee eh ee tee ie ya BE ie ee Scopolia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ~ = ie Chamaelaea trifolia, aculeata, floribus spicatis, iescoae Zeyl. 58, t, 24, Toddalia. Juss, gen, 371; and Lamarck Illustr. ii, 116, 2757, Encycl. Bot. vii. 692. Cranzia. Schreb, gen. N. 362. Telinga, Conda Cashinda. _ Is one of the most common bushes on the coast of Coro- mandel, delights in a rich soil, such as old hedges, under old trees, &e. is in general found in the state of a very ramous bushy shrub, but in less frequented places, where it meets with support and no enemies, it runs over the highest trees, Stem irregular. Bark corky. Branches exceedingly numerous, scandent. Prickles innumerable, scattered over every part of the younger branches, tender shoots, petioles, and nerves of the leaflets, recurved, very acute. Leaves al-— ternate, ternate, armed. Leaflets oblong, or broad-lanceo- late, notched, emargined, smooth; about an inch and a half long, and half or three-fourths broad. Petioles channelled, armed like the branchlets, Racemes axillary, generally compound, length of the leaves, lowers small, white. Calya inferior, small, glandular, five-toothed. Petals five, oblong, spreading. . Filaments five, nearly as long as the petals, spreading. Anthers oblong, incumbent. Germ. ovate, five-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the middle of the axis. Style short, thick. Stigma five-lobed. Berry the size of a small cherry, compressed, five-grooved, orange- coloured, five-celled. Seed one in each cell, Every part of this shrub has a strong pungent taste. — ~The roots when fresh cut smell particularly so. The fresh leaves are eaten raw for pains in the bowels; the ripe berries are fully as pungent as black pepper, and with nearly the same kind of pungency; they are pickled by the natives, and a most excellent one they make, | é The fresh bark of the bootie aikihinistered by the Telinga physicians for the cure of that sort of remittent, commonly 618 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Biittnera, called the hill fever. I conceive every part of this plant to be possessed of strong, stimulating powers, and have no doubt but under proper management it might prove a valu- able medicine where stimulants are required. BUTTNERA. Schreb. gen. N. 366. _ Calyx five-leaved. Corol five-petalled. Nectary stami- ~ niferous, surrounding the five-celled superior germ, Anthers double. Capsules quinquecoccea. Embryo inverse ; Sai perm scanty, 1. B. pilosa, R. Shrubby, twining, hairy, Leaves from three to five, acute~ angled, dentate. Umbels axillary, proliferous. . - A most extensive, twining shrub; a native of Chittagong. The flowering time in the Botanic garden at Calcutta is Sep- tember. The seeds are ripe in renters I have also had — mens from Silhet. » Stem woody, twining, in five years old plants as thick asa_ man’s wrist, and irregularly obtuse-sulcate. Branches nu- merous, twining up and over large trees, to a very great ex- tent; the younger ones very hairy, and irregularly obtuse-’ sulcate, Leaves alternate, petioled, having from three to five acute angles, dentate, posterior lobes large and rounded; about seven-nerved, with a large, long gland on the middle: one near the base, fron four to six inches each way. Peti-' oles round, often. as long as the leaves, hairy. Stipules subu-? late, hairy. Umbels axillary, generally one large, and saper- decompound ; and two or more smaller, all are clothed with: short, harsh pubescence, and are much shorter than the leaves. Bractes subulate. Flowers numerous, small. Calyx of five, spreading, pale-coloured, lanceolate leaflets. Petals fives. the lower third part of their length linear, yellow on the out. aN oth within 5 ‘much’ ineurved so as to forma circular al 7 Y, open at the five sides, and * Celastrus, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 619 in the vertex, the other two-thirds filiform, below slightly in- curved, above recurved; colour a bright orange. Nectary five-cleft, yellowish, divisions fleshy, truncate, shorter than the lower portion of the petals, Filaments short, inserted into the fissures of the nectary, recurvate. .Anthers two-lobed. Germ round, hairy. Sty/e short, five-grooved. Stigma mi- nutely quinquidentate. Capsulesthe size of a filbert, round, armed with long, rigid bristles; texture hard, approaching to that of a nut, five-celled, ten-valved, Seeds solitary, small in proportion to its cell, and attached te its inner angle, ovate- oblong, rather pointed at the apex, and obliquely truncate at the base. IJnteguments three; the exterior and interior membranaceous ; the middle one hard and thick, Perisperm none, or very thin. Embryo inverse, yellow. Cotyledons large, two-lobed ; and rolled spirally up. Plumula two-lob- ed. Radicle cylindric, nearly as long as the seed, superior. +2,.B. herbacea, Roxb. Corom. i. N.29. B. cordata, Willd. spec. i, 1119. Unarmed, herbaceous, erect. Leaves cordate, serrate, dumans Nectary one-leaved, five-toothed. __ An erect herbaceous plant, a native of the tops of the Cir- _ car mountains. | Leaves oliansatt petioled, cordate, serrate, downy, two ; inches and a half Jong, and one and a half broad, Stipules re- flexed, small, acute. Peduncles axillary, one or more, three- flowered, Leaflets of the calyx large, reflexed. Nectary one-leaved, five-toothed ; teeth converging over the pistillum, Filaments five, very sbort, from the fissures of the aida relents santinesiceties pigieyes pak. CELASTRU S. Schreb. gen. N. 372. Calyx five-cleft. Corol five-petalled, Germ three-cell- ed, with two or more ovula in each cell ; attachment inferior. Capsule superior, from one to three-celled, from two to thrge 620 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Celastrus. valved; seeds few covered with a coloured aril. Embryo erect, and furnished with a perisperm. 1. C. emarginata, Willd. sp. i. 1128. Sbhrubby, armed. Leaves obovate, entire, smooth. Flow- ers numerous, axillary, Capsules inflated ; cells twoeeeded, Telinga, Chennee Chintoo, Is one of the most common, rather poor looking shrubs in these parts of India, it grows every where and in —« soil, Flowers during the cold season. ~ Stem nothing deserving the name, but branches innumer- able, bent in every direction, and armed with exceedingly strong, large, straight, very sharp thorns. eaves alternate on the young ‘shoots, ov the old wood or thorns fascicled, very short-petioled, obovate, emarginate, smooth, shining ;— j about an inch long. S¢ipules small, withering. Umbellets very short-peduncled, many-flowered, one or two from the centre of the fascicles of leaves. Pedicels many times long- er than the peduncle, one-flowered. Flowers small, whitish, yellow. Petals twice the length of the calyx. Nectary, a saucer-formed, crenulate body surrounding the base of the germ. Germ conical, three-celled, two ovula in each, attach- ed to the bottom of their cell. Style single, half three-part- ed. Stigmas emarginate, Capsule inflated, turbinate, three- sided, three-celled, valved. Seeds two im each cell, small, shining, red, resting on a white fleshy ceged mane = — ae o-tee ee — -_ 2. C. montana. R. Arboreous, thorny. Leaves obovate, serrulate, ainaciie , Panicles axillary, small, dichotomous, —_ wa sed _ two-seeded, _ Telinga. Pedda-chintoo, = ‘areenelt t tree, a naanviees sonialanaiy Flowering time the % St daeneiea generally e fittle crooked: Brant Celastrus, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, _ 621 humerous, armed with the same large, sharp leaf and flower bearing thorns as in the last, Leaves alternate, short-petiol- ed, obovate, slightly serrate, smooth, shining ; ; about two inches long. Panieles axillary, dichietcenoun, | many-flower- ed. Flowers small, white. Petals many times longer than the calyx, Mectary as in C, emarginatus, Germ round, three-celled ; ced/s with two ovula in each, attached to the * bottom of the cell. Styles three, short, clubbed. Stigmas emarginate, Capsules small, not inflated, in other respects like the last, Seeds one or two in each cell, small, nearly _ round, attached as in the germ. Ari/ white, sebaceous, em- bracing the lower half of the seed. 4ntegument single, po- lishedg brown, Perisperm conform to the seed, dull white, and hard. Embryo nearly as long as the perisperm, erect, Cotyledons roundish. _ Radicle ovate, inferior, tee _ The wood of this tree is hard, and durable, 8. C. paniculata, Willd. sp. i. 1125. Unarmed, shrubby, scandent. Leaves round, oval, ser- rate. Panicle terminal, Stamens inserted into a nectar ial Ting. A large, climbing shrub ; a native of the Circar mountains, Flowering time March and April. é 3 _ Branches twiggy. Bark covered with gray, piles specks. Leaves alternate, petioled, broad-oval, serrate, pret- ty smooth, about two inches long, and one anda half broad. Petioles round, and one-third the length of the leaves, Pa- nicles terminal, erect, thin, oblong. Bractes small, falling. Flowers small, yellow, numerous, Calyx inferior, five- toothed; segments concave, emarginate, Petals five, insert- ed between the nectary and calyx, spreading. Nectary cup- shaped ; border five-toothed. Filaments five, which are a continuation of the teeth of the nectary, rather shorter than the petals. Anthers ovate, Germ round, Style shorter. Stig- mas three. Capsule round, size of a pea, one-celled, three- valved, opening from the apex. Seeds from three to six, - * Re 622 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Celastrus, surrounded with a yellow pulpy nidus, and always separat- ing into three lobes, whatever the number be. 4. C. multiflora. R. Shrubby, scandent, unarmed. Leaves alternate, oblong, acuminate, serrate. Panicles terminal. Stamens alternate, with an equal number of reniform nectarial glands. A native of Nepal, from thence Dr, Buchanan sent the seeds to the Botanic garden at Calcutta, in 1802. In July 1808, the plants therefrom blossomed for the first time and a their sced seven months afterwards, ~ Trunk short, about as thick as a man’s arm. Bark brown, soft and spongy. Branches numerous, spreading much, and having their extremities often twining, but the scandent habit prevails most. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, drooping, ob- long, acuminate, serrate, smooth on both sides; about six inches long, and from two to three broad. Stipules’minute, soon withering and drooping. Panicles terminal, ovate-ob- long, composed, of many, simple, diverging, short, smooth ra- cemes, Flowers numerous, small, pale greenish white, Brac- tes very small, caducous, Calyx obscurely five-toothed. Pe- tals oblong, inserted on the calyx, alternate with the stamens, — soon after expansion recurved, Fi/aments shorter than the petals, alternate, with as many semi-lunar nectarial glands. Germ superior, ovate, three-celled, with two ovula in each, at- tached to the bottom of the cells, Sty/e about as long as the nens. _ Stigma of three emarginate lobes. Coppers ctiandils . somewhat three-lobed, three-cel ed, three-valved, and gene- rally with a single seed in each cell, Seeds obovate, entirely covered by a thin, pulpy, scarlet aril. Snteguments (exclu- sive of the aril), single, tender, white and smooth. Perisperm of a soft cartilaginous texture. Embryo erect. Cotyledons two, round- cordate, and so large as to divide the perisperm. Raidicle bs alld pointing: obliquely to ond Aus-gasat ger Celastrus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 623 5. C. nutans. R. _ Shrubby, scandent, unarmed. Leaves digtentin polskie _ broad-obovate, obtusely serrate, smooth, Panicles racemose, terminal, Seeds invested in a complete aril, A native of Mysore, from thence introduced by Dr. Buch- anan, into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it flowers in April. Seeds ripe in August. Siem short, round, woody, scandent. Bark a little scab- rous, light brown, Branches climbing and twining over the tops of large trees, &e.; young shoots round, drooping, marked with white, rough dots, Leaves alternate, short-pe- tioled, drooping, broad, obovate, cuneate, serrate, smooth on both sides; length from two to three inches, and from one to three broad, Petioles about half an inch long, slightly channelled, Stipules minute, deciduous. Racemes or pa- nicles terminal, drooping, sub-cylindrical, a little downy. Bractes a single, acute, very small, caducous one at the base of each pedicel. Calyx deeply five-parted, divisions roundish, slightly pubescent, several times shorter than the petals, Pe- tals five, alternate with the divisions of the calyx, spread- ing; margins becoming recurved. Nectary a concave, five- sided receptacle, on which the germ rests. Filaments five, very short, inserted on the five angles of the nectary, alter- nate with the petals. .4nthers sub-sagittate. Germ ovate, three-lobed, three-celled, with two ovuda in each, attached to the base of thé axis, Style scarcely any. Stigma three- lobed, lobes spreading, with notched margins, Capsule round, size of a pea, one-celled, three-valved. Seeds from three to six ; three or four is the most common number ; shape conform to. ‘the: number, each invested in a thick, complete, fleshy, orange-coloured aril. Integument single. Perisperm conform to the seed, white and hard. Embryo straight, erect, green. Cotyledons oblong. adicle cylindric infe- rior, with its apex pointing to the umbilicus, ~ Obs, There are five or six large plants of this in the Bota- : 624 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Celastrus. nic garden, of these one only is hermaphrodite and fertile, all _ the rest are male, or male-hermaphrodite, and barren. 6. C. trigyna, R. Unarmed. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, oblong, entire. Flowers on small, axillary, dichotomous, round heads. Nee- tary of five scales, alternate in the stamen. Styles three. A native of the Moluccas, 7. C. verticillaia, R. Arboreous, unarmed. Leaves scattered, broad-lanceolate, waved, entire, smooth. Panicles terminal, umbelliferous. Capsules ove-celled, two-valved, few-seeded. Reared in the Botanic garden at Calcutta from seeds sent from Nepal by Dr. Buchanan in 1802, under the vernacular name Tibiliti, The young trees flowered for the first time, in the rainy season of 1805, when they were from twelve to fifteen feet high. The seeds ripen in January, . Trunk straight ; the branches and branchlets havea strong tendency to be verticillate. Bark of the trunk, and larger branches greenish ash-coloured, dotted with some small, ele- vated, lighter-coloured specks. Leaves numerous, droop- ing, scattered, more crowded towards the ends of the branch- lets, and like them having a tendency to be verticillate, peti- oled, broad-lanceolate, acute, entire ; margins waved, smooth, upper surface polished ; about six inches long, by two broad. Petioles rounded on the under side, flattish above. Stipules none, Panicles terminal, with alternate, spreading, umbel- liferous, simple ramifications. Peduncles and pedicels round, and smooth. Bractes lanceolate. Calyx five-leaved, Leaf- lets ovate-oblong, slightly ciliate. Petals five, alternate with, and three times longer than the leaflets of the calyx, __ linear-oblong, entire, obtuse, at first spreading, afterwards recurved, with the edges revolute. Germ ovate-oblong, 4 little” con prossods, two, rarely three-celled. Style erect, anen i iiower sSuie Beir three-lobed, about even - Celastrus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 625 with the anthers, Capsules roundish, size of a large dry, rugose, one-celled, two-valved, opening round the say Seeds from one to six, or even eight, attached to the centre of a ridge in the bottom of the cell, which crosses the’ open- ing of the valves; their shape varies according to the number of seeds, Integument single, and while fresh more like a thin, smooth, soft, moist, entire, scarlet aril, than a common skin. Perisperm contorm to the seed, cartilaginous. Em- bryo erect, minute, lodged in the base of the perisperm, ra- ther below the umbilicus, Cotyledons two, very small, Ra~ dicle inferior, oval, 8. C. micrantha, R. ‘Scandent, somewhat armed. Leaves unequally pinnate ; leaflets from five to seven, opposite, oblong, entire, smooth, with simple parallel veins, Panicles axillary, filiform, ferru- ginous. Nectary saucer-shaped, bearing the stamina on its margins, style none, A native of the Moluccas, a very doubifal apecies. 9. Cc. obtusifolia, R Arboreous, unarmed. Leaves petioled, lanceolar, bine ly serrulate, very obtuse, hard, smooth, Peduncles fetes many-flowered. : : _A native of the Mauritius. STU. ©. monosperma, R., sGinubby. scandent. Leaves oblong, glossy, serrulate, Pa- nicles thin, linear, axillary and terminal, cn ss leaves. Capsules three-valved, one-seeded. — si Mies 8 _ Tiara the vernacular name in Silhet, age itis aa wild in thin forests, climbing up and over trees, &c. to a great ex- tent. mend time the month of -_ Seeds de Oc. ~ Young. shoots smooth and omit perfectly void of every * kind of pubescence, Leaves alternate, short-petioled, from VOL, 1. Ne 626 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Celastrus. obovate-oblong to lanceolar, glossy on both sides, serrulate, | obtusely pointed, from three to five inches long, and one or two broad, Panicles axillary and terminal, linear, thin of branches, two, three, or even four times longer than the Jeaves, smooth, # lowers numerous, small, pale greenish yellow. Bractes subulate, small, smooth, Calyx five-parted, segments short and rounded. Petals five, sub-orbicular, inserted, al- ternate with the stamens under the margin of the flat repand nectary, which embraces the base of the germ. Filaments five, short, Anthers oval. Germ obovate, oblong, three-cell- ed, with two ovula in each attached to the bottom of the cell. Style short. Stigma trigonal. Capsule the size of a field bean, oblong, smooth, three-valved, but I never found more than one cell. Seed solitary, covered with an orange-colour- ed, pulpy tunic, under it a single, tender integument, of a light brown colour. Perisperm conform to the seed, pure white. Embryo erect, deep green. | Cotyledons peers Ra- dicle oval, inferior. 11. C. robustus. R. Leaves alternate, lanceolar, entire, glossy. Racemes:axil- lary, length of the leaves, Capsule one-celled, two-seeded. Sheelkoil the vernacular name in Silhet, where it is indi- genous and grows to be one of their largest timber trees. It blossoms in August, and the seeds ripen in March, 3 _ Young shoots straight, round,and smooth, Leaves alternate, petioled, lanceolate, entire, acuminate, firm, and even glos- sy ; about six inches long, and one and a half or two broad. Stipules small, caducous, Racemes axillary, single, or pair- ed, simple, cylindric, length of the leaves. Flowers numer- ous, and over every part of the raceme, small, greenish yel- low. Braetes conical, one under each pedicel. Calyx five- parted ; segments oblong. Petals five, oblong, spreading. Vectary, a fleshy, five-lobed ring round the base of the germ. Filame nis five, rather longer than the petals, .4nthers two-. S lobed, Ger “— meeneie liahedowg! inbiaanel? eee Buonymus. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 627 on the apex, two-celled, with two ovala in each attached to the base of the cell, Styles two; slightly united at the base, Yecurved, Stigmas headed. Capsules ovate-oblong, size of a small olive, smooth, brown, one-celled, two-valved. | Seeds generally two ; when so lanceolate, and flat on the inner side, arilled, Integuments smooth, light chesnut-colour, pretty thick and may while recent be divided into two or three la: mina ; aril complete within half a line of the apex, thick and _ soft, colour a lively bright yellow. Perisperm conform to the seed, soft, white. Embryo erect. Cotyledons cordate. Radicle cylindric, as long as the cotyledons, inferior. EVONYMUS. Schreb. gen. N. 373. Corol from four to five-petalled. Germ from two to five- celled ; cells two-seeded ; attachment inferior, Capsule su- perior, three or four-celled, three or four-valyed, Seeds ca- lyptred. E'mbryo erect, and furnished with a perisperm, 1. E. atropurpurea, Willd. spec. i, 1132. Shrubby, erect. Leaves opposite, lanceolar, smooth, ser- rulate, Peduneles few-flowered ; flowers tetrandrous, Found by Dr. Buchanan in Nepal, from whence he sent seed to this garden, where in eight years the plants are four or five feet high, thin of branches; and now beginning to blossom in March. Trunk erect. Bark smooth, and ash-coloured. Branch- lets spreading, round, and smooth. Leaves opposing sate perieints Magecias, mania on eee ane nist ‘tie ely serra Seigler while the dinette i setdior dasa. do bris- tle or two occupy their place, . Peduncles below the leaves, opposite, expanding, diehotomous, each division three-flow- ered, with generally one in the fork, Flowers pedicelled, _ small, greenish white, Calyx four-leaved; leaflets round, concave and smooth. Petals four, cordate, emi i Na. 628 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Euonymus. panding ; margins revolute, white, and smooth, Nectary a deep green, four-lobed, fleshy body surrounding the base of the germ. Filaments four, rather longer than the pistillum, _ inserted on the four lobes of the nectary. Anthers two-lob- ed, dark brown. Germ superior, four-lobed, four-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the middle of the axis. Style four-sided, Stigma obtuse. 2. E. glabra. Re <4 __Arboreous. Leaves opposite, oblong, smooth, with the anterior margin serrate. Peduncles axillary and lateral, two or three times dichotomous, with a single flower in each fork ; flowers pentandrous. A small tree, a native of Chittagong, where it flowers in May. | 3. E. gareinifolia. R. Sub-arboreous. Leaves opposite, lanceolar, entire, smooth. “ Peduncles between the leaves, three-flowered, Capsule two- valved, one-seeded. Ze Mori the vernacular name in Silhet, where it is indige- nous ; growing to the size of a small upright tree; flowersand ripe seed were found on the same trees in the month of Janu- ary 1812, but whether it is in constant flower and fruit the whole year round, I cannot say. _ Branchlets opposite, round, and covered with smooth brown bark. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, lanceolar, en- tire, smooth on both sides; from three to four inches long, by about one broad, Pedunciles between the pairs of leaves, sometimes opposite, sometimes solitary, short, and_ three- flowered. Flowers short-pedicelled, small, pale-yellow. Bractes subulate, caducous, Calyx five-leaved; /eaflets oundish, smooth and imbricated. Petals five, oblong, mar- gins incurved, many times longer than the calyx; down the _ middle on the inside runs an elevated sharp rib. _ Filaments five, shorter "than the ‘germ, sleapase with the patel An- Ventilago. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 629 ihers erect, long-cordate. Germ superior, ovate, two-cell- ed; each cell containing two ovula, attached to the thick- ened middle of the partition, Style none, or very short, Stigma four-toothed, Capsule oblong, size of a small field bean, smooth, one-celled, two-valved, opening from the base. Seeds solitary, at least I have not found more, oval, cover- _ed with a thin, succulent, veined, bright, scarlet aril, Pe- risperm conform to the seed, firm, and tough. Embryo erect. Cotyledons ovate-cordate, Radicle cylindric, inferior, VENTILAGO. Gert. Calyz five-parted. Corol five-petalled. Germ hid in the crenulated flat nectary. Style two-cleft. Samara semi- supera, globose, long-winged, one-seeded, knee erect, _ with perisperm. eV. Madraspotanmi Willd, sp. i. 1106, Gert. carp. i. | 223. t. 49. _Funis yiminalis. Rumph. Aud Vidit; Be how. Ruktupita, | Telinga. Yerra chictali. A very large climbing shrub; a native of forests and ane uncultivated places, amongst the mountains ; flowering dur- ing the cold season. | . Leaves alternate, short-petioled, bifarious, ovate-oblong, seifulate; smooth, except while young, then villous; from three to four inches long. Panicles terminal,: coal of alternate, bifarious, ramous, villous branches. Flowers_ ve- : ry numerous, small, greenish, smelling very strong and offen- _ sive. Calyx, corol, nectary, stamens, and pistillum as in Rhamnus Jujuba, Capsule (Samara) globular, size of a pea, surrounded near the middle with the remaining nectary, terminating in a long, linear, membranaceous wing, one-cell- ot; not open of itself. Seed solitary, round, Nos rue tae 630 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Hovenia. Obs. This plant is generally dioicous. The smell of the — flowers is very offensive, not unlike that of Sterculia fetida, — HOVENTIA. Schreb. gen. N. 375. Calyx five-parted. Corol five-petalled.. Germ superior, three-celled ; ced/s one-seeded; attachment inferior, Style three-cleft. Capsule tricoccous, Embryo erect, with scan- ty perisperm. avs 1. H. dulcis, Thunb. japon. 101. Willd. spec. i. 1141. mre te de Ken et Kenpikonas, Kaempf. amoen. p. 808. t. 809. — A tree, a native of Nepal; from thence introduced by Dr. Buchanan into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where 7 eight years old, it began to blossom in April. Trunk in our young trees straight and high, from ten to twelve feet to the branches ; and twenty mehes in cireumfer- ences, four feet above the earth. Total height about thirty feet. Bark smooth, dark-brown. Branches spreading much, branchlets bifarious, round; young shoots hairy. Leaves alternate, short-petioled, cordate, acutely serrate, acuminate, three-nerved, smooth above, a little hairy underneath ; from four to six inches long, by from two to four broad. Stipules lanceolate, hairy, caducous. Cymes axillary, rarely termi- me: dichotomous, villous; divisions clavate. Flowers nu. merous, small, white. Ca/ya one-leaved, acetabuliform, i in- side hairy. Border five-parted ; divisions ovate, reflexed. Petals five, inserted within the fissures of the calyx, broad spatulate, sides incurved round the filaments, Filaments five, longer than the petals, recurved. Anthers ovate. Germ superior, ovate, three-celled, with one-ovulum in each, attached to the bottom of its cell. Style cylindric, apex hree-clett, | Stigmas simple. Capsules superior, round, size ofa pea, thin, smooth, and brown, three-celled, The ramifi- Lata ee —_ saves the seeds are ripe, much Gouania, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 631 swollen, and. variously bent, as represented by Kaempfer, but the taste is simply astringent. Seed solitary. Integu- ments two ; exterior tough, thick, hard, and highly polished; interior membranaceous, and covered with a brown mealy substance. Perisperm in small quantity, tough, dull, livid- white. Embryo erect, yellowish. Cotyledons Sabbewar: - Radicle oval, inferior. Obs. By Dr. Buchanan, dated Katumanda, 10th and \4th November, 1802. “ Munko-khoshee. A tree originally brought from China or some country subject to it. The fruit is a capsule, containing three seeds, and resting on an enlarged pedunculus, which is soft, and contains a sweet juice, This does net come to maturity till after the capsules are ripe. Part of the seed now sent in this parcel was brought from China, and part has ripened here. There can be no doubt, from the singular nature of the peduncle, that it is an Hove- nia, Thunb. but whether or not his species, I know not. — It has hairy leaves and is reckoned the largest tree in Nepal.” _» PITTOSPORUM. Schreb. gen. N. 379. Calyx five-leaved, deciduous. Petals five ; germ superi- or, three-celled; ced/s many-seeded ; attachment interior. Capsule three-celled, three-valved. Seeds many. Embryo centripetal, and furnished with a perisperm, or. ~1. P. Tobira, R. Leaves sub-verticelled, — ee wales est Eaaag = circular, | - Tobira, Kaempf. amoenit. 796. tab. 797. From China this pretty shrub has been a into the Botanic — at apenscies = GOUANIA. Schreds gen. Ny. 1592. shinee: five-parted. - Corol oa enme Germ three. Nad 632 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ‘Ttea. celled, sunk in the saucer-shaped, five-horned nectary ; cells: one-seeded ; attachment inferior. Capsule inferior, three- celled, with a single seed in each. Embryo erect, and fur- nished with a perisperm, 1. G. tiliefolia. Willd, sp. iv. 1000, Roxb. Corom. 1. AN. 98. wd Shrubby, climbing. Leaves cordate, serrulate, smooth. Racemes terminal, and axillary. Telinga, Penki-tiga. A large, climbing, woody shrub, a native of the Capes mountains, Tendrils simple, small, generally fromthe lower part of the racemes. Leaves alternate, petioled, cordate, slightly serrate, or crenulate, smooth, from two to four inches long. Racemes terminal, and from the exterior axills, long, filiform, #Jowers numerous, small. Bractes minute. Calyx above, five-parted. Corol as in Rhamnus. Nectary the saucer-shaped part is here augmented by five emarginated, spreading horns. Fila- ments inserted in the margin of the nectary, alternate with its horns. Germ below, three-sided, Style three-cleft. Capsule dry, triangular, three-celled, three-valved. Seeds one in each cell, ITEA. Schreb. gen. N. 381. 3 iGslga five-toothed. Petals five, (four of which, with she stamina are inserted on the receptacle.) Capsule pce two-valved, many-seeded, Receptacles lateral. Z = I. umbellata. R. Scarsp tite _ Shrubby. Leaves alternate, petioled, brood Janssasiatte Panicles axillary, and terminal, we of _——- ed, simple umbellets. — set “iden th Malay Islands, =e Dalrymplea. | PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 633 from six to twelve inches long. Petioles from one to two inches long. «Stipules one. Panicles axillary, terminal, and scattered amongst the leaves, composed of long-pedicelled umbellets, which are sometimes proliferous. Flowers numer- ous, pretty large. Bractes minute, villous, Calyx cup-shap- ed, five-toothed. Petals five, lanceolate, obtuse, inserted, with the stamina round the base of the germ. Filaments short- er than the corol, flat, Anthers sagittate. Germ oblong, pe- dicelled, containing many ovula, attached to two opposite, parietal receptacles, Style short and thick. Stigmaslight- ly two-lobed. Capsule oblong, one-celled, two-valved. Seeds several, aflixed to the- two parietal receptacles, DALRYMPLEA. Roxb. Calyx. five-leaved. Petals five, alternate with the stamina. Germ superior, three-celled ; cel/s many-seeded ; attachment of the ovula inferior. Berry three-celled. Seeds few, nuci- form, Lmbryo sub-inferior, and furnished witha perisperm. In memory of the late Alexander Dalrymple, Esq. author of the Oriental Repertory, &c. 3 D. pomifera, R, , Junki jam the vernacular name in Silhet where it is a na- tive, and grows to be a large tree. Flowering in March, and the seed ripening in September and October. * Young shoots rather .succulent, round, and perfectly smooth, Leaves opposite, unequally pinnate, some of them ternate; from ten to twenty inches long. Leaflets three or four pair, and a terminal one, the pairs opposite, all more or less petiolate, oblong, obtusely serrate, acuminate, smooth, from five to six Gra long, by two or three broad, Peti- oles and petiolets round and smooth, Panicles terminal, spreading much, more broad than long, primary branches de- cussate ; partial ones alternate with the small yellowish white flowers, which are crowded round their extremities; every 634 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cedrela. part smooth. Bractes to the primary branches of the panicle opposite, as in the Rubiacee ; the rest solitary.under each di- vision and sub-division. Calyx inferior, five-leaved; leaflets rather unequal and oval. Petals five, oblong, obtuse, spread- ing. Nectary acetabuliform. Filaments five, alternate with the petals, and shorter than they, inserted under the nectary. Anthers ovate. Germ superior, three-lobed, indeed almost separable, three-celled ; ovuda about eight in each cell, widely attached to the axis. Style length of the germ, three-groov- ed, Stigma three-lobed. Berry drupaceous, having the ap- pearance of a pome, of a roundish, three-lobed form, very fleshy, when ripe yellow, and almost smooth, size of a large medlar, three-celled. Seeds several in each cell, shape vari- ous, the most common roundish, reniform and considerably compressed, attached to the partition, Integument single, thick and of great hardness, in fact a perfect nut, exterior sur- face brown and highly polished. Perisperm conform to the ‘seed, Embryo obliquely inferior. Cotyledons cordate, three- nerved, Radicle oval, obliquely centrifugal. CEDRELA. Schreb. gen. N. 383. Calyx five-toothed. Corol five-petalled. Capsules five- celled, five-valved, Seeds several in each cell, winged and imbricated on a pentagonal mecgyeetlas Embryo inverse, pe- apes scanty. | | This genus is very nearly related to Swietenia, the slsieh moths of distinction appear to. me to be the number of sta- mina, viz. in Cedrela five, inserted on five nectarial glands which embrace the base of the germ ; in Swietenia ten, insert- ed into the mouth of a sub-cylindrical nectarium, which em- braces the whole of the pistillum. In both, the seed vessel aptoned> are very ae te alike, Be Cedrela, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 635 - 1. C. Toona. R. tg Panicles pendulous. Leaflets from six to twelve pairs, lanceolate, entire, acute. ide, "4 ¥ Surenus. Rumph, Amb, iii. 66, t. 39. Beng. Toon, Lood, iS _ This most elegant, large timber tree is now found common in Bengal, probably brought thither originally from the mountainous parts of the northern, and north-east frontier. Leaves deciduous during the cold season, appearing again with the flowers in February. Seed ripe in May and June. Trunk erect, growing to a great size and height, though I have only seen small trees about Calcutta. Bark smooth, gray. Branches numerous, forming a large, beautiful, sha- dy head. Leaves alternate, abruptly pinnate, drooping, from twelve to eighteen inches long. Leaflets from six to twelve pairs, opposite or nearly so, short-petiolated, oblique- ly lanceolate, the upper half broadest, and extending further down the petiolet than the lower; margins waved, smooth on both sides, tapering to a long acute point; from two to six inches long, Petioles and petiolets round and smooth, Stipules none. Panicles terminal, nearly as long as the leaves, pendulous, composed of numerous, diverging, com- pound ramifications, smooth in évery part. Bractes minute, deciduous, Flowers very numerous, small, white, and pos- sessing a fragrance like that of fresh honey. Calyx five- parted, Petals five, oblong, with the margins ciliate, the apices incurved over the stamens, and keeled on the inside near the base. Nectary consisting of five, large, hairy, orange-coloured glands, sitting round the lower half of the germ, Filaments erect, inserted into the centre of the five nectarial glands, rather shorter than the petals. Anthers bent in towards the stigma. Germ superior, oblong, internal structure and contents as in the capsule. Style length of the corol, Stigma large, flat, composed of five lobes. Cap- sules oblong, rather larger than a field bean, smooth, five- celled, five-valved; valvelets opening from the apex and 636 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Camunium, fallmg off with the seeds. Seeds numerous, imbricated, both the ends and the exterior side membrane-winged; affixed to the upper end of the sharp ridges of the receptacle, &e. ex- actly as in Swietenia febrifuga, and Mahogani. See Gert. carp, ii. 86. Perisperm in very small quantity, and more like a fleshy interior integument, Embryo inverse. Cotyle- dons oval, three-nerved, Radicle obliquely superior. The wood of this tree issmuch like mahogany, but lighter, consequently not so close in the grain, It is much used for furniture and various other purposes. The bark is a power- ful astringent, and though not bitter is a tolerably good substitute for Peruvian Bark in the cure of remitting and intermitting fevers ; particularly when joined with a small portion of the powdered seed of Cesalpinia bonduecella, (Kutkuleget of the ——— which is a most — bitter. | CAMUNIUM. Rumph. Calyx five-toothed. Petals five. Nectary globular, apex perforated, inside staminiferous. Germ superior, one-cell- ed, from one to two-seeded ; attachment of the ovula superior. 1. C. chinense, Rumph. Amb. v. 28. t. 18.,f. 1. An elegant shrub, most probably a native of China, at least it has been brought to the Botanic garden at Calcutta from Canton, under the name Sam-yeip-lan, where it blos- soms ‘during the hot season, and the early part of the rains — in June and July, but has not yet shown any tendency to ee duce fruit. | 3 Stem in our young, small plant trifling, but many sree : and branchlets rising and spreading in every direction. Bark of the old ligneous paris olive gray; of the young” shoots green, with their very tender apices clothed with stel- late” ferruginous scales, Leaves alternate, petioled, ternate and | “wnequally pinnate. Leaflets rarely more than five,the Opposite, Ain Sach dominates the terminal one, all Milnea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, ~ 637 oblong, but tapering most toward the base, smooth, deep green, entire, obtuse ; from an inch and a half to four inches long, and from half an inch to two inches broad. _Petioles somewhat winged, and channelled. Panicles, sometimes only racemes, axillary, solitary, shorter than the leaves, Flowers minute, yellow, faintly fragrant. Bracies ovate, one embrac- ing the insertion of each pedicel. Calyz flat, five-toothed ; teeth semi-lunar. Petals five, oval, concave, at all times pressing on the nectary, smooth, much longer than the calyx. Nectary sub-globular, mouth contracted, and slightly five- toothed... Filamenis scarcely any. Anthers five, cordate, attached to the nectary near its base on the inside. Germ superior, oblong, hairy, one-celled, with one or two seeds, which are attached to the top of the cell. Style none, Stig- ma large, conical, sient MILNEA. Roxb. Calyx five-parted. Petals five. Nectary urceolate, with the five anthers round its inside. Germ three-celled ; cells from one to two-seeded ; attachment centripetal, no peris- perm, : In honour of Colin Milne, LL. D. author of a Botanical Dictionary, Institutes of Botany, and other works, 1, M. adil, R. A tree of middling size, a native of the “ ow hills and of the Silhet district, where it is called Gumi by the natiyes, who eat the large succulent aril which surrounds theseed un- der the cortex of the berry. Flowering time June and July. ~The fruit: ‘ripens two or three months afterwards, Young shoots densely clothed with dark brown eat when more advanced smooth. Leaves alternate, unequally pinnate, from six to twelve inches long. Leaflets from three to six pair, sub-opposite, petiolate, lanceolate, entire, smooth but not lucid, apt: acuminate, from. three to six inches 638 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Eleodendrum. Jong, by one or two broad. Stipules none. Petioles cylin- driec, somewhat villous, Panic/es one from each of the lower axills, nearly as long as the leaves, very ramous and spread- ing ; like the young shoots very downy. Flowers numerous, minute, caducous. Bractes very minute, caducous, Calyx five-parted, small, downy on the outside ; segments rounded. Petals tive, oyal, concave. Nectary urceolate, rather shorter than the petals, mouth five-toothed. Filaments five, very short, inserted on the inside of the bottom of the belly of the nectary. Anthers sagittate, and completely hid m the nectary. Germ semi-superior, three-celled; ced/s with one or two ovula attached to the axis, Style short and thick. Stigma turbinate, truncate, six-grooved. Berry round-oval, rather more than an inch in diameter, three-celled, contain- ing seldom more than one fertile seed, most of the ovula be- ing in gencral abortive. Cortex firm, rather dry, covered with a rough, brownish gray mealiness, Seed solitary, oval, inserted in a complete thick, fleshy, lucid, edible aril, like that of the Lichee of China. Integument sirigle, brown, ad- hering more firmly to the aril than the seed. Perisperm none. Embryo transverse. Cotyledons conform to the seed, equal with the surface, furrowed. Corculum transverse, hairy. Radicle short, pointing to the umbilicus, ’ _.. ELHODENDRUM. Schreb. gen. N. 385. _ Corol five-petalled. Germ two-celled, two-seeded ; attach- ment inferior. Drupe superior, oval. Nut two-celled. me bryo erect, without perisperm, | Hs 1. E. glaucum. Persoon. Synops, ii. 241. — Corom. 3 ii, 2. eo ~ Leaves opposite, ‘dinide serrate, | Panicle slay, Sehreb: na albens: Wiutd. — 1092. Eleodendrum. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 639 Mangifera glauca, Rotib. in. Nov. Act, Hawn. ii. 534, to. fo 1. A middle-sized, or rather soph tree, native of various parts of India, From Ceylon it was received into the Botanic gar- den at Calcutta, under the name Ceylon tea; its leaves are like those of that plant but much longer ; their taste slightly bitter and astringent. It flowers in May ; the seeds ripen in September and October. Trunk straight. Bark in young trees, smooth, and olive- coloured. Branches numerous, spreading in every direction, and forming a very dense, oval head ; young shoots round, and smooth. Leaves opposite, Saticcéoled, oblong, and cuneate-oblong, sometimes very acutely, and sometimes ob- tusely serrate; texture hard, with both surfaces polished, the upper dein ; apex’ rather obtuse, and always bent down, from thrid to four inches long, and about two broad, Stipules a minute scale on each side of the inside of the base of each short, polished petiole. Panicles axillary, shorter than the leaves; all its divisions dichotomous and divaricate, Flowers pedicelled, small, greenish yellow. Bractes small, oblong, from one to three, at the base of each pedicel, and at the divisions of the panicle. Calyx of five, somewhat une- qual, round, concave, caducous leaflets, Peta/ls five, ex pand- ing, linear-oblong, sessile. Neetary a green, pentagonal, fleshy, scolloped gland, in which a great part of the germ is immersed. Filaments five, inserted on the nectary, scarcely half the length of the petals ; at first nearly erect, but by age becoming so much revolute as to bring the roundish, two- lobed anthers under the calyx. Germ superior, immersed in the very large, green, fleshy nectary, two-celled, with two “ ovula in each, attached to the bottom of their cells. Style short, conic. Stigma simple, obtuse. Drupe nearly round, size of a large cherry, smooth, pulpy, when ripe olive-colour- ed, one-celled. Nut oval, rather more aeute at the apex than at the base, a little rugose, with two grooves on the opposite _ sides; uncommonly ne hard ; two-eelled, though one 640 . PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, Mangifera. is often abortive, Seed solitary, very rarely two, oblong, more convex on the inside. Integument ; there seem two, ra- ther spongy. Perisperm none. Embryo erect. Cotyledons. conform to the seed, amygdaline. Plumula minute, two-lob- ed. Radicle oval, inferior, and lodged close to the umbi- licus, 2. E. indicum, Gert. carp. i, 274.4. 57. Arboreous. Leaves opposite, obovate-oblong, obtuse, re- motely serrulate. Panicles axillary, small, dichotomous. Drupe and nut oblong. Rubentia. Jussieu. Genera. plant. 416. A middling-sized tree, a native of the Mauritius, where it is called Bois d’ Olive. Flowers in May and June, and - seeds ripen in October. MANGIFERA. Schreb. gen: N. 387. - Calyx five-leaved, or five-parted. Corol from four to five- petalled. Germ one-celled, ovulum single; attachment la- teral. Drupe superior, reniform, Embryo sub-erect, with- out perisperm. 1. M. oppositifolia. R. , Leaves opposite, lanceolar, acuminate, Panicles deans _ mal, Stamina from four to five, all fertile. eee /Meriam, the vernacular name at Rangoon in Surnngaden the tree is indigenous, and grows to the general size of a small apple tree in England, The wood is somewhat red, — hard, close-grained, and said to be very durable, Flower- ing time the month of March, fruit ripe in Jane and July. Branches and branchlets smooth and green, Leaves op- _ posite, short-petioled, lanceolar, polished, obtusely. —— _ hate; from four to six inches long, and from one to two ‘Stipules none, but the scales of. the bud» rernain for some — a base of. ~ oy seine Panicles generally Mangifera, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, 64) terminal, shorter than the leaves, oblong, rather dense; ra- mifications opposite, smooth in every part. Bractes ovate, acute, caducous, Flowers numerous, minute, pale-yellow, Calyx from four to five-parted, segments rounded. Petals four or five, oblong, a keel down the middle on the inside. Filaments four or hive, short, alternate with the petals, An- thers ovate with an obtuse point. Germ obliquely ovate, one-celled, and containing one ovulum attached to the side of the cell, under the perforation of the stigma. : Style scarcely any, Stigma of three, very unequal lobes, one of which is much more elevated and much larger; between it and the lower and smaller lobes the channel may be traced. Drupe sub-ovate, a little compressed, smooth, pale-yellow, the size of a small pullet’s egg, one-celled, like the man- go the pulp is yellow, and universally eaten in Burma. Wut oblong, &c. in every respect like that of the common man- go, but much smaller, thin, and of a soft texture, easily cut, fibrous on the outside, smooth on the inside, chesnut-colour- ed, one-celled, evalvular. Seed solitary, conform to the nut. Integument, no other than the nut could be observed. Pe- risperm none. Embryo erect. Cotyledons conform to the seed, oblong, fleshy. Plumula pointed, curved up, two-lob- ed, Radicle inferior, conic, transverse. 2. M. indica. Willd. spec. i. 1150, Vahl. en. pl. i. 7. Co- rom, pl. Leaves lanceolate. Panicles terminal. Flowers with one fertile stamen. Mao, du. Mau, vel. Mangas. Rheed. Mal. iy. 1, t. 1. 2. _ Manga domestica, Rumph, Amb. i, 93.1.25. 00 | Beng. Aw. English, Mango. Telinga. Mamadi-chitoo. Tam, Mangas marum., Of this tree, though one of the most common ib Tidia, J VOL. 1. = 642 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Mangifera. * have not yet met with any description which deserves the: hame, ‘ It is universally cultivated all over India, and all the warmer parts of Asia. Is generally raised from seed, though sometimes by layers, or grafting by approach, which are the only methods of certainly continuing a good sort, probably of improving them. The stones must be sown soon after they are taken from the fruit, otherwise they do not vege- tate, but there is no depending on the quality of the fruit so raised, The seed of a very superior sort will produce fruit _ of a bad kind ; and vice versa, hence such an infinite variety. Colonel Kyd in Bengal, and Dr. Anderson at Madras, have lately begun to graft by approach ; which will no doubt be a means of improving this excellent fruit, Flowering time Ja- nuary, February, and March; the fruit is ripe im May, June, and July. The ‘tree grows to be of a very great size, with an crock trunk, covered with dark-coloured, scabrous, cracked bark ; (large old trees of from ten to fifteen feet in circumference are meant.*) Branches very numerous, the lower ones spreading horizontally to a great extent, the upper ones gradually as- cending till they become nearly erect in the centre. Leaves alternate, petioled, about the extremities of the young shoots, approximated, reclined, lanceolar, entire, often a little waved at the margins, firm, smooth, shining; generally from six to twelve inches long, and from two to three broad. Petioles round, ‘smooth, from one to two inches long, thickish at the base, Stipules none. Panicles terminal, large, erect, or as- cending, rigid, a little downy, often tinged with red. Pedi- cels shart, thick, rigid. Bractes oval, concave,a little downy. Flowers small, yellow, with some stripes of red near the base of the petals, many perfect male flowers are often found mix-— ed with the hermaphrodite ones throughout the panicle, ee es ~~ A grove a of that ping. it bolero feo and 8 met — sight’ * “ Mangifera, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 643 * Calyz five-leaved ; ; leaflets oblong, concave. Petals five, lan- ceolate, epremtings: twice the length of the calyx. Mectary five, large, yellow, fleshy bodies surrounding the base of the germ, forming as it were an excavated, five-lobed receptacle for it to sit in, each of the lobes as large as the germ itself. Filament single, subulate, ascending, half the length of the petals, inserted between the lower lobe of the nectary and the germ. Anther oval, purple. Besides these there are general- ly two, three, four, or more, very minute, sterile filament like ‘bodies, issuing from the apices of the lobes of the nectary. Germ obliquely oval, one-celled, and containing asingle vvu- lum, attached to the side of the cell, opposite to the fertile stamen, and under the style. Style from the side of the germ, length of the stamen, subulate, declining, so as to bring the - stigma which is small, and incurved nearly to touch the an- ther. Drupe oblong, or kidney- -formed, also a little compress- ed like a kidney, fleshy, smooth, when ripe yellow, size va- rious, but in general about as large as a goose-egg, Nut con- form to the drupe, but more compressed, woody, one-celled, two-valved, covered on the outside with many fibrous ram ments, particularly on the worst sorts. s It is by no means necessary for me to mention thatthe ‘pe. fruit of this tree, (when of a good sort,) is universally eaten, and esteemed the best fruit in India. Jellies, preserves, tarts, pickles, &e. are made of them before ripe. “The kernels are large, and seem to contain much nourish-. ment, however they are made no use of, exeept during times of scarcity and famine ; they are then boiled in the, soon of = and used as an article of diet, 3 ~ The wood is of a dull gray colour, porous, yet pes Aue rable if kept dry, but soon decays if exposed to wet. In very large old trees it acquires a light chocolate colour towards the centre of the trunk, and larger branches, This is hard, closer grained, and much more derable. | From wounds made in ‘the bark, there issues a soft, red- dish, brown gum resin, which age hares, and renders ex- Ge2: * ; 644 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. = -Mangifera, ceedingly like bdellium, Laid on the point of a knife and held in the flame of a candle, it readily melts, catches flame, and burns with a cracking noise; emitting a smell exceeding= ly like that of Cashew nuts when roasting. Jt softens in the mouth, and adheres to the teeth. Its taste is slightly bitter with some degree of pungency. It dissolves almost entirely in spirits, and in a great measure in water ; both solutions are milky with a small tinge of brown, 3. M. sylvatica, R. Leaves alternate, lanceolar, glossy, Panicles terminal. Flowers monandrous. Drupe obliquely conic, with the point- ed apex turned one side. -Lukshmee am, the vernacular name in Silhet ; on the moun- tains adjoining to that district it grows to be a tall tree of great size. Flowering time October ; the fruit ripens in Fe- bruary and March, and is eaten by the natives, though by no . means so palatable as even a bad domestic mango, they alse dry them and keep them for medicinal purposes. Leaves as in the common cultivated sorts, alternate, peti- oled, lanceolar, entire and smooth; from six to eight inches long, by one and a half or two broad, Panicles terminal, much larger than in the domestic sorts, and with the numerous ra~ mifications more erect and slender, Flowers very numerous, small, white, with a faint shade of pink ; they are more com- pletely monandrous than any of the cultivated sorts. Calyx five-leaved, many times shorter than the corols, Petals five, linear, spreading, and finally becoming somewhat twisted and revolute. MNectary a short, solid, turbinate, slightly groov- __ ed, villous receptacle for the germ to rest on. In the domestic sorts it is composed of five distinct glands, which embrace the base of the germ. Filament single, inserted into the pot of the nectary, incurved, length of the pistillum, Anther oval. ? Germ elevated on the RE nectary or receptacle, “unequally oval, smooth, one-celled ; ovulum single, attached at side ‘of the. eal} from whence the style rises, and_-most Harpuilia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, 645 remote from the stamina, Style subulate, length of the fila- ment, incurved, after fecundation recurved. Stigma simple, acute, Drupe ovate, obliquely acuminate, smooth, when ripe yellow, like thecommon mango and nearly as large, one> _ celled. Nut oblong, less fibrous than in the common sorts, aud also less firm, with an even surface. Seeds solitary, con- form to the nut. Integument single. Perisperm none, Em- bryo between erect and transverse. Cotyledons equal, con- form to the seed, Radicle lodged between the cotyledons on _ one side of their base, pointing out, and rather upward. HARPULLIA. R. Calyx five-leaved, Corol five-petalled, alternate with the stamina. Germ two-celled; cells one-seeded; atiach- ment of the ovula sub-superior, Capsules two-celled, Seed solitary, arilled. &mbryo with incumbent cotyledons, and lateral radicle without a perisperm. five 12 Sapaaasktos R, Harpulli the vernacular name at Chittagong. A small tree ; a native of the hilly parts near ———— it flowers in April; and the fruit ripens in July. ‘3 _ Trunk straight. Branches tew, and tending to be erect also; bark ash-coloured ; young shoots smooth, Leaves al- ternate, abruptly pinnate, from twelve to eighteen inches long. Leaflets from four to six pair, short-petiolate, from al- ternate to opposite, from ovate below to lanceolar above ; all are entire, and smooth on both sides ; apex considerably point-. ed; from three to six inches long, by one or two broad, Pe- tioles round and smooth, Panicles axillary, solitary, erect, thin of branches, and shorter than the leaves, Flowers small, pale yellow, Bractes subulate.. Calyx inferior, five-leaved, permanent; leaflets oval. Petals five, lanceolate, obtuse, spreading, becoming recurved. Filaments five, alternate with the petals, and much shorter, Anthers oblong, Germ O03 646 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Neerija. ovate, hairy, somewhat two-lobed, two-celled, with one pen- dulous ovulum in each attached to the upper end of the par- tition. Style short. Stigma two-lobed ; lobes reflex, adnate. Capsules pendulous, orbicular,two-lobed, considerably com- pressed, villous, two-celled, two-valved, opening all round. Partition opposed to the valves, The whole very exactly resembling the capsule of Geloneum cupanioides. Gert. carp. ii. 271. t. 139. Seed solitary, semi-oval ; the inner side being straight, the exterior rounded, arilled. Integument single, rather thin, smooth, chesnut colour. Avi/ deep orange, covering the whole seed from the base except the apex. Pe- risperm none. Embryo green. Cotyledons two, conform to. the seed, incumbent, their line of separation being nearly through the middle of the seed, which makes them equal. Radicle on the exterior or convex side of the seed, apex ra- ther acate, and turned up into a small hollow in the upper-_ most cotyledons, so that it points to the apex of the seedy After it has Jengthened alittle by the progress of vegeta- tion, the two-lobed plumula is very conspicuous, NEERIJA. R. Calyx five-leaved. Coro! five-petalled. Style simple. Berry superior, one or two-seeded,. : LN. dichotoma. R. sie (ams - Telinga, Neerija. - ees > ane A middle-sized tree, a ative of ane anciasision of Coro mandel, Flowers about the beginning of the hot season. — Trunk erect. Bark rust-coloured, scabrous.. Tieesdacias numerous, spreading in every direction. Branchlets oppo- site, round and smooth, — Leaves opposite and alternate, pe- tiolate, oval and oblong, serrato-crenate, smooth ; about four as: and two broad; texture hard... Petioles round, e-quarters of an inch long. Panicles axillary, globu-- , throug] ut ‘ichotomous, with the divisions stand- Vareca, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 647 ing at right angels, Peduncles three times the length of the petioles, round, smooth. #/owers small, yellow, not very numerous, Calyz five-leaved; Jeaflets orbicular, unequal, caducous, Petals five, oblong, spreading. Nectary alarge, fleshy, pentagonal ring surrounding the base of the germ, into its angles the filaments are inserted. Filaments five, shorter than the petals, spreading. Anthers two-lobed. Germ superior, conical. Style shorter than the stamens, thick. Stigma simple. Berry obiong, succulent, red, smooth, one-celled. «Seeds one, or two. Is nearly allied to Eleodendrum glaucum in habit, but in that the drupe with a single, very thick, hard nut will alone be sufticient to distinguish them. } . The fresh bark ef the root, rubbed with plain water, is by the natives applied externally to remove almost every sort of swelling. It is a very sirong astringent, pata scarcely aay other sensible quality, _ VARECA. Geert. Calyx five-leaved, or five-parted. Corol five-petalled. Germ superior, one-celled; ovula numerous, their attach- ment parietal. Berry one-celled, Seeds a few, inserted on the three parietal receptacles, AE LO AO PLING 1. V. moluccana, R. _ Leaves alternate, lanceolar. Peduncles axillary, many-~ flowered. Filaments free. A small tree, from fifteen to twenty feet in height, a native of the Molucca islands, and from thence introduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, in 1798, where it blossoms in Oc- tober and November, and again in March, April, and May; but has not yet, though now fourteen years in Bengal, pro- duced even well 0 ii fruit, so that the genus is still doubt- * falktvice ess Trunk erect. eictiins numerous, between erect and pa Oo4 648 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Vareca, tent. Bark of the old parts smooth, and ash-coloured ; of the young shoots with a little, short, ferruginous pubescence, Leaves alternate, about the end of the branchlet, short-peti- oled, lanceolar, entire, waved, acute, smooth, and glossy, above; from four to twelve inches long, and from one to four broad. Stipules none. Peduneles axillary, solitary, about an inch long, many-flowered, villous. lowers middle- sized, white, inodorous, pedicelled. Bractes small, cadu-. cous.. Calyx one-leaved, five-toothed, villous, caducous, Petals five, linear-oblong, recurved, many times longer than the calyx. Filaments five, inserted on the receptacle, short- er than the germ, and pressing uponit, Anthers sagittate. Germ superior, oblong, torulose, villous, one-celled, with _ many ovula, attached to two or three parietal receptacles. Style short. Stigma pretty large, two or three-lobed. 2. V. lanceolata, R. . nae ist Leaves alternate, lanceolar. Flowers in axillary fascicles; An erect, shrubby plant, a native of Pulo Pinang. Leaves alternate, bifarious, short-petioled, lanceolate; veins numerous, simple and parallel ; smooth on both sides. Stipules within the leaves, lanceolate, chaffy. Flowers small, numerous, collected onshort-peduncled, axillary, compound: corymbs, pale yellow. Calyx five-leaved ; /eaflets oval, con- cave, permanent, Petals five, lanceolate, ecniing g, perma-— nent, Filaments five, shorter than the petals, incurved, unit- ed at the base into a ring round the lower half of the germ. Anthers arrow-shaped, erect. Germ superior, ovate, hairy. Sty/e longer than the stamens, hairy. Stigma simple. Cap- sules three-lobed, leathery, one-celled, evalvular, Seeds se- veral, affixed to three, vertical, parietal receptacles, on the in- _ side of the middle of the lobes of the capsules, Boopgttt BY, deri R, : a bb; Leaves broad tanceoar, erenate, Flowers ile = rt a. Se inseash (ag Cae or pees ~ Viola, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 649 A small ase; received into this garden from Generel Martin at Lucknow, Blossoms in October. Stem short and slender; bark smooth, ash-coloured, Branches bifarious, slender, all spreading nearly horizontal- ly. Leaves alternate, bifarious, sessile, cuneate-lanceolar, crenate, smooth on both sides; in the axill of each vein on the under side is a-remarkable hollow gland. Stipules ensiform. Flowers axillary, crowded, sessile, small, white. Calyx of five, unequal, imbricate, woolly, margined leaflets. Petals five, lanceolate, confined at the base, by the rigid leaflets of the perianth, into a bell shape ; above they are revolute and smooth on both sides. Filaments five, long, and slender, pro- jecting considerably beyond the mouth of the bell-shaped _ part of the corol, at the base each side is enlarged with one or more adjoimed hornlets which are bearded at the base, Germ superior, ovate, somewhat three-sided, Style as long as the stamens, villous; stigma simple. In the germ are the rudi- ments of two, three, or four seeds. VIOLA. Schreb. gen. N. 1364. Calyx five-leaved, Corol five-petalled, irregular, calea- rate. Anthers united. Capsules superior, three-valved, one- celled. Seeds many, parietal. Embryo furnished with a pe- riapenn 3 3 radicle centrifugal. L v. bufraitcosen Willd. spec, i, 1171. Perennial, diffuse. Leaves alternate, sub-sessile, lanceolate. Stipules subulate. Peduneles axillary, with two bractessiear the middle, Corel resupine. Capsulesround. = = _A native of the sandy lands about Madras. In the Bota- nic.garden at Calcutta it continues in flower and seed most part of the year. Stem scarcely any, but many diffusd! perennial, round, smooth branches, often extending to a foot in length, Leaves alternate, sub-sessile, vere: slightly serrate, pretty 650 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, : Viola, smooth, about an inch long, and a quarter of an inch broad. - Stipules small, subulate. Peduncles axillary, solitary, one- flowered ; shorter than the leaves, jointed above the middle, where there are two small bractes, one on each side. Calyx five-leaved. Leaflets nearly equal, lanceolate, acute. Petals five, rosy, the two upper ones smallest, linear-oblong, and pointed ; the two lateral ones sub-ovate, with long, taper, re- curved apices; the lower one (here the corol is resupinate,) much larger than the others, broad-cordate, supported on a claw as long as the superior petals, which is protruded be- hind, between the two lower leaflets of the calyx, into a gib- bous nectary, Filaments; the two lower ones have eacha — _ ciliate hornlet projecting back. nthers with brown, ovate, scariose apices, Capsules nearly round, size of a pea, one- celled, three-valved. Seeds several in each cell, attached to a ridge which runs along the inside of each valve, obovate. Integument single, thin, striated. Perisperm conform to the seed, white. Embryo three-fourths the length of the peris- perm, greenish, Cotyledons oval. Radicle sub-cylindric, pointing to the umbilicus, at the small end of the seed, 2. V. enneasperma. Willd. spec. i. 1171. Perennial, rather diffuse. Leaves lanceolate. Corol with little or no horn behind. = pO - Nelam. parenda. Rheed. Mal. 9, t, 60. rather a bad figure. 3. V. primulifolia, Willd. spec. i. 1162. sg Annual, stemless. Leaves from triangular to faneolile cordate, serrate, decurrent. Flowers resupinate ; in that ae sition the lower petal is broader, and emarginate. é Native of the interior parts of Bengal ; in the Botanic gar- den at Calcutta it blossoms and _ its seed more or _— i Saag a | : ; t . Impatiens, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 651 rate lobes, and apex rounded, in luxuriant plants the scapes are many-flowered. Flowers as and very general- ly without a corol. Received from the Mauritius into the Botanic garden in Bengal, where it is in constant flower and seed the whole - year. IMPATIENS. Schreb. gen. N. 1365. Calyx two-leaved, Corol five-petalled, irregular. Nec- tary cucullate. Anthers united.._Germ five-celled ; cells many-seeded ; attachment central. Capsu/es superior, five- celled, five-valved. Seed numerous, Embryo naked, with - centripetal radicle, : 1. I. Balsamina. Willd, spec. i, AN75.. Leaves lanceolate, serrate. Peduncles one-flowered. Ne ec- tary shorter than the flower, Tilo-Onapa. Rheed, Jal. ix. 101. t. 52. Beng. Doopati. Hind. Gool-mendee. oS a tripetala. R. . Leaves alternate, opposite and tern, eval leone ser- rate. Peduneles from one to many-flowered. | Corol three- _Petalled; horn of the ample nectary hooked. _ Anative of the mountains near Silhet, where it flowers and Tipens its seed more or less the whole year round, Rheede’s Tilo-Onapu is, 1 think, more like ‘this than. it.is to 1. Bal- samina, though quoted for that species; and I can scarcely conceive this to be that plant in its original wild state. Root annual, fibrous. Stem erect, swelled at the leaves, scarcely pubescent in any respect. Branches opposite, se- veral pairs, and generally below the middle of the plant; whole height from one to two feet, Leaves on the stem op- * posite, and tern ; on the branches often alternate, long-peti- oe | PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, Impatiens, oled, broad-lanceolar, serrate, a little hairy, particularly the serratures ; about three inches long, by ene broad. Flow- ers axillary, from one to many, in the latter case their long pedicels are inserted on a very short, common pedunele, Perianth of two, small, bracte-like leaflets. Corol three- petalled ; the upper one forming a roof over the interior part of the whole flower; Jateral pairs composed of two, large, roundish lobes each ; the lower lobes thereof forming the lip. Nectary large, with a hooked or incurved slender horn from its obtuse end. Stamina, &c. as in the genus. : It has a pretty appearance when in full blossom, the flow- ers being numerous, large, and of a lively red colour, with the nectary deeply tinged yellow. 3. I. natans. Willd. spec. i. 1175. Leaves linear-lanceolate, serrate. Peduncles three-flower- ed. Berries five-seeded. aia ak Telinga, Neer-Ganaroo, i, e. water Oleander, : This is a large annual species ; a native of ponds, ditches, &e. of sweet water. It flowers during the rainy and cold seasons, ees _ Stem piped, all the parts that grow in, or float on the water, bending in various directions, and being often some yards in length; the part above the water is erect, branchy and from one to two fect high. The former part is jointed, with roots from the joints, and the pipe interrupted there; the erect part five-sided, smooth, coloured, as thick as the fore- _ finger ; pipe interrupted at the leaves, as in the floating parts. Leaves sessile, scattered, lanceolate, serrate, smooth; from four to five inches long, and less than one broad ; there is @ gland on each side of the base instead of stipules. —Pedun- eles axillary, solitary, generally three-cleft, three-flowered. Braetes (Involucres) oblong, Flowers large, very beauti-~ px peek with red, white, and. yellow. Penoarpe : Leea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, : 653 size of a cherry, Seeds five, hard, nut-like, obliquely. ob- long, la pped over at both ends, | When in flower, this is one of our most elegant water plants, . LEEA. Schreb. gen. N. 1432. Calys five-toothed. _Corol one-petalled, witha five-cleft, staminiferous nectary in the mouth of the tube. Germ six- celled; cells one-seeded, This definition includes, I think,, Aquilicia sambucina, which of course I do not consider as a distinct genus. The position of the anthers in this family is so remarkable and anomalous, that I know of nothing like it elsewhere. The filaments are inserted into the bottom of the fissures of the nectary, and rise parallel with its segments, to their height, where they are quickly bent in and down, to their projecting apices, the inverted anthers are attached near the middle of their backs, with their sides touching, and in most of the Species, as firmly united as in any syngenesious plant, form- ing a cylindrical tube round the stigma ; in this position they remain, until by the detachment of the filaments from the nec- tary, they fall off in one body. 1, Lageenephitia ie Herbaceous. Leaves simple. Sans. Sumoodruka, Beng. Dhol-Shumoodra. _Is common phrmmshent Pongale lewete time the: rainy season. . Root tuberous, paiclidiels aes Stem soray piece yet jointed. Leaves simple, alternate, petioled, broad-cordate, ir- regularly serrate, or tooth-lobed ; posterior lobes large and overlapping each other ; smooth on both sides, except that on the under side the numerous veins are very protuberant, of which the larger are always opposite; from one to two feet ih 654 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Leea, long, and nearly as broad. Petioles tapering from the base, furrowed below, channelled above, as far as the stipule-like membrane reaches. Cymes terminal, large; first division three-parted, or three distinct cymes, superior divisions less regular, Flowers very numerous, small, white, Bractes small, falling, Calyx five-toothed, permanent. Corod one-petalled. Tube length of the calyx. Border five-parted ; divisions lan- ceolate, expanding with an incurved apex, and there bagged, Nectary ; in this species the apices of the divisions are entire. Filaments five, length of the nectary, and inserted on the bottom of its five fissures, Anthers inverted within the mouth of the nectary, with their sides united. Germ superior, six~ celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the base of the axis. Style cylindric. Stigma simple, perforated, lodged about the middle of the inverted anthers. Berry much de- pressed, torose, size of a small cherry, obscurely six or more~ lobed, smooth, black, and succulent when ripe, six or more- celled. Seeds solitary. Intequments two; the exterior one somewhat nuciform, pretty thick, and brown; the inner one very thin, and lighter coloured, adhering to the perisperm. Perisperm conform to the seed, deeply intersected with brown, clammy fissures, Embryo small, scarcely half the length of the perisperm, subulate. Cotyledons subulate. Radicle in- ferior, pointing to the umbilicus. 7 Obs. The root promises to yield a colour fit for dyeing 5: ; ; its sates is a and it is mucilaginous, ; = S. L. crispa, Willd. spec. i. 1177. ‘Herbaceous, stem and branches fringed at the angles. Leaves pinnate ; leaflets oblong, serrate. Antlers so age Nalugu. Rheed. Mal, ii. 43. t. 26.00 Beng. Bun-chelta. | : 3 Grows wild among bushes near Calcutta. Flowering time 1€ rain} season ; and though the flowers are not conspicuous: Leea, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 655 Root perennial. Stems several, herbaceous, somewhat woody, from four to five feet high, jointed, swelléd above the joints, the young shoots chiefly areornamented with from six to eight, thin, short, much curled wings. Leaves alter- nate, petioled, generally quinate-pinnate, though in luxuri- ant plants the lower pair is sometimes compound, Leaflets petioled, ovate-oblong, pointed, deeply and acutely serrate ; Veins numerous, simple, parallel, large, running off at an an- gle of about forty-five degrees, corresponding in number with the serratures of the margin, and ending in their points, as in Dillenia speciosa. Petioles four or five-Winged; wings curled, &c, as on the branches, Stipules falcate, not ciliate. Cymes terminal, small, a little hairy, five-flowered. Bractes Iainate, hairy, margins running down the next peduncle or- pedicel immediately below, forming a deep groove thereon, with high winged margins. Calyx absolutely fiye-toothed, permanent. Corol as in the last species, Mectary also as in the last. nthers lodged within the mouth of the nectary,— but not adhering to one another. Germ conical, six-celled, with one ovudum in each, attached to the base of the axis, Style five-grooved. Berry round, size of a small cherry, when ripe smooth, black, and succulent, six-celled. Seeds one in each cell, all of which very frequently come to perfection, obliquely-obovate, inserted near the inner and lower angle to the lower part of a soft, central receptacle. Integument single, hard, and’ pretty smooth; a very thin membrane seems to cover and adhere to the perisperm. Perisperm con- form to the seed, deeply intersected with brown, clammy fis- sures. Embryo small, lodged in the base of the perisperm: near the umbilictis, a little incurvate. Cotyledons — Radickes inferior, oblong. : 3. L. robusta. R. Shrubby, jointed, pubescent. Rane bi- and sic ptanite g leaflets ovate-lanceolate, serrate, cuspidate. aged ub- ; globular, re 656 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Celastrus. A native of the northern Circars. In the Botanic garden at Calcutta, it flowers during the rains. Stems in plants five years old erect, about five or six feet high, stout, simple, flexuous, jointed, round, the woody parts pretty smooth, the more tender parts rather harsh, with coarse, short pubescence. Leaves alternate, from pinnate to tripin-— nate, from one to three feet long, and often broader than long. Leaflets ovate-lanceolate, the lateral ones with a broad-cordate base, serrate, hairy underneath ; from five to ten inches long, and from three to five broad. Petioles channelled on the up- per edge. Stipules petiolary, large, semi-elliptic, villous, ca- ducous. Cymes terminal, super-decompound, villous. Flow- ers very numerous, small. Bractes linear, villous, caducous, Calyx campanulate, five-toothed. Corol green, five-cleft. Nectary round, urceolate, pearl-coloured, inserted on the mouth of the small tube of the corol, and there contracted by a sharp vein on the inside, deeply five-parted ; segments li- near-oblong,, fleshy, with a thin, rounded apex. Filaments inserted into the bottom of the fissures of the nectary, above the middle jointed, and there bent in and down. Anthers li- -near-oblong, inverted, and in that position their margins are firmly united into a ring round the stigma. Germ superior, ovate, six-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the base of the axis. Style short, but thin, andsix-grooved. Stig- — _ ma rather large, entire, convex. Berry much flattened, size of a small cherry, smooth, black, and somewhat succulent, © six-lobed,six-celled. Seed solitary. Perisperm conform to the seed, intersected with some deep brown fissures, as in all the other species examined by me. Embryo small, a little curved, Cotyledons subulate. Radicle inferior, pointing to the umbilicus. : =a _A.L, hirta. Herb. Banks. ; | Shrubby. Leaves pinnate, and bi-pinnate ; peat lente” ite, erate, Ethie big ufuihere conneetatbiuaisi-sisi yas Leea. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 657 A native of the lower parts of Bengal. Flowering time the rainy season. ie Stems several, somewhat woody, flexuose, jointed. Bark greenish, slightly scabrous ; branches few, and like the stem. Leaves alternate, petioled, from simple to decompound. Leaflets opposite, oblong, serrate, scabrous and hairy on both sides, particularly on the under one, from two to eight inches long, and from one to three broad. Petiole and petiolets round, scabrous and hairy. Stipules petiolary. Cymes terminal, three-parted. Nectary inserted into the edge of the projecting ring which surrounds the mouth of the tube of the corol, the tube of which is erect, and five-parted ; divisions oblong, emarginate. Filaments five, the length of the nectary, and inserted into the bottom of its five fissures. Anthers oblong, three-fourths or more lodged within the mouth of the nectary, with their points downwards, and firm- ly coalescing at the sides into a tube. Berry ; when ripe it has much the appearance of a black currant, a little flatten- ed, generally six-seeded, when dry it appears with as many lobes, (torose ). “Seeds, &c. anata: as in the former and fol-— lowing —— 6. L. sambueina. Willd. spec. i. 1177. Shrubby. Leaves from simple to decompound ; Joaplots ovate, oblong, serrate, smooth, Cymes super-decompound, ‘Frutex aquosus, foemina. Rumph, Amb. iv. t. 45. Aquilicia Sambucina, Linn. Mant. 211. Gert. carp. 2. 127. ¢. 108, : - A native of the Moluccas, from thenee introduced intortlee: Botanic garden at Calcutta, in 1798, where it blossoms dur- ing the rains, and — its seed in November, December, and January. _ Stems erect; almost straight, ramous, height of the lala plant from eight to twelve feet. Bark slightly furrowed lengthways, im other respects smooth. In this species roots generally descend to the — from the lower joints of the VOL, I. Pp 658 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Leea, * stems, Leaves from simple to decompound. Leaflets, the single leaves, which are rarely present, from ovate to nearly round ; those of the compound leaves from ovate-oblong to — linear-oblong, serrate, smooth on both sides, Corymbs ter- minal, trichotomous. Flowers small, yellow; structure as in the former species. Berries round, pulpy, smooth, glau- cous, black, size of a marrow-fat pea, six-seeded ; when dry torose, 6. L. Staphylea, R. : Shrabby. © Leaves compound and super-decompound ; leaflets \inear-oblong, finely taper- os — smooth on both sides, ‘Cyyuiin thin. Aquilicia Otillis = Otillis ze — ) Gert, corp i. 27. t. 57. ~Staphylea? indica. Bevel Ind. 7. t. 24. afi me » Beng. Kookoor-jihwa. ies Teling, Ancados. “onrkerts TPR Stems several, erect, stout, ligneous. Branches few; the young ones flexuose, smooth ; round, articulated. Leaves al- ternate, compound, and decompound, commonly about eigh- teen inches long ; pinne opposite, generally two pair, the low- er pair is sometimes compound; all terminate with an odd one. Leafets opposite, petiolated, linear-oblong, pointed, serrate, smooth on both sides ; frem four to seven inches long,and from two to three broad, Petioles and petiolets round, smooth, Sti- pules large, adjoined to the Jower part of the petiole, colour- : ed, leathery, falling. Cymes terminal, large, with frequeut- ly a smaller one accompanying the chief one. Flowers small, greenish white, very numerous. Calyx cup-shaped, five-toothed, permanent. Corod one petalled. Tube a lit- tle longer than the calyx. Border five-parted ; divisions ob- _ long, concave, with an incuryed point. Nectary a yellow, fleshy, five-cleft ring, inserted into the mouth of the tube of —e ae a contracted rim mateo into * Vitis, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 659 inserted into the outside of the nectary, just below; or rather in the lower sloping edge of its fissures. Anthers oblong, in- verted within the nectary, their sides adhering to each other as in the plants of Syngenesia. Germ superior, globular, Style the length of the tube of the corol. Stigma simple. Berry dry, size of a small cherry, flattened, five or six- gToov- ed, five or six-celled. Seeds one in each cell, 7. L. integrifola, R Sub-arboreous, Ledves super-decompound ; /eaflets lan- ceolar, entire, acuminate. Corymbs super-decompound. Teling. Booradipakai. : A native of the moist vallies among the Circar mountains, It is a large shrub, and flowers during the wet seasons ‘Leaves alternate, super-decompound, about thirty inches long. Pinne as in the last species; the lower pair always bipinnate, Leaflets opposite, sub-sessile, linear-lanceolate, and lanceolar, sometimes very slightly serrate; smooth above, a little downy underneath, from six to eight inches long, and from two to three broa!, Petioles and petiolets smooth, with an elevated ridge running zlong the upper side ; beyond the lower pair of pinne the ridge has a groove in it. Stipulesas in the former. Corymbs terminal, &c. as in the last species, but larger. Calya as in the other species, Corol; iube shorter than the calyx, in other respects as in the last species, Nectary composed of five erect, emarginate scales, issuing from the mouth of the tube of the corol. Filaments tive, al- ‘ternate with and longer than the nectarial bodies, Anthers oblong, pointed, . Pisti/, pericarp, aud seeds, as in the last species ; it is rather more common for the Sopsule't to sisal seeded in this species than in the others. | E08 VITIS. Schreb. gen. N. 396. idealen bresnghels Corol five-petalled. Germ rwocbells ae cells two-seeded ; attachment inferior. Berry superior, . Ppa 660 : PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Vitis. from one to four-seeded. Embryo erect, and furnished with a perisperm. 1. V. indica, Willd. spec. i. 1180. Shrubby, scandent. Leaves round-cordate, often more or less angled, finely serrate, downy underneath. » Tendrils pa- nicle-bearing. | Germ embraced by a five-lobed leds Ber- ries round, from one to two-seeded. Schembra-valli. Rheed, Mal. vii. an t. 6. _ Beng. Amdhouka, A native of various parts of iedies Flowering sinc the month of April. The fruit ripens in July, _ Root, perennial... Stem and branches long and anhin’ climbing: up and over trees, hedges, &c. to an extent of ma- ny fathoms ; young shoots villous... Tendrils opposite to the leaves, floriferous, beyond the flowers bifid, Leaves alter- nate, petioled, round-cordate, more or less angular, finely serrate, more or less villous according to their age, particu- _ larly. underneath, from three to six inches each way. Pe- tioles vather shorter than the leaves. Panicles issuing soli- tarily from. the middle of the tendrils, peduncled, ovate, . dense... Flowers numerous, very minute, greenish purple. Calyx small, fiye-toothed, Petals five, ovate-oblong, at first spreading, afterwards reflex, and not cohering at top as in some of the species. Neciary a five-toothed, saucer-shap- stihodys. surrounding the base of the germ. Filaments five, arly as long.as the petals. Germ superior, nearly round, two-celled, with two ovula in each, attachéd to the ho sha cell... Style none. este fivelobed. “ re iw 2. y. ietiate R. : | sie _ Shrubby,. climbing. Soin tales serrate, pnndliyas un- derneath, Racemes: gone’ leaf- Bet ioe pttepale coher- Vitis. ‘ PENTANDREA MONOGYNTA. 661 | Trunk woody, climbing over trees, &c.; young shoots very long, covered with a little rusty wool. Tendrils op- posite, simple, or split. Leaves alternate, petioled, cordate, serrate ; above a little woolly, below much so; four inches long, by three broad. Petioles round, woolly, two inches long. Peduncles opposite, composed of compound racemes, alittle woolly, Flowers very numerous, small, green, fasci- cled. Petals cohering at the top; when they drop they.seem to be a monopetalous corol, and what was the top must then be considered as the bottom, Berries round, purple, suecu- lent, size of a pea, one or two-seeded. 3. V. latifolia. Bi th . Herbaceous, climbing. Leaves cordate-lobate, | semasionis serrate, smooth, . Tendrils panicle-bearing, a Germs embraced by a nectarial cup, buat) ginetine Vallia-Pira-Pitica, Rheed. Mots vil, 13, ‘. z cots eves ., Beng. Govila, a ; _A native of Bengal. pre of pe warmer maritime. nnd India, blossoming about the beginning’ of the rainy season 5 and ripening its fruit in July. | . Root tuberous, Stem and branches herbaceous, clined ing, round, and smooth, very long, and slender, running over trees, &c, to a great extent. Tendrils leaf-opposed, gener- ally two-parted, panicle-bearing. Leaves petioled, alter- nate, always opposite to a tendril, nearly of a round, cordate- lobate shape, with three, fivé, or seven rather acute lobes; Margins serrate-dentate, pretty smooth on both sides, length and breadth from three to nine inches. _Paniedes issuing so- litarily from the middle of the tendrils *before they divide ; peduncles ovate, dense, Flowers very numerous, small, of a deep. reddish brown, Bractes linear. Calyx small, ob- - seurély five-toothed. Petals oblong, at first expanding, then -reflexed. Germ superior, nearly round, two-celled, with two _ ovula in each, attached to the bottom of the cell. Style, none. “Stigina a pitin the lobate apex of the germ. Pp3 662 PENTANPRIA MONOGYNIA, Musa. the size, shape, and appearance of a black currant, rarely more than two-seeded, Perisperm conform to the seed. Embryo erect, in the lower half of the perisperm. Cotyle- dons nearly round. Radicle inferior, 4. V. parvifolia, R. Leaves angle-cordate, three-lobed, crenate-serrate, smooth, Stipules oval. Thyrses leat-opposed, few-flowered. A slender, perennial vine, of exactly the habit of the com- mon grape vine; a native of the eastern part of — Flowers in February. Stems and old branches ligneous, considerably flattened, ten or twelve feet high. Bark dark brown, with the exterior Jamina thin, and frequently peeling off; soung shoots some- what angular, and pretty smooth, Leaves simple, cordate, sometimes three lobed, crenate-serrate, apex somewhat at- tenuate, smooth on both sides, about two inches long. Ten- drils bifid. Stipules oval, caducous. Thyrses opposite to the leaves, diverging, very small, and only a little longer than the petioles. Flowers very minute, green. Calya ob- scurely five-lobed, Petioles five, cohering, and falling off i in one body, Nectary five-rounded scales, exiles the base of the germ, alternate! with the filaments. Filaments five, length of the germ, at first erect, but by age becoming re- curved. Anthers ovate. Germ round, four-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the base of the axis,” ‘Style scarcely — Sess sranehed cece = eee MUSA. Schreb. gen. N. 1563. giallisiaten Calyx, Spaties partial, one or many flower- ed. Corol of two unequal petals. Flowers all hermaphrodite. | Male-hermaphrodite toward the apex of the spadix. Germ- rior, abortive. Female-bermaphrodite toward the base of thé spadix, Germ inferior, three celled ; cells many-seed-» ed; attachment central. ‘erry oblong, thc clled,many- | Musa. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, 663 * seeded, Embryo central, and — furnished with a = perm. t 1. M. sapientum, Willd. spec, iv. p. 894. Spadix drooping, spathes ovate, deciduous ; those of the female-herimaphrodite tlowers of the wild plant often wither and remain till the seeds are ripe, but in the ee varie- ties they are always deciduous, - Bata. Rheed, Mal. i, 17, t. 12,13, and 14, Musa, Ramph, Amb, v. 130. t. 60. Ram Kulla, Walli kulla,Ram Jakialia-kulla,are the names - the wild banana and plantain are known by at Chittagong where’ they’are found indigenous in the forests, and blossti during the rains, cod Beng. Kula, $ 1h Telinga. Aretti; and Komaretti the culevaned pion: The varieties of the banana, cultiviited over India, are very numerous, but fewer of the plantain, as I have hither- to obtained knowledge of only three ; whereas, I may safely say, not Jess than ten times that number of the former have come under my inspection. : Their duration, culture, habit, and natural character are already well known; I shall therefore confine myself to — (what I think,) the original wild Musa, from which I eon- clude uP ithe cultivated varieties of both plantain and bana - na , and which I consider as varieties of that one — species, In the course of two years, from the seed received frosi Chittagong, these attained to the usual height of the cultivat- - ‘ed sorts which is about ten or twelve feet. They blossoin at all seasons, though generally during the rains ; and ripen their seed in five or six months afterwards ; the plant then perishes down to the root, which long befor: this time bas produced other shoots; these continue to grow up, blossom, &c. in succession for several years. Their leaves are exactly as in the cultivated sorts, — ipl Pp4 664 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Musa. diz simple, drooping. Spathes partial, numerous, ovate, con- cave, smooth, crimson on the inside, outside darker-coloured, six or eight of these nearest the base of the spadix embracea double row of female-hermaphrodite flowers, and are not al- ways deciduous, but sometimes wither, and remain till the seeds are ripe. All the rest, and they are very numerous, ex- panding im succession for two or three months, embrace simi- lar double rows of abortive, or male-hermaphrodite flowers; which, with their spathes, are always deciduous, Calyx no other than the just mentioned spathes. Corol of two, dissi- milar petals; the exterior one with an unequally five-toothed apex, which soon becomes revolute, the inner one sometimes called the nectary, half the length of the exterior one ; when forcibly expanded they are nearly round, but in their natu- ral state oblong, and deeply concave, with an emarginate apex, and incurved, ensiform point. Filaments in both flow- ers five, with sometimes the rudiment of a sixth, ,Anthers in the male-hermaphrodite linear, and.as long as. the fila- ments; in the female-hermaphrodite minute, and without pollen. Germ. inferior, oblong, three-celled, with from four to five or six rows of oyula in each cell, regularly attached to a central; fleshy receptacle axis; by their growth they are . forced from the regular situation in which they are found in the germ, their insertions cannot then be easily traced ; inthe male-hermaphrodite: they are abortive, Style cylindric, Stigma three-lobed, large and clammy; . Berry oblong, ta- pering to each end; of a soft fleshy consistence, smooth and yellow, marked. Iongieudinelly. with five ribs, three-celled ; the partitions distinct, but soft and pulpy, and:no doubt dis- appear when dry, and long kept.. Seeds numerous, the size of a small pea, round, turbinate, tubercled ; the exterior half dark-chesnut. or /blackish toward the umbilicus, which is.a large circular cayity ;. light brown, _Integument, &c, as de- Musa. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 665 2. M. coccinea, Andr. Repos, i. 47, Spadia and spathes straight, the latter one or inn ed, and permanent. | . Chin, On-ang-chok-chee. This has been brought from China, where it is said to oa indigenous. It thrives well in the Company’s Botanic gar- den at Calcutta, where I Jong took it for the banana. in a dwart state ; a state the Chinese have the art of reducing most plants to; but now, after repeated examination for ma- ny years, I find it is undoubtedly a permanently distinct Species. It resembles the banana and plantain in habit, and in its perennial root. ‘Stem erect, generally three or four feet high, and about as thick as a man’s arm. Like the other species they perish soon after fructification, and like them, are succeeded by shoots from the root, Leaves linear, &e. as in M, Sapien- tum. Spadix erect. Spathes linear-oblong, boat-shaped, erect, obtuse, both sides smooth, and of a bright scarlet co- lour ; all are permanent, and embrace one, or at most) two flowers. Flowers, the inferior ones are female-hermaphro- dite and fertile. The superior ones male-hermaphrodite and abortive. With Geertner I consider the corol as two-petal- led in this genus, (and not as a nectary ;) and in this species it is particularly so.. In M. Sapientum the two ovate scales over the inside of the fissures of the exterior petal may be called nectarial. Petals two, as long as the stamens, some- what ringent; the exterior one involving the interior like a spathe, its apex three-parted; the lateral, divisions thereof ending in a slender hornlet; the middle one is broader and three-parted ; soon after expansion they become. reflected, then revolute. Interior petal nearly as long: as the exterior, _ apex sometimes entire, sometimes three-parted. 4’tlamenis uniformly five, surrounding three-fourths of the style. An- _ thers in the male-hermaphrodite flowers linear, about as long as the filaments, with a deep polliniferous groove on each margin ; those of the fertile, or female-hermaphrodite flowers 666 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Musa, are small, and totally destitate of pollen. Germ inferior, ob- long, three-celled, &e. Style as long as the stamens, Stigma oval, obscurely three lobed. Pericarp of the male-herma- phrodite flowers abortive, of the female-hermaphrodite ones fertile, oblong, and a little compressed, pulpy, about two inches long, and less than one broad, when ripe yellow, divid- ed in ternally into three cells, with a double row of seeds _in each, these seeds however rarely come to maturity here. The plant is highly ornamental, which so far as I know, is all that can be said in its favour, 3. M. ornata. R. Spadix erett; spathes deciduous, three-flowered, lanceo- late. Both petals of the corols equal in length. Beng. Ramanigee kula, A native of Chittagong, where this and some other sorts are commonly called monkeys’ plantains. Except in size and manner of flowering, the species does not in any res- pect differ from the common cultivated sorts already well known. In the Botanic garden at Calcutta, they blossom and ripen their seeds the while year. pare 91 ~ Root perennial, pushing forth a succession of stems < every way like those of the cultivated sorts, only about as thick as a man’s arm, and in general, in a rich soil from three to five feet high. Leaves petioled, &c. as the common plan- tain. Spadix erect. Spathes partial, ‘alternate, boat-shaped, bi road Janceolate, obtuse, smooth, striated, colour a most love- ly light purple or lilac, two or three-flowered, deciduous, Tength from four to six inches. Flowers, the inferior five or six spathes are occupied by female-hermaphrodite ones; all the rest, and they are very numerous, by male: hermaphro- dite ones, all are orange-coloured. Coral two-petalled, the exterior one irregularly five-toothed, the lateral segments with calearate apices. The inner petal:is as long as the,ex- exterior one, thin, and membranaceous, Filaments five, in some lowers there is the minuteradiment of asixth Anthers Musa, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 667 _in the male hermaphrodite flowers linear, as long as the fi- laments, in the female ones most minute and abortive, Germ inferior, in the female-hermaphrodite flowers large, and line. ar-oblong, with three most distinct cells, &e. in the male one minute, Style in the former twice as long as the fila- ments, with a large clammy stigma ; in the latter shorter than the stamens, very slender, and with scarcely any stigma at all, Berry linear-oblong, slightly incurved, obscurely four or five-sided, with the angles mach rounded, smooth, fleshy, when ripe dull yellowish green, about the size ofa man’s little finger, three-celled, Seeds many in a single tow in each cell, compressed, tending to be quadrancular, tubercled, very black, inserted into the soft fleshy ee Perisperm and embryo as in the former species. A very pretty ornamental plant, and would no doubt so — admired in Europe, “ 4, M. superba. R. ‘Reot fibrous and perishing with the short conical stem. Leaves petioled, but not sheathing. Spadix nodding. Spa- thes cordate, many flowered, those of the female-hermaphro- dite flower permanent. ‘ A native of the vallies of the southern parts of the peninsu- la of India, From Dindigal Dv. Anderson of Madras receiv- ed it into his garden, and from thence introduced into the Bo- tanic garden at Calcutta, where the plants thrive, blossom, and ripen their seeds at various times of the year. ~~ Trunk almost conical, being only three feet to the leaves, seven anda half in circumference close to the ground, and four and a half immediately under the leaves ; and invested with the numerous, somewhat stem clasping bases of those that have | decay ed; height of the whole plant to the highest part of the curvature of the spadix, thirteen feet. Leaves numerous, equally surrounding every part of the stem, petioled, lanceo- late, very entiré, until broken by wind, &e. filiforin, pointed, ; sinooth on both sides, with numerous parallel, div in 668 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Musa, veins ; from five to ten feet long, and from two to three broad, Petioles about two feet long; those of the lower leaves have their bases broad and embrace the stem ; while those near the inflorescence have long, stem-clasping sheaths, like those of the plantain and banana; semi-cylindric on the under side, and deeply channelled on the upper one. Spadia terminal, simple, drooping, before any of the spathes expand, cordate, Spathes numerous, expanding in succession, broad-cordate, slightly ribbed, smooth, ferruginous, many-flowered, perma- nent, and not becoming revolute. /owers numerous, from twenty to thirty in a double series to each spathe ; the female- hermaphrodite ones occupy the bases, or lower spathes; and the male-hermaphrodite oes the superior. Perianth none, Corol ; petals two, very unequal, Exterior petal involving the inner one like a spathe, leathery, three-parted ; the linear ~ divisions often adhering by their margins; soon after expan- sion they become twisted into one body. Inner petal five or ‘six times shorter than the exterior one, pale-coloured, almost pellucid, and composed of two sub-rotund lobes with an en- siform process between them ; from the inside of the insertion of this petal a very large quantity of transparent jelly is dis- charged. Nectary two filiform scales inserted over the two fissures of the exterior petal. Thus far the male and female- hermaphrodite flowers agree. Filaments five, with the rudi- | ment of a sixth on the under side, Anthers in the male-her-. naphrodite flower longer and thicker than the filaments. In. 1¢ female-] phrodite they are wanting, or only small, black, withered points. Germ beneath. In the female-her- maphrodite flower large, three-celled, and fertile ; inthe male one small, and barren. Style linear, thick, and fleshy, In the female-hermaphrodite flower twice as long as its barren sta- mens, In the male-hermaphrodite one only half the length of Os: fertile stamens. Stigma in both somewhat three-grooved,, Musa. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 669 numerous, angular, and black. Perisperm a and —- as in the former apoete- : ; 5. M. ‘alata R, Root fibrous, and perishing with the columnar stem. Spadix drooping; spathes ovate-lanceolate, imbricated, from ten to twenty-flowered, permanent ; those of the inion phrodite flowers withering. A very stately, elegant, perfectly distinct, strongly waren species, a native of Pegu, and from thence introduced, by the discoverer, Mr. F. Carey, into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it blossoms in May, and the seeds ripen in October and November. Like my M. superba it never produces suckers, _ consequently it must be reared from the seed, which it fur- nishes in great abundance; the fruit containing’ little else, — even fit for a monkey to eat. The whole plant has a pale glau- cous appearance, which, with its columnar stem and total want of suckers, readily distinguish this from all the other Muse known tome. Root fibrous, about triennial, for like that of my seria it perishes with the plant, when it has perfected its seed, and not like the cultivated sorts, tuberous, permanent, and furnish- ing a succession of suckers, by which they are quickly and_ abundantly propagated, Stem simple, erect, columnar, from ten to twelve feet high and about two feet in cireumference. Leaves numerous round the apex of the stem, &c. as in M. Sapientum. ‘Spadix in this species rather long-peduncled, perfectly pendulous, base occupied with fertile female-herma- pliredite flowers, which are completely hid‘under the perma- nent, ovate-lanceolate spathes; the barren or male-hermaphro- . dite flowers occupy all the rest to the very apex, and continue to blossom in succession until the seeds are ripe, by which time this part greatly exceeds in length the fertile part, and continues covered with the withered, but permanent spathes, Corol, jatainine, nwehipispilln, as in M. Sapientum, &e. Ber- ies trivonally clavate, as’ thick as a cucumber, and about 670 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA,. Heliconia. four or five inches long, smooth, striated lengthways with small veins, colour when ripe a mixture of green, yellow and pink, three-celled. Seeds, rather nuts, a few in each cell, oval, size of a field bean. Integument a perfect, hard, black, substantial nut, divided into three transverse cells, the upper- most and lowermost filled withspongy matter, the middle one is occupied by the friable.white perisperm, in the middle of the base thereof is lodged the small, simple, short, sub-obco- nic embryo, the whole nearly as in Gertner’s Sapientum, Carp, i, 28. t. 11. f. 1. HELICONIA. Schreb. gen. N. 403. Spathes alternate. Calyx none. Corol six-petalled. .Nee- tary one-leaved. Germ inferior, three-celled ; ced/s with one or more seeds; attachment iaferior, Pericarp three-celled, three-valved, al sitesi or several. J. H. buccinata, R. ia . Stemless. Leaves lanceolar, glossy. Spadix central, flexuose, pubescent ; spathes from six to eight, bifarious, di- verging, each embracing from six to ten pedicelled flowers. Nectary oblong ; cells of the germ one-seedéd, | Folium buccinatum. Rumph. Amb. vy. 141. t. 62.f. 2. From Amboyna plants were brought to the Botanic gar- an at Calcutta, in 1798, where in seven years they began to blossom during the hot season, viz. April and May ; but have not yet ripened. their seed in Bengal. _. Root consisting of numerous, sirong, fleshy Sine. like: ya common batman. and still more permanent than in any spe- cies of Musa known to me, Stem no other than the united sheathing part of the petioles, except when in flower the seape then rises through their centre. Leaves in numerous ae _ from the same root, forming an immense, beautiful bush ; b farious, petioled, lanceolate, entire, polished, acute, with di verging veins, from, two alge feet. Jong, and one foot Achyranthes, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA: 671 broad. Rib protuberant, and pale, Pedtioles from three’to six feet long, the lower half sheathing, those within smooth in every part. Scape rising through the centre of thé sheath- ing of the petioles, and elevated but litte above them. _ Spadix about a foot long, flexuose, hairy, compound, of from six to ten, alternate, bifarious branches. Spathes from six to ten, alternate, bifarious, diverging, smooth, lanceolate, boat-shaped, each embracing a small raceme, of from six to twelve, pedicelled, pretty large, pale yellow flowers, which expand in succession, Bractes numerous, bifarious, imbri- cated, linear-lanceolate, acute, villous, each of the most in- ferior ones embraces a single flower; the superior ones are smaller and abortive. Ca/ya none, except what I take for _ the corol’ be so called. Petals from six to three. interior, and three exterior, unequal in breadth, but, of the same length, linear-lanceolate, all united at the base. Nectary or sterile-stamen, a single, oblong, acute leaflet, inserted on the base of the largest of the three exterior petals, and into this, petal no stamen is inserted, %i/ements five, inserted on the base of the. petals on the inside. Anthers linear, erect, with their apices nearly as high as the stigma. Germ pedicelled, inferior, three-sided, three-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the bottom of its cell. Style nearly as long as the petals. Stigma simple, ACHYRANTHES. Schreb. gen. N. 404. Calyx five-leaved, and calycl.d. Corol none.) Neetary and stigma various. Germ superior, one-celled, one-seeded ; attachment inferior. Capsule utricular, one-seeded. ek 3 ne annular, with central perisperm. je A, incana. R _ Annual, erect, hoary. Leaves lanceolar. Spikes pasion: terminal. Nectary ten-toothed. Illecebrum javanicum, Willd. spec. i, 1205. 672 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Achyranthes, Iresine javanica, Burm. Ind. 212. (by mistake 312.) tab. 65. f. 2. Found wild in various parts of India, i in flower, and with | ripe seed most part of the year. : Stems nearly erect. Branches few, and nearly erect, all the most tender parts very hoary, indeed white ; general height from three to five feet. Leaves alternate, sub-sessile, narrow-lanceolate, entire, hoary, Panicles terminal, com- posed of alternate, sessile, incurved, cylindric spikes, com-— pletely crowded with numerous, small, white flowers. Ca- lycle two or three, broader, smooth, hyaline scales. Calyx five-leaved ; leaflets lanceolate, hyaline, very woolly toward the base on the outside; three of the five rather narrower. and with a little green in the centre. Nectary a short, ten- toothed cup round the germ. Filaments no other than the. teeth of the nectary. Anthers could not be detected, yet the seeds are fertile. Germ superior, obcordate, one-celled, one-seeded. Style short. Stigma two-cleft; segments hairy, - and recurved in opposite direction, Utricudus an entire, one- celled membrane. | Seeds solitary. '. Obs, From the above description it appears evident that this plant is clearly an Achyranthes ; having the entire mem- branaceous utricular capsules of that genus, containing a sin- gle, lenticular, reniform, highly polished seed, with central | i a and peripherical embryo. 3 “ - aspera, Willd. spec. i. i. 1191. Biennial, sub-erect, ramous, Leaves’ opposite, obovate, downy. Spikes most long, with flowers cetretiaciem Beng. Chichiria, Apang. : Cadelari, Rheed. Mal, x. 155. t. 78. vn (elbead ___ Amaranthus spicatus zeylanicus, foliis — Burm. te 16. 4. 50. ach _ A troublesome weed i in every part of India, chiefly iielbi “the rainy aud i et ns ers ge the year. 3 PSTE WH ute aie AiG adage?” + Achyranthes, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. : 62 _ 8. A. aquatica, R. Herbaceous, straggling toa great extent about the edges of sweet water. Leaves opposite, lanceolate. Spikes terminal. Flowers retrofracted, Bractes and scales of the calyx spin ous, Celosia spinescens, Koen, Mss. A native of Coromandel, where it blossoms during the rainy season, pie 4, A, Monsonia. R. Tetrandrous, cespitose, very ramous. Leaves subulate, tufted ; spikes terminal, sub-cylindric. Illecebrum Monsonie. Linn, Suppl. 161. Celosia Monsoniea. Retz. Obs. 2. p.'13. Willd, spec. i, 1200 ; and Ait, kew. i. 288. Amaranthoides spicatum Spergulee foliis. Pluck. Almag. Mantiss, 11. t. 334. f. 4. Admath, 13. t. 357. f. 4. A native of Bengal and Coromandel, where it blossoms during the cool season. Stem none, but numerous branches, with opposite, diverg: ing, round, somewhat woolly branchlets, spreading close on the ground and extending to from one to three feet in length, Leaves subulate, opposite, sessile, with tufts of smaller ones in their axills. Spikes terminal, ovate-oblong, compact, being closely covered with numerous, minute, rose-coloured flowers. Calyx and calycle seven-leaved, Nectary four- leaved, alternate with the stamens. Stamens four. Utricules with a single seed. 5. A, lappacea, Willd, spec.i. 1192, - Biennial, straggling. Leaves opposite, petioled, ventri. cose-oblong, smooth, Spikes terminal ; flowers remote, ge- nerally in pairs, with three fascicles of coloured, hooked bristles to the pair. - Willia-codiveli. Rheed. Mal, x. 117, t. 59. 674 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Achyranthes. __ Blitum scandens, fructu la PPE Burm: Zeyl. 47. t. 18, J. 1. (good.) : ' Beng. Kuya-duya, Duya-kuya. 7 Is found in most parts of India, generally growing antong, bushes, Flowering time the rainy season, 6. A, alternifolia, Herb. Banks, ~ Annual, diffuse. Leaves alternate, ovate-oblong. Spikes axillary, longer than their leaves, two variously horned bo- dies between the corol and calyx. Nectary none. - * Beng, Luta-mohooriya, Gungatiya, Teling. Chancheli kura. Annual, common on most cultivated lands, in the Botanic garden at Calcutta ; it is a most troublesome w eed, Stem when the plant is young, tolerably erect, but ever af- terwards prostrate, with longer, prostrate, striated, succulent branches, Leaves alternate, petioled, oblong, or ovate, point- ed, sometimes a little waved, margins cowined's below a lit- tle hairy, about two inches long. Petioles chanielled Spikes axillary, twice as Jong as the leaves or more. Flowers soli- tary, alternate, small, red. Practes three-fold, concave, one- flowered ; ; immediately within each of the two lateral bractes isa compreactt ramous, green body. Calya five-leaved ; the inner segments three-coloured. Nectary no other than the en- larged bases of the filaments, Seed single, in its rugose utri- cals, — ~The leaves and tender tops are used by RIE in their curries, It ought to be carefully compared with A. muricata. 7. A. prostrata, Willd, spec, i, 1194. Annual, diffuse, Leaves opposite. Spikes filiform. Flowers reflexed, with fascicles of bristles adjoining. ectary with five bidentate horns, alternating with the filaments. Scheru-cadelari, Rheed. Mal. x. 157, 79. Auris canina femina. Rumph. Amb. vi. 26. t. i. ; dutroduced i into, be, Botanic cals at Calcuttns a amon z * ¥ eres. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 675 spice plants from the Moluccas, Dae during the cold season, Root ramous, annual, Stem scarcely any, but several pairs of opposite, diffuse, round, smooth, coloured branches. Leaves opposite, sessile, oblong, entire, coloured. Spikes terminal, _ solitary, filiform, sub-erect. Flowers scattered, reflected, ge- nerally two together. “Bractes (or calyx) three to the two flowers, with the same number of fascicles of hooked red bristles asin A. lappacea, Nectary with five, two-toothed hornlets, alternate with the filaments, and with them united into a membranous ring round the base of the germ. Germ am petiole’: . Style single, 8: A, sericea, Koen, Mss. Stem erect, downy. Leaves opposite, hiséall andbaltto, covered with much silky down. Peduneles axillary, longer — than the leaves, bifid or trifid, many-flowered. - A large, straggling annual, growing in sheltered shady places in a dry baindy neil Root single. Stem erect, with many long spreading branches resting on the ground, or something shi all are round, and covered with silky down, Leaves wh rials, petioled, broad- - cordate, acute, covered with very soft silky down, about an inch and a half long. Peduncles axillary, opposite, round, downy, as long as the leaves, each ending in two, three, or more, spreading, winding filiform spikes. The rest as in the e553. re eS genus. 9, A. ferruginea. Re 2) Annual, flaccid. Leaves opposite, Sbovala.: NSpathes we wib. conical, pediincled and sessile. Nectary five-toothed ; each tooth ending in a ee antheriferous filament, Stigmas en- tire, Beng. Rukta-Sirinchee. Hind, Lal-Sirinchee. A small annual, wild in gardens, or about the bordets of ‘ Qq2 676 . PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Achyranthes. cultivated lands near Calcutta, where it appears during the rainy season. Stems slender, leaning, about a foot long, absolutely four or five-sided, smooth, rust-coloured. Branches opposite, and like the stem, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oval or obo- vate, entire, smooth, of a very soft texture, reddish; about an inch long. Spikes peduncled, or sessile, small, conical. Pe- dunceles four-sided, length various. Braces in general two, . opposite, leaf-like, but much smaller, Flowers crowded, small, dull red. Calycle three-leaved, the two lateral ones falling off with the five-leaved calyx and seed ; the third or undermost one remains. There may be an impropriety in calling these the calycles. Nectary cup-shaped, five-toothed, teeth lengthened into five filaments, Stigma simple. ‘Seed solitary, in a membranaceous utriculus, 10. A, scandens, R. Perennial, climbing, downy. Leaves alternate, oblong-ven- tricose, Spikes axillary, solitary, sessile. Calyx hairy. Nee- tary ten-parted, Stigmatwo-lobed. + Beng. Nooriya. A native of hedges, &c. near Calcutta ; in flower about the close of the rains, Stems and branches dining below woody, perennial ; young parts more or less hairy. Leaves alternate, short-pe- tioled, oblong, a little ventricose, hairy, and of a soft texture; size very various. Spikes sessile, axillary, and terminal ; those from the axills small, and solitary ; while the terminal ones are large, and generally three or more of them together. Calyx and calyele silver-coloured, and woolly, _Nectary ten-toothed ; teeth equal, alternately antheriferous. Style single. Stigma two-lobed. Capsules circumcised, contain- ig a single, black, smooth reniform seed. ee hes hn Annual seteet,ramous, woolly, isis dct a Achyranthes. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 677 Spikes crowded, Nectary ten-parted, alternately antherifer- ous. Stigmas two-cleft, Illecebrum lanatum, Willd, spec. i. 1204. Scheru-bula. Rheed, Mal. x. 57. t. 29. (good.) Chenopodium incanum, racemosum, folio majore minori opposito. Burm. Zeyl. 60. f. i. (good.) Beng, Chaya. Is common every where, both on the Coast of Coromandel and Bengal. A stout, hardy, annual plant, from one to two feet high, flowering all the year round, Stems erect, with many ascend- ing, woolly branches. Leaves alternate, petioled, roundish, with somewhat of a point, and tapering at the base, entire, woolly both sides ; size very various. Calyx woolly, Nectary ten-toothed, asin A. scandens, Spikes axillary, oval, woolly. Stigma two-lobed, Capsules with a single, smooth, shining black, reniform seed. Obs. The late edition of the Spee. Plant. by Reichard, makes this plant an J lecebrum ; for what reason 1 know not. 12. A, diandra, R. Annual, diffuse, Leaves opposite, linear-lanceolar. Spikes terminal; flowers reflected, and pressed close to the rachis, Stamina two, alternate with the two multifid lobes of the nec- : tary. . : A native of Ceylon. Root fibrous, annual, or at most biennial. Stems slender, straggling, striated, clothed with a few hairs pointing forward, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, linear-lanceolate, entire, near- ly smooth, Spikes terminal, solitary, simple, long, and slen- der. Flowers solitary, small, after blossoming reflected back close to the rachis. Bractes (calyx ?) three-leaved. Calyx of five, rigid, smooth tapering, acute leaflets, Nectary two- lobed ; lobes finely and desis multifid, Filaments two, one in sank fissure of the nectary, half as long as the corol, An- thers incumbent. _Usriculus turbinate. Seed prgent at gees Qa3 678 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Celosia. 13. A. triandra, R. - Annual, creeping. Leaves opposite, sessile, lanceolate, smooth. Flowers triandrous. Capsules winged. Illecebrum sessile. Willd. spec. i. 1209. Coluppa. Rheed. Mal, x. 21. t. 11. Amaranthus humilis foliis oppositis, flosculis‘} in alis con- glomeratis, Burm. Zeyl. 17, t. 4. f. 2. (good.) Telinga, Ponagunta-kura, Sans, Shalanchi. Beng. Shanchi, also shalooncha, A native of Bengal where it is a common weed during the rainy season, 14, A. nodiflora. R. | Annual, diffuse. Leaves obovate, cuneate. Spikes glo- bular. Nectary with only five, antheriferous ee. Stig- ma simple, i Celosia nodiflora. Willd. spec. i. 1202. Amaranthoides indicum, nodiflorum, capitulis exatee virl- descentibus, Burm. Zeyl. 16. t. 5. f. 2. A native of Coromandel, Flowers in the cold season, The ovarium in this plant contains but a single ovulum, attached to the bottom of its single cell, consequently its place i is in this genus to whieh I have transferred it. 2 595. CELOSIA. Schreb. gen. N. 405... * | ae fivacheared and calycled, Corol none. Mears stamiferous, surrounding the base of the ovarium. Germ one- celled; ovula several, attached to the bottom of the cell. Capsules opening transversely and containing more seeds = one, _ a ities with a central — aie papi jap op C. eiyours Willd. spec. i. 97. pale £9 "Erect, ‘annual. ‘Leas rt anes t oblong, spits Celosia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 679 sub-cylindric, scariose. Nectary with five, short toothlets, alternate with the long antheriferous divisions, ~ Beng. Shwet-moorga, Hind, Debkotee, SE R= x eee Rheed, Mal. x. 77. t. 39. Belutta-adeka-manjen. [bid. 75, t. 38, 1 take for the same plant in its wild state; at least the wild plants of argentea found in the corn fields of India, are more stunted in their growth, but have their leaves broader, and the spikes shorter, as in the figure just quoted; and I am inclined to think Willdenow’s albida, consequently Burman’s pyramidalis, can, at most, be reckoned only another variety of the same _ Species, Plants from the same seed have leaves of very vari- ous breadth, and are as often with, as without the falcate stipules, 2, ¢. ‘eristata, Willd. spec. i, 1198, Annual, erect. Leaves oblong-ovate, cabtecled, ound. striated. Spikes oblong. Beng. Lal-moorga, the red variety ; Huldcomoonge, the adie i _ Amaranthus alana Rumph. Amb. v. 236, t. 84, a | have never been able to find any other species or satiate in India, that I could refer to C. coccinea, I cannot consider the breadth of the leaves, nor falcate stipules, to be any more characteristic in this than in argentea and its varieties, In gardens only throughout India, and thrives best during the rainy and cold seasons. | “ “8... comosa. Willd. spec. i. 1198, Erect, annual, Leaves lakboclatcl ~ Spikes cylindric tufted. . Found i in most parts of india: in cada and likesthe last pelle best ssoing: the iy and cold seasons. : se REM ak 4 680 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Celosia. 4. C. cernua. R. Annual, erect, ramous. Leaves lanceolate, acute. Racemes terminal, cylindric, with long sterile, ramous, pendulous tails. Capsules operculed, many-seeded. A native of the tops of the Rajmwhal hills, where Mr. W. Roxburgh first found it in great abundance wild amongst fragments of a rich iron ore, and from thence sent the seeds to the Botanic garden at Caleutta, where it grows well, and continues in gaudy blossom, during the whole of the cold season, Root annual: Stem erect, with numerous, ascending, ra- mous branches, slightly striated, colour from green toa deep liver colour, Leaves alternate, lancevlate, acute, smooth, entire, from one to six inches long, and broad in proportion. Stipules, or rather the lower opposite pair of leaves of the branches and brancliets often present, and then falcate, as in C, argentea, &c. but I do not think their presence or absence can, in any of the species found in India, be taken into the specific character; for in some plants they are tolerably constant, whereas in others of the same species reared from the same seed no sign of them can be traced. Racemes ter- ‘minal; the fertile flower-bearing part simple, cylindric, but curved from the weight of the long, pendulous, lovely crim- son, sterile panicle into which they divide, and which gives to this charming species its great beauty. Flowers numer- ous, short-peduncled, before and during expansion of a right, vivid purple colour, but as the seed advances to ma- turity the margins of the scales become pure white, more or less broad. Bractes tapering, acute, one larger under the base of the pedicel, and two on its apex, pressing the calyx laterally, and about half its length. Calyx ; leaflets dagger- pointed, rather longer than the stamina, Nectary ten-part- ed, the “five long, subulate, alternate ones are antheriferous, the other five short and incurved over the germ. Stigma slightly three-lobed, Capsules ; the lid is a little scabrous Celosia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNTA, 681 and marked with five elevations, Seeds several, shining black. | A This species appears to me to differ from Retz. comosa in the following points: Ist, Here the stamina and style are about the same length, and rather shorter than the calyx ; there twice as long. 2d. Here are many, about eight seeds in the capsules; there only two. 5. C. corymbosa, Willd. spec, i. 1200. Perennial, erect. Leaves opposite and fascicled, linear. Corymbs terminal. Calyx five-leaved. Corol five-petal- led, no nectary. is. eed one-celled, three-valved; seeds many. Paronychia foliis ad Penicitta pie acutis, see umbellatis, Burm. Zeyl. 184. ¢. 65, f. 2. atti Telinga, Rajuma. Is a native of dry sandy lands, — Genrer all the year round. This would better form a separate genus than a species of Celosia ; é —s it is one of Jussieu’s or phyllee. Root perennial, Stem straight, frequently hetinabes, ated; jointed, reddish, covered with white down; about a foot high. Leaves opposite, sessile, linear, spreading, with fasci- cles of many smaller leaves in their axills. Stipules general- ly four-fold, ensiform, membranaceous. Umbels terminal, dichotomous, Calyx five-leaved ; leaflets lanceolate. Nec- tary, or rather corol, of five, obcordate petals, alternate with the stamens, Filaments inserted, alternate with the petals. Style short. Stigma three-lobed. Capsules three-sided, one-celled, three-valved, opening aso Cag, a Seeds from six to twelve or more, round, Cattle are not found of this species. Ba A BBE 5 6. C, polysperma, R. teoitt die Henke oy) _ Annual, Leaves oblong, smooth, Spikes axillary, Nee- 682 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Deeringia. tary with. only. five antheriferous divisions, Style three- cleft. Capsules bacciform, evalvular, many-seeded. A native of the Moluccas. It is an erect, smooth annual, with long, delicately thin leaves, * DEERINGIA. Brown. prodr. nov. holl. i. 413. Calyx five-leaved. Corol none. Filaments having their base united into a little cup. Germ one-celled, many-seed- ed; attachment inferior. . Berry one-celled, Seeds a few, attached by their proper cords to the bottom of the cell, _ 1. D. celosioides, Brown. loc. cit. Perennial, scandent, Leaves alternate, cordate. Spikes terminal, panicled. Styles three. . Berries three-seeded. Celosia baccata. Koen. in Retz. Obs. 5, 23. « Blitum fructescens: Rumph. Amb, v. 235, t. 83 ile #- Beng. Gola Mohunee. Hind. Lutmun, Found near. Calcutta, flowering i in the rains. | Root nearly, spindle-formed, large, perennial, Stems and branches one, two, or more fathoms long; perennial, climb- ing, striated, otherwise smooth, Leaves alternate, petioled, cordate, acute, entire. Spikes panicled, terminal, and from the exterior axills long, ascending. Flowers numerous, dis~ tinct. Calyelethree-leaved, bractiform. Filaments five, from the nectary ; anthers two-lobed. Styles three. In January I found a very large plant of this climbing over a small tree, of about sixteen or eighteen feet high, with few. leaves, but innumerable, beautiful, pendulous racemes loaded with small, smooth, bright red berries, each:contained when perfect, three small, black, flattened, roundish, kidney- shaped seeds in one distinct cavity of the berry. — ae % ee Paederia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 683 _ 2. D. (formerly Celosia. R.) tetragyna, R. Shrubby, scandent. Leaves ovate-cordate. Flowers axil- lary. Styles four-cleft, ish A native of the Moluccas, and from thence accidently in- troduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, amongst spice and other plants ; flowering time in Bengal, the cold season. - Stem ligneous, scandent ; young shoots pendulous, striated, smooth, Leaves altennnte, petioled, ovate-cordate, acumi- nate, somewhat. undulate, smooth on both sides; about two | inches long, and one broad. Petioles channelled.» Flowers axillary, from solitary to the being collected on small short- peduncled heads; they are small and of a pale-greenish white colour, Calya (1 would in this species rather say bractes,) three-leaved. Corol (rather calyx) five-leaved ; leaflets ob- _ tuse, and about as long as the stamens, NVectary with four or five, lengthened, antheriferous divisions. Germ four-lob- ed. Styles four, recurved, . Berry with from one to four lobes, smooth, when ripe red, succulent, size of a pea, con- taining from one to four reniform seeds, though one is: —_ far — the most common. — | PAEDERIA. Schreb. gen. N: 412. Calyx five-toothed. Corol tubular. . Germ: two-telled, one-seeded ; attuchment inferior. » Stigma two-cleft. Berry inferior, two-seeded, Embryo erect, and furnished with a -perisperm. é. 1. P. fetida. Willd, spec, i, 1219. . ii a Sa | Shrubby, twining. Leaves — mae ain —Pasicles axillary and terminal. Stamina inclosed. Berries com- Somaraji. Asiatic Res, iv. 261. Beng. Gundha badhulee. Hind, Gundali,. e ee Rumph, inks v. 436, t. 160. “si 684 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Paederia. Apocynum fetidum. Burm. Ind. p. 71. Is rather a rare plant, I have only found it in the vicinity of Calcutta, twining up and over trees, &c. Flowering time the beginning of the cold season. Its root is used by the Hindoos as an emetic. $54) Stem ligneous, twining; young parts round, smooth. Leaves opposite, long-petioled, oblong-cordate, pretty smooth, entire. Stipules broad-cordate. Panicles axillary and ter- minal, brachiate. Flowers numerous, of a deep pink colour. Bractes ovate, Calyx five-toothed. Corol; tube pretty long, somewhat gibbous, inside woolly, Border narrow, di- vided into five cordate, crenulate segments. Filaments short, inserted irregularly about themiddle of the tube, Anthers erect, within the tube. Germ inferior, turbinate, two-celled ; cells containing one ovulum each, attached to the bottom of the cell. Style single. Stigma two-cleft ; segments various, bent amongst the anthers. Berry dry, compressed, smooth, with five lines on each side ; one-celled, two-seeded, . Seeds compressed, smooth, enlarged with a somewhat membrana- ceous ring all round, Perisperm conform to the seed, but scanty. Embryo large, erect. Cotyledons round, cordate. Radicle short, inferior. 2. P. recurva, R. aetite: Shrubby. Leaves lanceolar, acuminate. Corymbs termi- — ual, recurved, = a ia’ slender shrubby species 5 a native of Chittagong, where ering in the hot season, ‘The seeds ripen in October and No- vember. _ Stem and branches erect ; young shoots round, and smooth. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, lanceolar, entire, acuminate, pretty smooth on both sides, about six inches long, and from two to three broad. Stipules as in the other rubiacea, with asubulate, pei. point. Corymbs terminal, recurved, brachi- : us, Br opposit ensiform, _ Calyx five-cleft, Paederia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 685 hairy; segments conic, permanent. Corol fannel-shaped. Tube the length of the botder, widening to the mouth, a lit- tle hairy on the outside. Border of five, contorted, oblique- ly oblong segments. Filaments searcely any. Anthers five, linear, erect, attached below the middle to the mouth of the tube of the corol, and their lower ends in it, Germ hairy, two-celled, with one ovu/wm in each, attached to the partition a little above its middle. Style the length of the tube of the corol. Stigma simple, linear-clavate, longer than the stami- na. Berry inferior, size and colour ofa black currant, when dry striated, crowned with the remaining calyx, two-celled. Seeds solitary, the outside convex ; on the inside a deep pit filled with the spongy receptacle. Integument single, thin, Perisperm conform to the seed, hard, dull white. Ambryo lodged in the middle of the convexity of the seed. © Cotyle- dons reniform. Radicle inferior. 3. P. areatil R. Shrubby, erect. Leaves HAG dokiile, broad-lanceolar, en- tire, Panicles in the terminal forks of the branchlets, erect. Stamina protruded. An erect, shrubby plant; a native of the Silhet district, It flowers in May and June; and the seeds ripen about the pod of the rainy and begcliiagr of the cold season. Stem short, erect. Bark smooth, ash-coloured. Branches round, smooth, and dichotomous. Leaves opposite, sub-ses- sile, broad-lanceolar, entire, smooth, ribbed with parallel veins underneath ; from three to four inches long, by one.and a half broad. Stipules interfoliaceous, as in other rubiacee. Panicles solitary in the fork of the branchlets, often longer than the leaves; thin, being composed of a few small, short, opposite ramifications. Flowers small, numerous, white, ino- dorous. Calyx superior, short, slightly five-toothed. Corol with a short tube which is woolly on the inside; segments of the border oblong. Filaments short, inserted on the tube of the corol, Anthers oval, scarcely exsert. am turbinate, 686 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Guettarda. two-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the inner, and lower angle of its cell, Style the length of the tube of the corol, Stigma two-lobed. Berry inferior, the size of a pea, when ripe smooth, shining, highly polished, black, two- celled ; one of the cells frequently abortive. Seeds solitary, with a very deep concavity on the inner or flat side. Integu- ment single, Perisperm conform to the seed, rather hard. Embryo lodged in the middle of the perisperm. sti Seri round, reniform. Radiele inferior. oe GUETTARDA. Sehrabs gen. Nz M437. ae Calyx sub-entire, Corol infundibuliform, with thie border . from five to eight-parted. Stamina from five to: eight. Drupe dry ; nut from five to eight:celled. Seed solitary. 1. G, speciosa, Willd. spec. iv. 398. ; Arboreous, unarmed, Leaves obovate. Cymes axillary, dichotomous, Flowers sessile, from seven to. eight-cleft, Drupes with as many seeds as ow in the border of the corol. 1O1 Cp MESA ~ Jasminum hirsutum, Wiild. i. p 36. Cadamba jasminifiora, v. Fleur. de St. — Sonutrdl 4. 2, p. 228. t. FB HF - Rava pu. Rheed, Mal. iv. 99. t. 47, aka 48, ~~ On the coast of Coromandel, it is only to be found in gar- dens, where it is raised from the seed, It is in flower all the | year round, and highly ornamental as well asfragrant, Iam not aware that it is used for any economical purposes, Trunk erect, straight, covered with smoothish, dark-colour- ed bark. Branches numerous, opposite, decussated, 'spread- ing, horizontal, forming a large beautiful, shady, evergreen’ — » Leaves opposite, petioled, nearly decussate, obovate, times cordate at the base; entire, smooth, from six to nine inches long, and from four to six broad. Petioles round, : coloures eens hee —_—_ ith . Carissa. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 687 in the leaves, oblong, spreading. Cymes opposite, axillary, long-peduncled, twice two-forked. Peduncles round, a little inflected, from three to four inches long. Bractes many, li- near, obtuse, caducous. Flowers sessile, from fifteen to twen- ty on the cyme, large, white, and exquisitely fragrant, par- taking much of the fragrance of cloves. Calyx cup-shaped, entire, permanent. Corol ; tube cylindric, an inch and a halt long. Throat woolly. Border from six to nine-cleft. Fila- ments none, Anthers.as many as there are divisions in the bor- der of the corol, linear, within the mouth of the tube. Germ inferior. ‘Sty/e a little shorter than the tube. Stigma nearly globose. Pericarp a dry drupe, nearly globose, pretty smooth, inwardly of a fibrous, woody texture, containing as many curved cells as there were anthers, or divisions in the border of the coro]. Seeds one in each od much — concave part of the curvature outward: en Obs. 1 have at various times examined many hundreds of the flowers of this tree, and never found any that were herma- phrodite. It agrees better in habit and in most other respects, the seed vessels excepted, with Gardenia than with any net genus I have met with, CARISSA. Schreb. gen. ON. 413. P Calyx five-toothed. Corol funnel-shaped. Germ superior, two-celled ; cells two to four-seeded; attachment interior, Berry two-celled, few-seeded. — inverse, and fur- ” nished with a perisperm, aapitia nC. = Chrandil, ‘Witla. spec. i. 1219, Roxb, Corom. 77. ‘Sub-arboreous. Thorns often two-forked. Leaves ellip- tic, obtuse, smooth. Corymbs terminal, few-flowered. Germ eight-seeded. Avinga, Krishna-pakphula, and Sanscrit aames'See with atic Res, iv. 263. e aba _ Telinga, Waaka, sania o 688 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Carissa, Tam. Kalaaha, It is also thus called by Europeans on the Coromandel coast, Beng. Kurumcha, A common, large shrub ; or irregularly formed small tree, growing in most wild, woody, dry, uncultivated parts. Flowering time February, March, and April, Fruit _— in July and August. Trunk, when it is of age to have one, irregularly bent in various directions. Bark gray. Branches and branchlets very numerous, always two-forked, and standing nearly at right angles, rigid, smooth, and round. Thorns constantly in pairs at the divisions of the branches and branchlets, and at every other pair of leaves, opposite, horizontal, very strong, smooth, and exceedingly sharp ; they are frequently forked, Leaves opposite, nearly sessile, oval, obtuse, smooth, hard, shining ; their insertions remarkably regular, generally one ‘pair below the fork, crossed with the thorns; and ano- ther pair between the forks, where there are no spines, » Pe- duncles terminal, generally in pairs, each less than an inch long, bearing from three to many, beautiful, milk-white, Jasmine-like flowers. Bractes, a small one at the insertion of each pedicel. Calyx, corol and stamens, as in the genus. Germ ovate, two-celled, with four ovula in each, attached to the thickened partition. Berry single, (never two, not even the rudiment of more than one,) size of a small plumb, but of a more lengthened form, when ripe of a shining black, two-celled. Seeds four in each cell when all come to matu-— rity, which is uncommon; oblong, compressed, concave oD ~ the inside, from the centre of the céncavity is the attachment to the large fleshy particular margins, thin. Integument single. Perisperm conform to the seed, white. Embry inverse, “Cotyledons nearly round. Radicle dine su- =. Obs, This plant makes exceedingly strong cee The um Sepia thorns, renders them almost iat ; Carissa. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, _ 689 The fruit just before ripe is employed to make tarts and preserves of various kinds, also to pickle, and by most people reckoned superior for these uses, to every other fruit in the country, not even the mango excepted, __ They are universally eaten by the natives when ripe, and are erable pleasant to the taste even ef a European. 2. C, diffusa, R. Shrubby, diffuse, armed branches dichotomous, Leaves sub-sessile, roundish-ovate-cordate, mucronate, polished, Flowers terminal, Germ four-seeded, Berries ovate. . Sans. Kurumudika, ' Telinga, Waakoyloo, Oorissa, San Kurunda. Is a native of the Ganjam district, and from thence cathe | ward to the mouth of the Hoogly. F hoa time the hot season. | . Stem scarcely any can be aecids but numerous, spread- , dichotomous. branches, forming a low, broad, rigid, See bush. _ Spines opposite, &c. as in C. Caranda, at the larger pairs of the leaves only, horizontal, simple, bifid, or twice-bifid. Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, the alternate pairs always larger, and. ovate-cordate, roundish, and without. spines; all are-entire, of a firm, polished, shining , texture, each ending in a short, subulate, somewhat recurved point. Corymbs terminal, rarely axillary, many-flowered. Flowers pure white, Calyx five-toothed, small. Corol funnel-shap- - ed; the upper half of the tube a little swelled. Border of of five, obliquely-lanceolate divisions, /%ilaments. five, in- serted rather below the middle of the tube of the corol ; an- thers oblong. Germ ovate, two-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the middle of the partition. Style half the length of the tube of the corol. Stigma double, the low- er half nearly round, the upper half more slender, and taper- a » Berries oval, pulpy, when ripe smooth, shining. black, VOL. Ie | Bs i gitic: 2 Sage eee 2 690 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Carissa, size of a French bean, two-celled, with two seeds in each, Seeds, perisperm and embryo as in C. Carandas. 3. C, villosa, R. Shrubby, tender parts villous. Leaves from broad-lan- ceolate to oblong-acute. Flowers terminal, subtern, or se- ven. Germ four-seeded, (two in each cell.) Several plants of this shrub have been long cultivated in the Botanic garden at Calcutta, but from whence, or how they got into the garden, has never been ascertained. Flowering time the same as the other species, viz. during the warmest time of the year, March, April, and May. This species seems perfectly distinct, and has much less to recommend it than either Carandas, or diffusa, In most respects it agrees pretty well with Vahl’s description of C. edulis. The follow- ing description will, however, point out some difference. Siem rather weak, and leaning considerably, soon divid- ing into several, rather slender, dichotomous, ‘flexuose branches. Bark of the ligneous parts spongy, and deeply cracked ; that of the young shoots villous. Thorns opposite, at the forks of the branches, and in all other parts at every second, straight, strong, very sharp, and less frequently compound than in the other two species just mentioned. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, and broad-lanceo- — late, acuminate, soft with down, particularly while young, — from one to two inches long, and rarely more than one broad. rules small, and only present where the spines are. Flow~ are térnial, tern, or twice tern, small, white. Calyx ; seg- ments lanceolate, acute, villous. Tube of the corol a little curved, swelled near the mouth. Border of five, linear-lan- ceolate, acute segments. Stamina lodged in the swelling of the tube. Germ conic, two-celled, with two ovula in each, attached to the partition, Style shorter than the tube. Stig- poh evilloms, bidentate ae —— nina the Cerbera. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 691 cell, shape various, concave on the inside, convex on the ex- terior, Jnteguments single; light brown, and rather rough, Perisperm conform to the seed, white, amygdaline. Embryo ‘inverse, white. Cotyledons roundish, Radicle cylindric, length of the cotyledons, superior. A. C. axillaris, R. Shrubby, armed with simple, opposite, recurved spines. . Leaves short-petioled, oblong. Corymbs peduncled, axillary, many-flowered. A native of the Moluccas. CERBERA. Schreb. gen. N. 415. Calyx five-parted. Corol funnel-shaped, Germ two-lob- ed; lobes two-celled ; cells two-seeded ; attachment interior. Diupes superior, one or two singly, one-seeded. Embryo inverse, without peri : 1. €. fraricien. R. ‘Shrubby, dichotomous, Leaves broad- lanceolar. Corymbs terminal. Drupes obliquely urn-shaped, and gaping. From Pegu this elegant shrub has been introduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it is in constant blos- som. The flower like those of Vinca rosea, but larger, and faintly fragrant; it is in fact one of the most ornamental - shrubs in the garden: Stem short, soon dividing, and sub-dividing into many, straight, round, smooth, dichotomous branches Handi branch- lets, Leaves opposite, often remote, short-petioled, from ob- long to lanceolate, entire, smooth, acuminate, about five or six inches Jong, and from two to three broad, Stipules inter- foliaceous, acute. Corymbs terminal when they first appear ; but long before the whole of the blossoms expand, a branch- let shoots forth on each side and places t them in the fork ; di- _ visions sub-trichotomous and short. Flowers large, sib Rr2 692 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Cerbera. of the tube lively red, the rest a bright lively pink,somewhat | fragrant, and highly ornamental. Bractes opposite, triangu- lar, acute. Calyx five-leaved ; leaflets oblong, smooth, per- manent, a smooth eland on the apex of each. _Corol infun-. dibuliform. Tube nearly two inches long, and equally slen- der, except near the apex, where it swells considerably, mouth highly coloured and hairy. Border of five, obovate- . oblong, equal segments. Filaments five, short, inserted round the bottom of the swelled top of the tube, .nthers Sagittate, entirely hid’ within the mouth of the tube. Germ two, villous, on the sides where they meet, a small subulate seale covering the fissure on each side, singly two-celled, with one ovulum in each, attached to the middle of the par- tition, Style nearly as long as the tube, Stigma large, with a two-lobed apex, which is lodged in the dome formed by the converging of the sagittate anthers. _Drupe (in this rather capsule) generally solitary, obliquely urn-shaped, size of the first joint of the little finger, villous and veined, dark greenish purple, apex truncate, sloping much to the inner side, with a slit down the middle, semi-two-valved, opening up the inside and along the apex, one-celled. Pulp scarce- ly any, the whole substance being thin and somewhat fibrous, Seeds solitary, ovate-oblong. Jntegument single, white, pret- ty thick, and soft, Perisperm none. Embryo erect. Cotyle- dons conform to the seed, of a pale: yeliovrish colour, Ra- fick, orals, ER PTION- : 2.6. idole. Gert. Carp. ii. 193.1 t 124. piso 8 Leaves alternate, lanceolate, with transverse nerves, smooth, : p Corymbs terminal, divisions of the calyx linea and 5 reyo- ute. : _Odallam. Rheed, ‘Mali i. 71. t. 39... But chat 5 ae america 150. 1. 70. 6 he ig without. doubt a different Ophiorylon, _— PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 693 A pretty large tree, a native of salt swamps near r the shores , of various parts of India, yet it thrives well in the sweet and comparatively rich soil of the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where the trees are fully as large as the largest pear trees, and in flower and seed the whole year, The wood is remarkably soft, spongy and white, the bark on the young, generally trichotomous shoots polished, deep green. Leaves alternate, and crowded about the ends of the branchlets, short-petioled, lanceolar, firm and polished. Co- rymbs terminal, Flowers large, white and fragrant. Bractes and calycine segments linear and revolute, Coro/ infundi- buliform; segments of the border sub-triangularly falcate, in the bud imbricated. Stamina enclosed. Germ two-lobed, each lobe with a groove on the outside, and containing: two cells, with two ovula in each, attached to the partition, I ne- ver saw more than one of the lobes come to maturity, and that with rarely more than one seed, the other cell proving abor- tive. The style is slender, and the stigma in this species is remarkably large, conical, resting in a saucer-shaped recep-. — tacle, the circumference fluted with ten grooves, and the apex two-cleft. _Gertner’s description and figures of the mature seed vessel and seed, are so good as to render any a | Surther unnecessary. 3. C. maculata. Willd. spec. ii, 1223. Leaves sub-verticelled, oblong, tapering most toward the base, smooth, veined. Drupes acuminate. : Ochrosia. Jussieu. gen. plant. 161. Found by Colonel Hardwicke indigenous on the Island of Mauritius, in seed in “September. From his specimens the above definition is taken. - OPHIOXYLON. Schreb. gen. N. 1578. " Cabjs five-toothed, Corol funnel-shaped. bon two- celled ; cells one-seeded ; attachment inferior, Berries twin, Rr3 694 _ PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. = Ophioxylon. superior, slightly united, each one-seeded. Embryo inverse, and furnished with a perisperm. 1, O, serpentinum, Willd, iv. 979, Tsiovanna-Amel-Podi. Rheed. Mal. vi. 81. t. 47. Radix Mustela. Rumph. Amb, vii. 29. t. 16. Sans. Chundrika, Churmuhuntree, Pushoomehunukarika, Nundunee, Karuvee, Bhudra, Vasoopooshpa, Vasura, Chun- drushoora. Beng. Chandra. Hind, Ch’hota-chand, Telinga. Patalganni. This, in a rich soil, is a large climbing or twining shrub ; in a poor soil, small and erect, It is a native of the Circar mountains. In my garden it flowers all the year round. — Stem woody, erect, climbing, or twining. Bark ash-co- _ loured. Leaves three or five-fold, short-petioled, oblong, pointed, waved, entire, smooth ; from four to five inches long, and about two broad. Stipules none. Fascicks axillary, pe- duncled, many-flowered. Peduncles long, smooth, round, sometimes nearly erect, sometimes drooping. Pedicels and calyces of a bright red colour, which with the white flowers, gives the haw a very pretty appearance, The Hermapnropite Fiowers, indeed I never could | _ discover any other, are well described in the Genera Planta- rum, except that the corol is always contracted. Germ sa- perior, two-lobed, with one ovulum in each, attached to the inner and lower corner of the cell, Berry t two-lobed, smooth, shining black, and succulent when ripe ; ‘lobes the size of a pea, aah: one-celJed. Seed solitary, somewhat ie nee Integuments two, the exterior one nuciform, most pointed at the base, hard, thick, and rugose, the inner one a fine mem- - brane, adhering to the perisperm. Perisperm conform to the seed, greenish white. Embryo inverse, straight, nearly as long S, mb ocak Nona cone round, cordate, i Hunteria. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 695 Obs. The want of the nuciform, bony, exterior ‘integument of the seed in Geertner’s O, trifoliatum, ii. 129, induces me to think his cannot be the same, yet I know of no other to compare his with, ' ~ The root of this plant is employed for the cure of various disorders by the Telinga physicians. First, in substance, in- wardly, as a 5 atl oe Secondly, in the same manner, after the bite of poisonous animals. The juice is also expressed, and dropt into the eye, for the same purpose. And thirdly, it is administered, in substance, to promote delivery in tedious cases, HUNTERLA. R. Calyx five-parted. Corol infundibuliform, _ dake two- lobed ; /obes one-celled, two-seeded ; attachment of the ovula eiaievior. Berries two, pedicelled, one-celled, one or two- seeded. * ‘ soe Bl eta i ° a8 =A tree, a native of Prince of Wales’ Island, where it blos- soms in July ; in Bengal, i in May; butin the latter piece ithas not ripened its seed, Leaves opposite, short-petioled, shame and lanceolate, ob- tuse, pointed, entire, smooth on both sides, from three to four inches long, and one or two broad. Stipules none, but a swelling on the inside of the base of the petiole. Corymbs terminal, decussate. #/Jowers numerous, small, white, Ca- lyx one-leaved, five- parted, permanent, segments ¢ ovate, Co- rol ‘one-petioled, funnel-shaped. Tube two or three times longer than the calyx, gibbous at the base, and swelled a lit- tle at the mouth, Border contorted, five-parted, divisions obliquely ovate-oblong, i in the bud spirally imbricated. Nee- tary a fleshy ring round the base of the germ. Filaments five, very short. Anthers ovate, lodged in the swelled part of the tube, just within its mouth. Germ superior, ovate, Rr4 696 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Webera. two-lobed, two-celled, with two ovula in each, attached with their base to the bottom of the partition. Sty/e nearly the length of the tube of the corol. Stigma ovate, short, with a two-lobed apex. Berries two, perfectly distinct, singly some- what of a roundish ovate shape, short-pedicelled, size of a cherry, pulpy, when ripe orange-coloured, one-celled. Seeds two in each berry. : Obs. The whole of the generic character of this plant, agrees so well with that of Carissa, as it stands in the various _ editions of the Genera Plantarum that I have seen, (Jussieu 5 excepted) as to leave no doubt with those, who stijl may think two berries are the produce of one flower in that genus, that this ought to be considered a species thereof, But in all the In- dian species of Carissa,* that 1 have yet met with, the peri- carpium is uniformly single. As therefore this plant cannot be placed in the same family, I think it better to continue the former generic name (Carissa,) to the well known thorny plants described under that genus, for 1 have not yet met — with any of the unarmed species, consequently cannot say what their pericarps may be. I consider this to be a well defined, perfectly distinct genus, and have named it after Dr. William Hunter of the Bengal Medical Establishment, an eminent Botanist, and author of various papers in the 4st- atic Researches, of the History of Pegu, &c. He was pa first discoverer of this ay plant, _WEBERA. Schreb. gen. N. 1733. : Cah rye five-parted, Corol funnel-shaped. Germ inferior, two-celled ; cells few, or many-seeded ; attachment interior. Berry lociler cells few, or many-seeded, Embryo cc cen- tripetal, and farisiahedt with a perisperm, : | . Ww. corymbosa AT ih epee, i, 1224. Gert, for. 3. 7. 3 t, 102, ‘a “Eh he de ain al dri : Webera, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 697 Shrubby. Leaves from lanceolar to oblong, glossy. Co- rymbs terminal. Calyx five-parted, and nearly as long as the tube of the corol. Capsules few-seeded. Rondeletia asiatiea, Linn. suppl. 244. Cupi. Rheed, Mal. ii, 37, t, 23. Beng. Kunkra. A pretty large, erect, unarmed, ramous shrub, common on most parts of the Coromandel coast. : : Leaves opposite, petioled, broad-lanceolar, margins reflex- _ ed, smooth, deep shining g green, with hairy glands in the axills of the large veins; six or seven inches long, aud about two and a half broad. Stipules interfoliaceous, as in the other spe- cies, Corymbs terminal, large, divided by three. Flowers small, very numerous, white, faintly fragrant. Calya, corol, and stamens as in the genus. Germ turbinate, two-celled, with from six to nine ovuda in each, attached to the thickened centre of the partition. Berry the size of a large pea, when ripe smooth, shining black, two-celled. Seeds from four to eight in each cell, Embryo furnished with a perisperm, and centripetal radicle, The extremities of the young shoots are afin found cover- ed with a white resinous matter. A substance of the same nature and appearance is to be found on the — of most of - the Pao of Gardenia known to me. 2. W. macrophylla. R. Shrubby. Leaves ited: lanceolar. Panicle terminal. Co- rols with a long slender tube, Berries many seeded. os sbrubby species, found by Mr. W, Roxburgh, aaigee: ous on Prince of Wales’ Island, fs Young shoots somewhat villous. Leaves opposite, short- petioled, broad-lanceolar, entire, acuminate; from six to eighteen inches long, and from four to five boui: Stipules angular, &e. as in the Rubiacea of Jussieu. Panicles termi- nal, very large, brachiate, villous. Bractes subulate, villous. Fi —— large, white, Calyx divided into five, short, acute, 698 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Webera. villous segments. Corol ; tube cylindric, long, slender and vil- © lous ; segments of the border five, obliquely Jncos aacile, aasiseds than thetube. Filaments short, rising above the mouth of the tube. .Anthers filiform, nearly as long as the segments of the corol, Germ oval, two-celled, with many ovua in each, attached to an elevated receptacle on the centre of the parti- tion. Style longer than the tube of the corol, villous, Stigma clavate. Berry the size of a pea, two-celled, Seeds many in each cell, from six to twelve, angular, &c. as in W. corym- bes Gert, carp. 3. t. 192. ot W. scandens. R. Shrubby, scandent, glossy, Leaves oblong, cymes axillary, Stigma of two oval plates. . Gujer-kota, the vernacular name in Silhet, where it is s indi- ~ genous, It flowers in April. Stem and branches ligneous, scandent ; ; young shoots polish- ed, as is every tender part of the plant. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, long, entire, acuminate, glossy, about six inches long, and from two to three broad. Stipules as in the rest of the Rubiacea, Cymes axillary, and in the forks of the branchlets, solitary, divisions generally bi-ternate. lowers large, infundibuliform, fragrant, when they first open white, but like the Gardenias become yellow by the second day, Calyx sub-campanulate, five-toothed. Corol with a long, slen- der tube ; segments of the border five, obliquely oblong. An- thers eek sessile on the mouth of the tube. Germ inferior, oval, two-celled, with many ovula i in each, attached to an ele- vated receptacle on the centre of the partition. Style the length of the tube of the corol, Stigma of two, thin, oval la- mina, ae A: WwW. oppositifolia. - Shrubby. _ Leaves ancuilacssblace: firm. and oan Pa- we toa ep ecenrtt of a few ssi peat z ha ; ate? : e" newe se : apege Alyxia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 699 : recurved spikes, Corols with a short, woolly-mouthed tube. Stigma clavate, entire. A native of Chittagong, where it blossoms in April. 5. W. odorata, R. Shrubby. Leaves lanceolar, polished, acuminate. Corymbs terminal. Ca/yzx five-toothed. Patugrooja, the vernacular name in Silhet, where it is indi- genous, and grows to the size of a large shrub, or small tree. Flowering time the hot season, when the air is perfumed with the fragrance of its blossoms. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, lanceolar, acuminate, en- tire, polished, from four to eight inches long, by from one to two broad. Stipules triangular, Kc. as in the order. Corymbs terminal, trichotomous ; ramifications villous. Flowers nu- merous, middle-sized, white, and very fragrant. Bractes op- posite, sub-lanceolate, villous, Ca/yx poculiform, mouth five- toothed, Corol with the tube twice the length of the calyx ; border of five, spreading, linear-falcate seoments, which are longer than the tube. Filaments five, very short. Anthers subulate, nearly as long as the segments of the border of the capil ieee which they spread, Germ inferior, short, turbinate, two-celled, with three or four ovula in each, attached to the thickened middle of the partition. Style and stigma together longer than the corol, of a clavate-subulate shape. } ALYXIA. Banks. Calyx fiye-toothed. Corol hypocrateriform. Germ 0 lobed ; lobes one-celled, few-seeded ; attachment interior. Berries two, pedicelled, one-seeded, Embryo tte ae echinate, lobed perisperm. ek A, stellata, R. " Shrubby, often twining. Leaves tern, and quatern, hee lanceolate, polished. Gers terminal, simple, recurved, 700 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Alyzxia: Gynopogon stellatum. Forst, Prod. n. 47. Willd, spec. i. - 1221? Pulassarium. Rumph. Amb. v. p. 32. t. 20. A native of Amboyna, and from thence brought to the Botanic garden at Calcutta in 1798, where it thrives well, ‘blossoms about the close of the rains in September, and ri- pens its fruit in the cool season. Trunk scarcely any, but many, long, twining, straggling, or scandent branches as they meet with support. Bark of the ligneous parts ash-coloured, of the young shoots smooth, | deep green. Every part abounds in a milky juice. Leaves tern, or quatern, short-petioled, oblong, or oblong-lanceo- late, entire, of a deep shining green on both sides; with very slender, divereine: parallel veins; length from thiee’td six inches. Stij-zles, a small scale between the petioles. Flow- ers many, small, pure white, collected in small, for the most part, terminal, cymose fascicles, Bractes short, cordate, ri- gid. Calyx deeply five-parted. Corol ; tube swelled at the base, and a little below the mouth where the stamens are_ lodged, divisions of the border nearly round, in the bud im- pitched! Filaments short. Anthers sagittate, just within the mouth of the tube. Germ two-lobed, and with care se- parable without violence, each lobe one-celled, and contaim- ing three or four ovula, attached to the corol. Stigma slight- ly two-lobed. Berries two, when both prove fertile, which is rarely the case, short-pedicelled, oval, size of a small cher- ry, smooth, with a groove on the inside from the blunt-point- ed apex to the base, when ripe yellowish. Pulp i in very” small quantity ; one-celled. Ihave frequently found pro- liferous berries, that is a second, on a short pedicel, growipgs from the apex of the first, as in the genus Anosa, Seed con- form to the berry. Integuments single, thin but hard and elastic, approaching to nuciform ; from the middle of the i in- side a vertical lamina projects sab tiaras into the seed, then ‘oceeds in opposite directions, | like the rece} Y- onia (see Gert, sem, ii, t, m4) to these the Ophiorrhiza, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 701 ' perisperm is attached, ein conform to the seed, in the centre a thin portion thereof forms an entire sac, or cavi- ty for the embryo, the rest is divided into innumerable, di- verging, fleshy, cuneiform lobes ; colour greenish, becoming white, texture fleshy. Embryo erect, straight, nearly as the perisperm, Cotyledons lanceolar. Radicle sub-cylindric, inferior, 7 Obs. I am inclined to think that this may be Forster’s Gynopogon stellatum, or another species of the same genus ; (now Alywxia; see Brown’s Prodromus, Nov. Holl. i. 469.) and I conclude he had not an opportanity of making him- self acquainted with the carpology of the genus. Until I met with the fruit I considered it a Rawwolfia ; but am now sa- tisfied it cannot belong to that family. To what natural’ or- der? A poner ? OPHIORRHIZA. Schreb. gen. N. 273. Calyx five-toothed. “Corol funnel-shaped, Germ inferior, two-celled ; ce//s many-seeded ; attachment to a sub-inferior, free, clavate receptacle. Stigma bifid, Capsule two-lobed, two-celled. Seeds numerous, angular, 1. O. Mungos. Willd. i. ‘826, , . Leaves opposite, elliptic, smooth, Corymbs Seat Radix Mungo. Kempf. Amoen, 573 and 577. Leaves opposite, petioled, oblong, entire, pointed, in tex- ture remarkably thin, length from four to six inches, Pe- tioles short, villous. Stipules, aslight connecting mem- brane, Corymbs terminal, many-flowered, Calyx supe- rior, one-leaved, five-toothed, permanent. Corol one-petal- Jed, funnel-shaped ; tube short ; border five-parted ; divisions oblong, hairy on the inside, pointed. Nectary a thick, two- __ lipped, fleshy body crowning the germ between the base of the stamens and style. Filaments five, very short, inserted onthe base of the tube, 4nthers linear, erect, nearly bid 702 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Ophiorrhiza, in the tube of the corol. Germ beneath, turbinate. Style as long as the stamens. Stigma two-lobed. Capsule ob- verse reniform, totally compressed, (two-lobed) ; on the out- side five ribs run down from the divisions of the calyx, mter- nally divided into two cells by a transverse partition, open- ing between the remains of the two fleshy nectarial lips, _ Receptacle sub-cylindric, free, aftixed to the partition near | its base. Seeds very numerous, angular. Obs, From my own knowledge, I can say nothing of the virtues, that have been by various authors ascribed to the root of this plant. Indeed I am rather inclined to look upon the whole t to be a fiction, 2. 0. willond. R. Suffructicose, erect, villous. Leaves from oyate-oblong * to lanceolar. Corymbs terminal, long-peduncled, villous. A native of shaded, moist places amongst the hills of Chit- tagong; where it blossoms in May, and the seed ripens in three or four months. Stems a few inches hich, simple, eabsdigeied es while young hairy. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, entire, veins many, large, parallel, and hairy ; from three to four inches long, and one or two broad. Stipules ensiform, villous. Corymbs terminal, solitary, rather long-peduncled, sub-glo- - bular, rough, with ferruginous pubescence, composed of a few recurved, short, villous branches, with the numerous, white, sub-sessile flowers on the upper, or convex side there- of. Calyx hairy, five-toothed. Corol fannel-shaped. Tube the length of the five segments, its mouth shut with hairs. Filaments five, inserted on the bottom of the tube of the corol, Anthers linear, erect. Nectary a fleshy bilabiate body on the top of the germ embracing the base of the style, as in O. Mungos. Germ turbinate, inferiét, two-celled, with | humerous ovula in each, attached to two large, free recepta- cles which are attached to the base of the partition, Style the length of the tube of the corol. Stigma large, two-lob- Gardenia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 703. ed, villous. Capsule two-lobed, transverse, breadth twice the height, two-celled, opening round. the apex. Seeds, &e. as in O. Mungos, Gert, Carp. i. 264, t. 55, 7 GARDENIA. Schreb. gen. N. 416. | Calyx with the divisions uncertain. Corol funnel-shaped, Germ inferior, one-celled, with numerous ovula, attached to two or more parietal receptacles. Berry one-celled, many- seeded. Embryo furnished with a perisperm, directions va- rious, 3 With Jussieu, Lamarck, Geertner and others, I have at last Separated the Gardenias with a one-celled seed vessel and parietal receptacles from those which are two-celled, with the receptacles attached to the partition. To those still called Gardenia belong the following unarmed species, viz. G. flo- rida, calyculata, costata, latifolia, arborea, lucida, gummi- Jera, tetrasperma, montana, and the two arnied species, tur- gida, and campanulata, And to the latter ( Posoqueria) belong wliginosa, dumetorum, nutans, longispina, fragrans, Sasticulata, and longiflora, all of which are armed, — SECT. I. Unarmed. 1. G. florida, Willd. spec. i, 1225. | _ Shrubby, unarmed. Leaves oval, acute at both Soda Berries long, turbinate, with as many sharp ridges as there are divisions in the calyx. , Sans. Gandhuraja, Beng. Gundhuraj. ; -Catsjopiri. Rumph, Amb. vii. i. 26. t. 4. sf 2. A large, very ramous shrub, found in gardens about Cal-. cutta, and originally from China, Thunberg’s description of it is the best. I have seen, I can only add that the flowers are axillary for the most part, and that in the calyx I have always found a small inflected tooth- 704 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Gardenia, like process at the bottom of each fissure, which exists also in that of the ripe berry, The seeds nestle in a firm, deep orange-coloured pulp, which is a substance employed for dyeing in some parts of Iudia. To distinguish it from Gardenia sulcata, Gert. carp. iii. p. 78. tab. 194, 1 will add the following account of the fruit of this species. Germ turbinate, from five to six, acute-an- gled ; at the base from three to five-celled ; above one-celled, with from three to five parietal receptacles, to which the nu- merous ovula are attached. Berry oblong, orange-coloured, smooth, the size of a pigeon’s egg, down the sides run six equi-distant ribs, a continuation of the permanent, ensiform segments of the calyx, one-celled. Receptacles generally four, projecting from the lining of the cell to about one-fourth of its diameter, when they divide into two or more portions. Seeds numerous, nidulant in orange pulp, roundish, a little compressed, rugose ; ‘mode of ‘attachment on the ripe fruit obscure, FPerisperm conform to the seed, pale... Embryo — straight, nearly as long as the perisperm. Cotyledons two, cordate. Radice straight, pointing to, very near to the um- bilicus, 3 SEC oe 2. G. ealyculata, R. | Arboreous. Leaves petioled, ovate, acuminate, smooth, Flowers terminal, solitary, sessile, germ involuered: _Caly- cine segments ensiform, _Authers within the swelling tube of — the five-cleft corol, _ : : BPE: Sad ‘Native place uncertain ; some -thictis years: ago, it was brought from Hydradad to Lord Pigot at Madras, who planted it in his garden there, where it was pointed . out to me by Lady Clive in. 1798. The flowers are lanes alse, and like most of the genus, Gatows rier S _ G. costata, R, Gardenia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 705 Berry Mra pRboows, oval, five-ribbed, one-celled, shell two- valved, \ A native of the mountainous + parts of India, From those of Chittagong, it has been introduced into the Botanic garden at Calcutta; where, in ten or twelve years it has arrived to the size of a small elegant tree, It blossoms in April, and the seeds take nearly one year to ripen. Trunk straight, in twelve years old trees sakes laches circumference, The branches expand but little, the bark of the ligneous parts is smooth and ash-coloured, that of the young shoots round, and somewhat harsh, with short, adpressed hairs ; whole height from ten to twenty feet.. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, and cuneiform-oblong, smooth, when _ young resinous, entire, pointed ; veins numerous, large, and parallel ; length from six to twelve inches, and the breadth from three to five, Stipules interfoliaceous, supporting the leaves, Flowers terminal, or nearly so, very large, the tube being above three inches Jong, and the horder above four in diameter ;, when they first expand at day-break, they are white, but in the course of the day change to a pretty deep yellow, powerfully fragrant, Calyx cylindric ; mouth irre- gularly divided into five, lobes outside resinous, and strong- ly marked with five, very. prominent angles, caducous.. ; (a my lucida, which this resembles most, it is permanent, smooth, on the outside, and deeply divided into five uniform segments.) Corol; tube cylindric; border .of five obliquely ovate seg- ments, -Anthers five, sessile, completely within the mouth of. the tube, of two filiform lobes. Germ clavate, fiye-angled, and one-celled, with numerous ovula attached totwo opposite receptacles, rising from. the sides of the cell, as in Geertner’ s figure of Chironia baccifera, carp. 2, 1.114. Style the Tength, - of the tube, Stigma rather above the tube, large, and con-. sisting of two variously grooved lobes, Berry drapaceous, oblong, ventricose, smooth, yellow; five strong vertical ribs run its whole length, Pulp yellow, soft. and rather foetid, one-celled, ‘Shalt thick, ie and two-valved. Seeds nu- VOL, I. - 706 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Gardenia. merous, small, shape very irregular, but always much flatten- ed, nidulant in dark-coloured, soft pulp. It is only in the germ that their insertion can be clearly traced. — Intequment hard and two-valved. Perisperm soft. Embryo straight, nearly as long as the perisperm. Cotyledons ovate. Radicle as long’ as the cotyledons, and pointing directly to the umbi- licus which is generally the most pointed end of the seed. 4. G, latifolia, Willd. spec. i, 1226. ~ Arboreous, unarmed. Leaves opposite, or tern, ini ovate. lowers terminal, three-fold, sessile, from eight to nine-cleft. Berry = — hem, one-celled, five- — valved. ' Hind, Papara, © Gardenia enneandra. Konig’s Mss. Telinga, Caringua. ~ Is a native of barren rocky hills both in the Citcare, and Carnatic, like the other species it flowers about the beginning of the hot season, and the seeds take nearly one year to ripen, By slow growth it becomes a small tree, with sub-erect branches, covered with smooth, ash-coloured bark. | Leaves either opposite, or three-fold, ina good soil always three-fold, nearly sessile, inserted into the stipulary ring, obovate, entire, _ of a deep shining greenon the upper side, paler on the lower; veins many and large, running parallel; in their axills are hollow glands, with hairy margins ; from six to twelve inches Jong. Stipules annular within the leaves, splitting irregular- ly when old. Flowers one, two, three, or four, at the extre- mities of the branchlets, very large, very fragrant ; when they first open in the morning white, gradually growing yellow before night. Peduncles short, one-fiowered. Calyx small, jiregularly divided. Corol; tube long, cylindric, smooth. Border large, spreading, from seven to eleven-cleft, divisions - obliquely f oblong, the length of the tube. . Filaments none. _ Anthers « nding with the number of segments in the = ‘una Pie eerie pointed at — heliseeunee” Gardenia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 707. ed in the tube, the other half above its mouth. Germ oblong, one-celled, containing numerous ovula, attached to five parie- tal receptacles. Berry the size of a pullet’s egg, nearly round, crowned, with a small part only of the tube of the calyx, ‘which makes me suspect Gertner’s G, latifolia, vol. iii. p, 78, must belong to a different species, That my plantis the original latifolia 1 know well, as 1 was with Kénig when he first discovered it, Colour at all times a cineritious greenish yellow, a little scabrous, one-celled, and the internal, nuci- form portion five-valved, Seeds very numerous, attached to five parietal receptacles. —. Obs, This species is very denéeiciste of. notice. Its large, while young, glossy, green leaves, independent of the size, beauty and fragrance of the flowers, render it very orna- mental. a “be Go lucida, Ri. : itis 4 Sub-arboreous, unarmed, erect, gems resinous, Leaves oblong, smooth, bard, and lucid, with simple parallel veins. Divisions of the calyx subulate. Tube of the corol cylindric, three times the length of the calyx, border five-parted. Ber- _ ries drupaceous, with a two-valved cell, A native of Chittagong and various other parts of India. It is in flower and fruit the greater part of the year. ~ Trunk short, and straight, Branches numerous, opposite, decussate, ascending, covered with smooth, ash-coloured bark ; young shoots round, smooth, and generally incrusted _ with a little yellow resin, a bright yellow drop of which is often found.on the gems. Leaves opposite, short-petioled, oblong, smooth ; margins interior and waved ; rather obtuse- pointed, hard to the feel, both surfaces polished ; nerves nu- merous, parallel, and simple; about six inches long, and about three broad. Stipu/es annular, within the leaves; mouth variously divided into unequal, obtuse segments. Pe- duncles terminal, and above the axills,solitary, round, clavate, smooth, from half an inch toan inch long, supporting a sim imple ~ $s2 708. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNITA, Gardenia. beautiful, large, pure white, fragrant flower. Calyz five- cleft. Segments ensiform, with the mareims incurved, so as become subulate; permanent. Coro/ ; tube cylindric, smooth, from one to two inches long, which is more than twice the length of the calyx. . Border five-parted ; divisions oblique- ly obovate-oblong, about the length of the tube. Filaments none. Anthers five, -very long, slender and acute, half bid in the tube of the corol, and affixed by their backs to its mouth. Germ oblong, even, one-celled, containing numerous ovula attached to two parietal receptacles, Style length of the tube of the corol.. Stigma clavate, exert. Berry drupace- ous oblong,.size of a pigeon’s egg, smooth, crowned with the permanent calyx, one-celled, its inner lamina of a bony hard- ness, turning into the cell on op posite sides, but soon separat- ed into two receptacles each. Seeds numerous, attached to the just mentioned receptacles. Perisperm conform to the _ seed. Embryo with two cordate Wises _ a — dric radicle pointing to the umbilicus. oo ae Obs, The total want of pubescence, structure of the sti- pules, length of the calyx, and sharpness of its divisions, dis- tinguish this from G. gummifera, which it most resembles, _ 6, G, arborea. R. Rie eae unarmed, , gree antsy: Flowers ter- minal, often three-fold subsséssilej tube filiform ; border five- parte are ae even; shell four or fivecvalvot Pag Ganges fee tebapidis. pies ane me ahh A native of the Circar wioulitaiads Its leaves are decidu- ous during the cold season, and it: continues naked till the hot season is pretty far advanced. Flowering time the be- ginning of the hot season while the tree is naked of leaves. : From the buds and wounds made in the bark there exudes bernitl es pew like ome —_ ——- — ‘ Gardenia, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, . 709 flowers of this species, renders it more deserving of a place in our gardens thau any species I know ; 1 may even say, than G, florida, The natives eat the ripe fruit. AG. saeaitea. Sian Suppl, 164, ‘eo. ' Shrubby, with resinous gems. Leaves oblong, obtuse- pointed, Divisions of the calyx ovate, acute, and very short,. Tube of the.corol as long as the divisions of its border. __Native of Sescenuiel: : In a specimen in the Banksian herbarium, the divisions of the alr are stene slender, and acute, % G. staat R, a Shrubby. Leaves enh a ce smooth. Flowers axillary, solitary, short-peduncled, pentandrous. Calycine segments subulate, Berry round, four-seeded, —_ 7 Found by Colonel Hardwicke on the mountains near Shree-. nugur, See Asiatic Researches, vi, 354, __ eel _- anlis fe SEC T. IL. Armed. “9. ‘G. montana, R, : : _ Arboreous. Leaves oblong-ventricose, downy ae est | saahina’. short-peduncled, Stamens within the belly o of the tube. Berry drupaceous, sub-rotund ; shell from five to six- valved. wie ae Tella kakisha, sii As Famous tree ; armed with stron g, short, acute, thorns; a gece of the. er mountains, Leaves decidu- — ous in December. It flowers about the beginning of the hot season, viz. in March and April, soon after which the leaves | appear, Bark white, soft and ; ee ey. & , Thorns. above the axills, opposite, spr addin . abarps sometimes they are wanting. Leaves ¢ bp poss _ young shoots, fascicled on the older, nearly sessile, 0 i dy 9 ce “ak ee Be 5 Bid os ret ih : } $f, 710 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Gardenia, obtuse, entire, with the margins revolute, above shining and smooth, a little downy underneath, three inches long, by two broad. Stéipuf/es annular, within the leaves, membranous. Flowers three, four, five, or six, from little buds about the extremities of the naked branchlets, pretty large, very fra- grant, when first open white, but soon becoming more or less yellow. Peduncles short, one-flowered. Calyx small, some- what five-toothed, permanent. Corol; tube short, some- what gibbous; throat smooth. Border from five to seven- cleft ; divisions wedge-shaped, emarginate. Filaments none. — Anthers in number equal to the segments of the border of the — flowers, linear, entirely within the tube. NVectary a moni- fiform, fleshy ring surrounding the insertion of the style. The stigma just appears within the tube. Berry the size of a ~ pullet’s egg, scabrous, ash-colour and yellow mixed ; an ex- terior, pulpy cortex covers a hard bony shell which imme- diately encloses the seeds with their pulpy nidus, it is one- celled, five or six-valved, and the incurved edges of the valves form the parietal receptacles for the seeds, 10. G. campanulata. R. Shrubby, armed. Leaves lanceolar, ‘iidvoth Flowers in - terminal and lateral fascicles, Calya five-toothed. Corot campanulate ; border five-cleft. Berry round. ) A native of the forests of Chittagong. Flowering t time eo month of March ; seed ripe in November. Trunk ‘straight, but short, soon dividing < and suai into numerous, stiff, erect, and spreading branches. Bark of the old parts brownish green, and pretty smooth ; that of the” tender parts lighter sarourea | height of the “ee in five” years, from five to ten feet. Thorns single, short, strong, and sharp, they generally terminate the little, lateral, “opposite branchlets, Leaves opposite, short- petioled, broad-lanceolate, most toward the base, entire, and smooth on both ‘om two to five inches long, and from one fo two" 1 caibbetegtae Rares sess ar, acute, 1 fowers small,'o — cilia Gardenia. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 71i yellowish white, short-peduncled, crowded on the extremities of short, rigid, lateral, spinous branchlets. Ca/ya cylindric, five-toothed. Corol with a five-sided, campanulate tube, and a border of five obliquely-ovate segments, nthers five, ses- sile in the bell of the corol. Germ inferior, one-celled, con- taining numerous ovula attached to generally five, parietal receptacles, Style short. Stigma somewhat five-grooved, and situated deep in the tube. Berry round-ovate, the size of a golden pippin, smooth, depressed, and slightly five-fur- rowed at the apex and base ; one-celled ; the exterior tunic thick, fleshy, yellowish, with slender, hard, longitudinal fi- bres interspersed, the inner tunic thin and firm, but not bony, the edges of which turn in five portions, forming five parietal receptacles, Seeds minute, nidulant in a little yellow pulp. Perisperm conform to the seed, pale. Embryo straight. Co- tyledons round, Radicle cylindric, pointing to the umbilicus, Obs. The fruit is used by the natives as a cathartic and an- thelmintic, and also to wash out stains in silk, a f7G. rabgida: R : Arboreous, with swelled mealy bark, beanchies brachiate. Thorns opposite and terminal, Leaves obovate, smooth, Flowers \ateral, sub-solitary, calyx five-toothed, apices of the anthers scarcely peeping from the tube of the smooth corol, A native of Bhotan, and introduced by Dr. Carey into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where it blossoms during the months of March and April, the season when most other species of this genus are in flower, but after being twelve years in the garden it has not once ripened a single fruit. Trunk straight, Bark very thick and spongy, appearing as if swollen and somewhat mealy, Branches brachiate, drooping short, and covered with bark like that of the trunk. Spines opposite, above the axils, and, when not terminal, — in form of a small leaf-bearing branchlet, shorter than the leaves, © Leaves opposite, sub-sessile, obovate, entire, smooth Ss4 “ T2 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIAS Posoqueria. — on both sides, from one to four inches long, and from one to three broad... Stipudes interfoliaceous, acute, Flowers late- ral, generally single, sub-sessile, large, white, and fragrant. Calyx short, cylindric, smooth, mouth slightly five-toothed. Corol ; tube many times longer than the calyx,somewhat gibbous. Border of five, spreading, and. finally revolute, obliquely-oblong, obtuse segments, Séamina no filaments. Anthers' filiform, with their apices only peeping from the mouth of the tube. Germ turbinate, one-celled, ovula nue merous, attached to four or-five parietal receptacles. | Style short, pee. clavate, five-grooved, rather tong than the anthers,. ad Obs, ti, cien ei of this species anil its tesight trunk even up through the branches, render it readily known and easily distinguished from all our other Indian Gardenias. ete et heey ee - POSOQUERIA. Aubl. Juss, Tamacte pt Gert. flo... Ceriscus of Gert. Calyx five or six-cleft, Corol tubular, border from five to six-parted. os inferior, two-celled ; ovu/a numerous, attached to a free receptacle from the centre of the partition. Berry two-celled. Seeds numerous, nidulant, sascha fur- nished with a perisperm,, direction various. , ~ By nliginosa. Boo. , __ Arboreous, armed, branches a oR faptaideds ose lets Teneei horizontal, bearir the thorns and flowers at their extremities. Berry oval, drupaceous,, i, ao Gardenia uliginosa, Willd, spec, i. 1228, . baad oe - Beng, Peeralo. BS Bicade inhale ' be Avod’y : Tam. Wagatta. Bn s euea esas ey __ Telinga. Nella-kakisha, rigid ramous, small tree, armed with, numero ng _ Posoqueria. PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 713 ering time the beginning of the hot season, and in some mea- sure all the year. The seeds ripen in the cool season, Trunk short, covered with a dark, rust-coloured, scabrous bark, Branches, some stiffly erect, very rigid, four-comer- ed, thick. set with short, round, diverging, decussated branch- lets; others spreading. Thorns one, two, three, or four, at the extremities of the short, round branchlets just: mention- ed, Leaves opposite, on the young shoots, fascicled at the extremities of the branchlets, short-petioled, oblong, smooth, shining, entire, from two to three inches long, by one and a half broad, Stipules within the leaves as in the rest of the genus, Flowers one, two, or three upon their proper short peduncles, at the extremites of ‘the branchlets, large, white and fragrant. Calyx tubular, obtusely five-toothed, perma- nent, ‘Corol, mouth of the tube shut up with much white hair. Border flat, from five to eight-cleft; divisions orbicu- lar. Nectary a fleshy, angular ring surrounding the base of the style. Germ inferior, two-celled, each containing numer- ous ovula, attached toa crescent-shaped receptacle in each cell, ‘vertically united to the middle of the partition. Berry. two-celled, size and shape of a pullet’s egg, bark ash-colour- ed, or olive gray; pulp in Jarge quantity, hard and dry. Seeds numerous, oval; flattened, nidulant, Enheuntuit ed. with a perisperm, its direction various, The flowers of this species render it deserving of a conspi, cuous place in the flower garden, The uncommon appear- ance of the plant is also in its favour. yt iP; dumetorum, Willd. i ae | ee ee one icy Sub-arboreous, armed. Leaves dbowites ‘vhows iawn, and terminal, solitary ; twbe short, border a ney drupaceous, spherical. pi Gardenia dumetorum, Willd. i, 1229, tes eee _G, spinosa, Suppl. Plant. p. 164, “aldo Stade | Telinga, Manga. — bia 39290 of the most common, thorny, ramous shrubs, 714 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Posoqueria, or, in a good soil, small trees, on the coast ; there is scarcely an uncultivated spot where it is not to be found. Flowering time the beginning of the wet season. “Dr. Kénig’s description of this shrab, published in the Supplementum Plantarum of the younger Linneus is good and full. _ Germ two-celled, each containing many ovula attached to a crescent-shaped receptacle in each cell, which is vertical- ly attached to the middle of the partition, Berry round, smooth, when ripe yellow, and much like a small crab apple both in size and appearance. Pulp in large quantity, of a firm, fleshy texture, two-celled. Seeds numerous, oval and oblong, attached as in the germ, and nestling in a quantity of gelatinous pulp. Perisperm conform to the seed. Hm- bryo more than half the length of the seed, straight. Cotyle- dons roundish. Radicle cylindric, length of the cotyledons, vaga, It is avighayen for fences, and fire-wood. The Sinica like all the rest of this genus are highly fragrant, but in this _ species few in number. ‘The fruit when ripe, looks like a small yellow apple? if bruised and thrown into ponds where there are fish, they are soon intoxicated, and seen floating. If this is done during the hot season, it is said, the fish generally die, but if — the wet or cold season they recover. Fishermen sometimes follow this mode to enable them to take the fish with more ease. — They are not deemed less wholesome from the effects of the fruit. Coceulis Indicus— does not grow in those parts, nor is it known or used there _ = this Aree pend | 3. P. nutans, R, os “Shrubby, armed, branchlets drooping. Leaves narrow- — _ Obovate-oblong. | Flowers solitary. Bets si tse beatae ed with pe masire calyx. malabaricus are ae 9 wit ei Posoqueria, | PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA,) —_~ 715° to shape and size a very good representation of the berry, but to render it exact, the ealyeine segments, and the recep- tacles of the seeds must be added. ‘The figures are too small for dumetorum growing in exactly the same spot, and with the same management. In the Botanic garden at Caleutta, in twelve years, this is a tall slender shrub with very slender drooping branches, and a trunk not thicker than a man’s wrist, whereas dumetorum of the same age has grown to bea stout, rigid, small tree, with a trank two inches and a halfin circumference, at four feet above the ground. Trunk straight, from three to four feet high. Branches numerous, with the extreme divisions long, slender, and _ drooping ; tender shoots a little hairy. Spines axillary, oppo- site, horizontal, straight, slender, but hard, stiff, and sharp. Leaves on the young shoots opposite, on the old ones fasci- cled, ‘short-petioled, from cuneiform-oblong to round, from one to two inches long, by about one broad, Stipules trian- gular, acute, &c, as in the order, Flowers solitary from the. old axills under the spines, with or without leaves, short-pe- duncled, middle-sized, white and fragrant. Calyx with a short, rather hairy, cylindric tube, dnd five-parted border, all permanent. Coro/, outside sericeous. Tube very little longer than the calyx, swelled near the base, and there shut — with « dense circle or valve of white hairs, pointing upwards, - Border of five, obovate, spreading segments, which are im- bricated in the bud. Filaments, scarcely any. Anthers fili- form, without the tube. Germ turbinate, two-celled, with many ovula in each, attached to two peltate receptacles aris-_ ing from the centre of the partition. Style rather longer than the tube of the corol, swelled near the middle. Stigma large, | roundish, elammy, apex two-lobed. Berry the size of a nut- meg, nearly round, somewhat rugose, pulpy, crowned with the entire eallyx, two-celled, Seeds numerous, small, eral, Ratienetl.” sa tes oe and Peoted as in the other pte 710 ~—C PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Posoqueria, A. P. longispina, R. Arboreous, armed, spines opposite, and alsérnstic horizon: tal, Leaves obovate-cuneate, smooth, Flowers solitary, ter- minal, and axillary. Calyx smooth, border permanent. _ Fruit obovate, smooth, oa A native of the coast of Coromandel, Flowering time the hot and rainy season, ; Trunk ‘straight. Branches numerous, the smaller long, slender, spreading, and drooping, a habit which immediately distinguishes this species from Kénig’s dumetorum ;_ its branches being short and rigidly erect. Spines opposite or alternate, decussate, horizontal, straight, strong and sharp ; length from one to two inches, Leaves on the young shoots opposite, on the old ones in fascicles below the spines, all are short-petioled, obovate-cuneate, entire, smooth on both sides; size varying, from half an inch to three inches in length. St7- pules (examine the very young shoots to find them) within - the leaves, subulate, pointed. Flowers solitary, short-pedun- cled, generally from the extremities of the little, leaf-bearing ‘branchlets below the spines, rarely axillary, pretty large, pure white, and fragrant. Calyx perfectly smooth, Tube cylindric ; border of five, ovate-cordate, permanent segments. ‘In dumetorum the tube only is permanent. Corol salver- shaped. Tube as long as the tube of the calyx, villous on — the outside, within, a ring of projecting hairs shuts it up about the middle. Border of five, obliquely ovate, s spread- ing divisions Filaments none, . Anthers five, linear, aftix- ed over the fissures of the border of the corel, and entirely, _ without its tube. Style thickened at the middle. Stigma erect, two-lobed, Berry obovate (in P. dumetorum round,) size of a large nutmeg, smooth, two-celled. Seas siusiiil ous, immersed in pulp. | Obs, Thunberg’s Gardenia spinosa isa plant Sines seen, if it be not Kénig’s dumetorum or this very species 1 _ have now described, consequently cannot say wherein they a differ, ‘ut from demetorum, whieh I know sani it differs va Posoqueria, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA 717 very conspicuously in the structure, and disposition of the branches, in the shape of the fruit, and in the border of the calyx — poomess 5. P. fragrans. Kin. i _ Shrubby, armed. . Leaves long-obovate. ius numer- ous, collected in small, simple, terminal umbellets. Berries from eight to ten-seeded. | Gardenia fragrans. Kon, Mss. Telinga, Pedally. - With P. dumetorum it is a common, rigid, shrubby sbicbas ; it seems also to delight in a poor soil, and like it is armed with strong sharp thorns. Brought into a good soil these almost totally disappear. It flowers about the begins the rains in June and July. _ Leaves opposite on the young shoots, fascicled 0 on the old ones, short-petioled, oblong; on both sides are smooth and glossy hollow glands in the axills of the large nerves; border hairy ; from two to three inches long, by one and a half broad, Stipules comecting the petioles, acute. Umbellets simple, small, terminal, or from small tuberosities on the branchlets, bearing many, small, white, fragrant flowers. ..Peduncles short. Bractes, a small, acute one at the base of each pedi- cel, Calyx five-toothed, toothlets acute, Corol, throat hairy, Border always five-cleft, divisions acute. Stamens and pis- tillum as in the genus. Berry the size of a small cherry, red, two-celled. Seeds from eight to twelve in both cells, kidney-shaped, orange-coloured. Obs. 1 know of no use this tree is put to, except seanke fences, for which ‘it is. well adapted, particularly when it is the produce of a poor barren soil, it is then well armed with strong thorns, The flowers like those of all the nai are de- ey et: | i ae R a9 ¥ xiiilieab bi, spines. inal patent, Leaves coteinidends 718 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Posoqueria, sub-sessile, Fascicles _—— and in the forks of the branches, | Berries two-celled. dj A middiing-sized, very ramous, well armed shrub, a na- tive of Silhet, where it blossoms in March and April. Branchlets smooth, opposite and dichotomous. “Spines axillary, patent, straight, rather short, _ Leaves opposite, short-petioled, ovate-oblong, entire, pretty smooth, from one to three inches long. Stipules interfoliaceous, acuminate, Flowers collected into small, sub-sessile fascicles, in the forks of the dichotomous branchlets, or axillary, middling-sized, and like those of most of the other species, fragrant ; when they first expand they are white, but gradually change to pale yellow by the second day. Calyx hairy, margin divided into five, subulate segments, Corol infundibuliform, bor- der of five oblong segments, Filaments scarcely any: .4n- thers five, linear, one-third of their length within the tube of the corol. Germ inferior, two-celled, each’ containing many: ovula attached to a receptacle rising from the centre of the partition. Style of the corol. Stigma clavate, unequally —— oo83 7 Pp longiflora. R. ; Arboreous, armed with opposite, recurved spines. Leaves lanceolar-oblong, smooth, Corymbs terminal and satis 2 few-flowered, eeeapaee with Gasilenii etiihcend Willd. i. p. 1231. sa - A native of Chittagong, where it grows to be a pretty he tree. It flowers during the meomensinghte seeds = in July and August. fe: go _ Branches and branchlets opposite, ied smooth, | Spina sidillaby, very strong, sharp, and considerably » recurved. _ Leaves opposite, short-petioled, from broad-lanceolar to-ob- long, entire, smooth, from four to six inches long, by one and a half or two broad. Stipules as in the order, Corymbs ter- ‘Minal, and axillary, short, generally about eleven to thirtéen- flowered, every eh smooth. Flowers large, pale; ceiety Posoqueria, PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, 719 white when they first expand, becoming yellow by the se- cond day, fragrant. Calyx tubular, mouth cut into five, se- milunar segments, Corol; tube long and slender; border of. five, unequally. lanceolate, spreading segments. Filaments. none. Anthers five, linear, attached to the mouth of the tube of the corol, Germ inferior, two-celled, with many ovula in each, attached to their elevated fleshy receptacle, rising from the centre of the partition. Berries the size of common cher- ries, when ripe yellow, smooth, fleshy, two-celled. Seeds nu- aden: &e. a: as in the genus. 8. P. floribunda, R. Sub-arboreous, armed, Leaves opposite and fascicled, obovate, cuneate, Flowers in lateral fascicles ; calyx long- er than the tube of the corol, its segments lanceolate. Berries ovate-cordate, polished. A large, rigid, ramous shrub, or, in a igoal soil, small tree, like dinate anative of the coast of Coromandel. Flow- ering time April and May, and the seeds ripen immediately after the rains, Trunk ia ten years old plants in the Botanic garden at Calcutta as thick as a man’s leg, but short, soon dividing into numerous branches; and straight, stiff branchlets, in every direction. Bark ash-coloyred, on the oldest parts considerably cracked. Spines axillary, and rarely more than one to each pair of leaves; about an inch long, stiff, straight, rigid and sharp. Leaves on the tender shoots opposite, on the old flower-bearing twig fascicled, round the flower sub- _ sessile ; the general form obovate, tapering a good deal to the baw; obtampamueesh, from one to two inches long, by one wii Stipules as in the order. Flowers short-peduncled, generally from four to six produced from each of the small lateral, short, scaly spurs, (as they are called by gardeners,) of a middling size, and fragrant, when they first expand pure white, but soon becoming yellow. Calyx smooth ; tube cy- lindric; segments of the border generally five, sub-lanceo- 720 PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA, Posoqueria, late, acuminate, permanent. Corol, outside sericeous. Tube rather shorter than the calyx, shut about he middle with a. valve of fine white hairs pointing up. Border of five, obo- vate segments. laments scarcely any. Anthers linear, spreading. Germ turbinate, two-celled, ovula numerous, attached to a far-projecting receptacle from the centre of each side of the partition. Style rather longer than the tube of the corol, swelled toward the middle. . Stigma oblong, two-lobed. Berries broad, ovate-cordate, polished, size of a prune, crowned with the remaining tube of the calyx ; two- celled, Seeds numerous, &c. &c. as in the other species. re IND EX. * .* The words in italics are synonyms. Page Achyranthes alternifolia 674 —— aquatica ... 673 —— aspera diandra — BFF ferruginea 675 —— incana eA lanata 676 lappacea —— Monsonie 673 us castalSyiedifiora .. 678 _ ——. ———_ sericea 675 triandra ... 678 Adhatoda spicata 132 eeeeniis duplo folio ... 430 - laciniata ws ~-435 Eeilops evaltata’ ... Agrostis coromandeliana 316 = see diandeas, aris see BLT ~— linearis — 289 Matrelis iste 317 ——— maxima = 317 —tenacissima ... 316 = wo 326 Bon Ol | 672 | = 673. | Gs : Page Ain bracteata 63 ealearata ... 69 Cardamomum Cardamomum me- dium... 74 —— Galanga ... 59 —— linguiforme 75 —— malaccensis ... 64 mutica 67. —— nutans 65 spicata 70 —— punicea ... yr sessilis | x. ... 16 Alsine multiflora os 800 Alyxia stellata... ... 699 Amalago i... ~—:160 | Amaranthoides indicum, nodiflorum, &e. ... 678 —.- 7, Shaaess snes woes Amaranthus hails foliis oppositis, &c. 678 -_ —— spicatus _ es iorspteus, &e. ... 672 | _ = vulgaris... 679 Ammania multiflora .... 426 xt 722 INDEX, Page Page Ammania nana... ... 427 Andropogon Martini... 277 octandra «-. 425 miliaceus 272 pentandra ...* 427 montanus ... 267 rotundifolia ... 425 monandrus 260 vesicatoria... 426 —— muricatus ... 265 Amomum aculeatum ... 40 —— parviflorus 274 angustifolium 39 pertusus ... 258 aromaticum ... 45 —— polystachyos 261 Curcuma ... 32 —— pumilus ... 273 —dealbatum ... 43 punctatus 264 maximum ... 4l —— saccharatus 271 Seip... J} —— saccharoides 263 —— subulatum... 44 —— scandens ... 258 ~~ Zerumbet . ... 48 |. —— Schenanthus 274 Zerumbeth.... 20 | — —— serratus... 253 Zinziber o.. ee _.—— Sorghum 269 Ampacus angustifolia 416 | & ——tenellus .... 254 Ampadoo Barrowing ... 449 —— tridentatus 257 Ana-Chunda 4... 571 |} . —— tristachyos ... 256 Ana-parua .. sw. ... 430 verticillatus 263 Andropogon aciculatus ... 266 Anthistiria arundinacea... 251 ong 329 —— ciliata ... 247 —— bicolor. ... 268 —— cymbaria .... 251 —— binatus... 255 [ | _——heteroclita 249 —— Bladhii .. 259 |. —— polystachya... 248 — _—_ cernuus on 270 as rm _—_—_— prostrata sae "250 geniculata wre B25 | piocynsiee foetidum ... 684 | Aquilicia Olillan: sez ~-- G58 “id —— Samiucina .. _ 637 o—— crenata, te ate i | Canthium angustifolium Tt? INDEX. Page Page Ardisia divergens .. 583 | Boerhaaviadiandra —... 147 glandulosa 584 a ae —— lanceolata 583 * _. procumbens ... 146 —— paniculata 580 | Borago indica 458 —— solanacea .. 580 spinulosa . 459 — villosa 582 zeylanica 458 —— umbellata .. 682 | Brucea sumatrana... ... 449 Aristidia depressa 351 | Buddlea Neemda 396 —— Hystrix ... ... 350 | Buglossom littoreum ... 527 setacea - 349 | Biittnera herbacea 619 Arundastrum’... ... +. 2 pilosa . 618 Arundo bengalensis ... 348 - pifaria ss .. 847 | Cadamba jasminiflora ... 686 —— Karka ... 347 | Cada pilava acomoens eb ee ee = -88 Cadelari o a eee Baeobotrys glabra... ... 560 | 1 9—— americana... 392 indica, wee ot > —— arborea” 390 ae ho 560 —— cuspidata’ ... — 394 0) ramentacea ... 558 —— jacana © 10°32 389 Ballel . +. 482 —— lanata 391 Béiovdus ilegusforian 1 O44 —— lanceolaria +. 395 Banducus latifolia .:. 541 longifolia ... 394 Banksia speciosa” 58 macrophylla ... 393 Bata ete BR O83 —— pentandra ... 395 Helameands ahutir mini 170 —purpurea .... 395 Bela modagam ... 527 Ciinalata oe oe Belilla- ... =. 687 er dehiscens = 504 Tsjori valli... 413 Ciraninm eiltiaine ... 636 Vin Curins a8 7. 329 | Cahnacorus "5". 1 Bena patsja ... +. 454 | Canna indica pe _Canscara i... 402 724 INDEX. Page ; sge Page Canthium didymum ... 535 Celastrus verticillata... «.. 624 - moluccanum 536 | Celosis argentea iu. --.070 baccata ~~ ..0~ ..- 682 cernuia:tr ‘visisravs -—-680 | ——parviflorum .*. 534 —— parvifolium 534 psa annuum ... ... 573 comosa.. ... ... 679 velit 574 corymbosa... 681 ' ——— frutescens ... 574 cristata... .-. 679 —— grossum ... 574 — — Monsonie..-:...\ -: 673 — nodiflora. .4; ... 678 polysperma..... 681 minimum 6 694 purpureum 573 Cara caniram 1.» ... 118 | SPINESCENS «2+ oe O73 Carangaamara...._—:135 Seie-hras biflorus: 4... ... 233 Carcumae@ Wise ane av... BQ muricatus ... Curdamontle Minus ... 37, 71 Cerbera fructicosa ... Carim curinit .... ... ‘we-1l4 maculata Garam ciéciiscon: wer BR Odallam Carissa axillaris... ... 691 | Chamaelaea trifolia, &c. —— Carandas «687 | Chandana” See ate —— diffusa ... 689 | Chenopodium incanum, &c. ) —— villosa’ ... 690 Cheru-chunda ; Cattu-tirpali ... .....- 156 | Chionanthus dichotoma ... ais 703 345 SIBSERER z Catajomri coat =. Chironia carinata Cavara-pullu. ee ee , — centaureoides ... Ceanothus asiatica .... 615 | Chironia trinervia ... . Ghirdta ee SS Ckloranthus inconspicuus Chloris barbata — po ee a ~ —— multiflora —— ramiflora - tenella ... .... 329 107 —— nutans 107 oon nee fists Ciriscus malabaricus Cissus adnata angustifolia auriculata — —— carnosa —— cordata elongata feminea glauca heptapylla —— lanceolaria .. _—— pedata Peper th. fee he quadrangularis _.— serratula ... +. tS ee vitiginea eee Clove-scented creeper ..- _ Oo te INDEX. Page Page 914 | Convolvulus blandus ©... °470 . 05 cuneatus \.. 492 . 408 Tice ealycinus ... 471 411 cespitosus ... 453 . 409 —— eopticus:... 477 407 —— digitatus - 411 dentatus.:. 477 410 fastigiatus ... 468 .. 466 —— flagelliformis 4%1 413 foetidus ... 683 412 gangeticus 467 413 grandiflorus A497 .- 407 heptaphyllus 4 0 Al4 hirsutus’ —, 410 ____ Jaurifolius — 494 | 9) —— Maleolmi ... 474 sal | eet marinus © 485 ‘5 —— maximus 469, 497 medium... 474 nervus —... 489 muricatus 499 obscurus’ >... 472 paniculatus 478 —— parviflorus... 471 —— pedatus... 478 —— pentagonus 435 pes-capre ... 486 —— pilosus seco" 75 ‘ud —— reniformis vs. 481 t) .——repens ... 482 ee svinsdiigyinas 468 —— sphexrocephalus 472 —— stipulaceus 484 —— tridentatus... 475 -——turpethum 476 726 INDEX, Page Page | Convolvulus vitifolius .... 476 | Curcuma Zerumbet. ... » 20 Cordia angustifolia ... 595 | Cuscuta aggregata ... +... 447 campanulata ... 593 capitata ... 448 —— grandis . 693 —— reflexa . 446 — latifolia ... 588 sulcata ... A447 monoica ... .. 592 | Cynoglossum diffusum ... 457 —— muluccana... ... 594 —— marifolium _ 457 e— Myze- cui 590 racemosum — 496 polygama 694 | Cynosurus wegypticus 344 retusa 599 corocanus ... 342 “—— serrata ... 591 =~ indiondosesshee B45 Costus speciosus... ... 58 | Cyperus alopecuroides 208 Cransil ehictend 2... 617 cristatus ... 190 Crusta olla he age capillaris 194 - olle major ... ... 138 —— castaneus 195 ——__———_ minor... 136 ——— compressus ... 194 Cumd ja i.._-... 61 “—_— eruentus «.. «. 196 Gumuda cvs. 459 | > —— difformiisiccmas »-196 Capt Gish. ep ence S50 OF —— diffusus . 189 — Curcuma zruginosa ... -27 —— digitatus 205 ——Amada .. ... 33 —— distans . 207 - —— angustifolia... 31 —— dubius 188 i. domestica major 32 | flavidus ... «.. 200 25° a — = 30 32 35 ae INDEX. 797 Page Page Cyperus mucronatus 185 | Erhetia aspera .... ... 598 niveus .. - I9l —— buxifolia »- 598 —— Pangorei «. 202 —— internodis . .. 599 —— pectinatus ... 190 a eee | —— pertenuis ..- 198 ——serrata ... ... 596 — pigmeus 190 —— setosa 598 — -—— polystachyos ... 193 ——uniflora® ... ©... 598 —— procerus.. 203 | Eleagnus arborea ... 441 —— pumilus ... ... 196 —— conferata ... 440 —— punctatus 193 ——_foliis oblongis 439 rotundus . 197 —— triflora + ve--439 ‘= -— semi-nudus .;. 187 | Eleodendrum indicum 640 —— spinulosus —... 203 glaucum ... 638 ——— squarrosus ... 190 | Elettadi Maravara “435 oo -— tegetus ss. —...- 208 Elettaria.. jee ee 8 ——- tenuiflorus ... 199 tea egyptica ~ 344 tortuosus . 197 calycina ‘ils ..< B46 - £5 — tuberosus 44-199 _ —— Coracana 342 a gushing » 205 —— indica » 345 wv ~ — 206 —— stricta ... 343 gi? eames verticillata . 346 Dactylis lagopoides ... 341 Elytaria crenata 119 1 brevifolia . 34] , Embelia ribes io te OE Dalrymplea pomifera 633 —— robusta, —— orixensis | .;. -subulata ..... Gramen acciculatum +. — capitatum — caricosum — __ ~ cyperoides, eae —_ teas Sea ieee tetrasperma Sr exeteers 708 .-, 704 710 . 704 713 pre | 703 Fi A. INDEX. 729 Page Page Gramen cyperoides, §:c. 201 Hedychium angustifolium — 13 elegans, &c. 193 —— coronarium 10 —— rarius .. 194 flavum 12 —- ——. madraspata- - gracile 14 num.» .. 210 | Hedyotis auricularia -» 365 i FUME. Korey 00 ne BOD 370 — paniceum 283 —— geniculata ... 364 ——— VACCINUM ve 345 —— hispida 364 Gratiola alata -.. 137 —— lineata san OOO amara * 135 scandens 364 cuneifolia 142 | Heliconia buccinata 670 -) + grandiflora . 136 | Heliotropium coromandeli- — hyssopioides ... 141 : anum . 404 _—— integrifolia _.,. 137 indicum. - 454 — involucrata .... 137 —p nicu ' g———. Jumcea ... 142 | Hellenia Allughas eee ~ _— lobelioides 142 | Hemapushpica 99 Herba spiralis hirsuta 58 Hippocratea arborea. ... 167 —— indica 165 — obtusifolia ... 166 Holcus bicolor 268 cernuus . +» »-. 270 we ——- CHitRisie useen sO ———— SEFFAtaaees-o sex) 139 nervosus stile 4cc- Seer veronicifolia.. ... 138 —— PEFEUNUS ao0, ion 258 _Grossularia spinis vidua §c. 615 succharatus. . ... 271 Gouania tilizfolia 632 — Surghum 269 Guettarda speciosa ..,. ... 686 —— spicatus ee. Ss s sete Jacqui as 445 Hovenia dulcis. meen 08 Gynopogon steliatum ... FU Hummatu... ... ae Hunteria corymbosa... -Hamiltonia pilosa . 555 Hura siamensium 79 » —+ suaveolens ... 544 Hydrophylax diffusa ... 423 Harpullia cupanioides 645 —herbacea 424 730 INDEX, Page Page Hydrophylax maritima ... 373 | Ischemum cuspidatum ... 324 pumila... 422 geniculatum 322 —— umbellata... 421 ies. <- 808 Ss ——rugosum ... 320 Illecebrum javanicum 671 —— semisagittatum 320 - —lanatum _... 677 tenellum ... 323 —— Monsonie ..._ 673 | Itea umbellata .. 632 sessile- ... oes 678 | Twarancusa 275 Impatiens balsamina ... 651 | Izxia chinensis . 174 natans . ... 652 | Txora acuminata 383 Bese aa age . » 651 alba Seki oe BO Inota-Inodien .. .. 563 | —— Bandhuca ... 376 Inschi... ee a 47 barbata ... .. 384 Inschi pe er vi brachiata ... 384 Ipomea bona-nox ... 494,497 | —— coccinea... «.. «.. 375 coerulea oo RE, ain es 379 —ccerulescens ... 500 | —— congesta — fesse 387 Candicans ... ....495 | —— cuneifolia ... ... 380 —— grandiflora 497 - fulgens ... aw OTe E mauritiana... 478 | —— lanceolaria ... 387 _—— multiflora 499 —— parviflora ... .,. 383 —— muricata 499 Pavetta ... .. 385 : 471 | —— stricta a: . 503 | tenuiflora ... ... 387 . 602 ——undulata ... .. 385 : 503 | ——— villosa © 4.0 4.. ... 383 _ —— sepiaria , 499 ——arborescens ... 95 zeylanica ..« 493 auriculatum _-« 98 Be isos mam at ee SO) —— bracteatum ... 94 Tvesine javanica... 672 —— chrysanthemum _ 99 Tris chinensis... ...... 170 — coarctatum ... 92 Tschemum ariStotum .. BID —— elongatum... 90 INDEX. 3 731 Page Page Jasminum grandiflorum ... 100 Justicia latebrosa +125 _ ———heterophyllum 100 ligulata ... 126 — ——— hirsutum ... 686 malabarica — 126 — lanceolatum:.. 98 —— montana 110 —— latifolium ... 95 —nasuta.... 120 -——— laurifolium ... 92 - NETVOSA «.. lil limonii folio con- © | —— orixensis as 158 jugato 88 —— paniculata... 117 _ ——paniculatum ... 99 pectinata ... ... 133 ~—— pubescens... 91 picta © 117 - ———seandens =... 89 —— polysperma . 119 ——simplicifolium 97 procumbens ... 132 Fe mes Qriperye =. 565° 93 pulchella ayes ei: 3 / —— tubiflorum «.. 97 —_—— ian ame = 133 ~~ ——undulatum ... 88 ramosissim . 129 ——+-vimineum ... 96 —— repens ~ 138 Zambac... 88 — iryitfions’ ae ee Jatus =~ 600 | ~—— tinctoria 123 Johni 169 —— tomentosa’... “... 131 — - ——tranquebariensis 130 —— speciosa wb | Juncus odoratus ...° ... 274 verticillata 135 119 — vitellina 115 126 116 Kempferia angustifolia ... 17 128 | iro, =— Galanga*3!* 16 126 ; ovalifolia 19 124 prereset 18 124 — rovundee: e216 * 127 | Kaka-toddali ... i ” 616 “114 | Kanden*hara:.. <:. \... 535 —— echioides 118 | Kappa-kelengu ... 483 —— Gandarussa 128 | Karinta-kali ... . 533 — glabra 2... 130 | Katou-tsjaka .. ... 512 '—— lamifolia’ ...... 134 | Katsjiletti-pullu ... ,.. 179 -— — Janceolaria ... 121 Katsjula: Kelengu Boe 15 Ua2 732 INDEX Page | Page Kattu-kelengu i. 469 Lettsomia splendens ~... 487 Katu-bala ... us. 1 —— strigosa 491 Katu-tsjiregam-Mulla ... 91 uniflora vee 495 Katu. pitsjegam- Mulla 96 Ligustrum nepalense.... 149 Kennelli-itti-kanni ... 550 =-Linociera purpurea . 107 Kerpa en Shc Knozia umbellata ... 367 idl pulla hi tice 182 Konda pulla .. 329 Kudda mulla 88 Kudira pulla ... 41. ... 262 Kunjun CO: sp 402 Kyllingia cyperioides ... 182 monocephala __- 180 _——- triceps . 181 ——umbellata ... 182 Lampujum sylvestre a 77 Lappago biflora... ... 281 Lasia aculeata ... — 438 Leea crispa . 654 — hirta.. ... 656 te ae ae integrifolia Ce | . 659 macrophylla 653 —— robusta . .. 655 ' —_— eit sta 657 ‘=e Beaphyite fey os cuneata * . 491 5 | Lithospermum viridiflorum 455 Lobelia nicotianifelia — ... 506 radicuns %. ... 507 Taccada os 527 trigona ... 506 Loeflingia indica -- 165 ‘Lonicera quinquelocularis 537 Loranthus ampullaceus 552 — bicolor ... ... 548 . ——clavatus.... 553 —— ferrugineus ... 551 —— involucratus ... (652 pentapetalus 553 Scurrula 550 Ludwigia parviflora. .... 419 —— prostrata ©... 520 Lussa Radja .s0 + Lycium fetidum: ... --- — indicum ...- «- japonicum s+ -. Lycopus dianthera _ aS fala svat, Macrocnemum parviflorum 525 cs hat eet a SO | Mallica .... sitsasanct ve 8B. p< ae stipulaceum 525 .. 488 | Magorium Sambac. ... 88 o. - 496 | Mala-inechiektias nie s6 62 an 493 | Malan-kua vic — 16 INDEX. 733 : : Page |» Page Malum indicum... ... 608 , Morinda exserta ... ... 545 Manga domestica ... 641 —— multiflora 546 Mangifera glauca ... 639 | | ——scandens... ... 548 ; indica ss 641 tinctoria ... 543 ian ..- 640 | Motta pullu ; .. 222 ; sylvatica 644 | Motienga ... «. 181 Manisurus granularis ... 352 | Mulen pullu ... .. 189 Myurus 351 | Munda-valli 497 “Manjella-kua 32 Munja pumeram 86 ‘Maranta malaccensis... 64 | Musa ... 663 ‘Mariguti —... ...._».. 365 | Musa coccinea .- 665 “Mariscus umbellatus ... 182 |. —— glauca 669 ‘Mashandart) 10... ... 393 ornata . .. 666 -Melica diandra . 327 sapientum = 663 i —. digitata =< i... -... 326 superba |... ++. 667 is Seren aed . 328 Mussaenda corymbosa 556 -refracta ie as BA frondosa ... 357 i protien cristata. «459 | -zeylanica «557 os o—tindica~ «... 460 | Myriophyllum tentrandrum 451 - Millingtonia pinnata 104 | Nalla-mulla ... .. ... 88 (os ——simplicifolia 103 | Nalugu .. «+ 654 —— filiforme 314 | Naru-killa © .00) ws 2. . Tramosum 315 | Naucleacadamba — 512 = —— sanguinale... 315 cordata... ... 509 Milnes edulis... 637 —— cordifolia 514 - Modira Caneram ... ..,. 578 » —— glabra 512 Molago-codi 150 —— macrophylla... 511 i —— ovalifolia ...— a 616 eae parvifolia pee! —— purpurea ... 515 —— rotundifolia 516 —— sessilifolia 515 —— tetrandra 516 734 INDEX. » Page . Page Nedel-Ambel _... .... 461 | Paederia recurva ... +++ 684 Neerija dichotoma -- 646 | Pal-modecca _.,...,. 478 Nelen tsjunda .:. ... 565 | Panicum eres ain Nella mura ... .., ... 119 | Panicum egypticum .,. 289 Nila-Barudena ... ... | 566 aristatum ... 294 Nyctanthes arbor tristis ... 86 —— barbatum. ..... 282 elongata ... 90 brevifolium .... 40 grandiflora ... 95 —— brizoides ... 292 multiflora... 91 —— Burmanni »-+ 295 pubescens ... 91 HIDEO oi cine teks a — scandens ... 8&9 cimicinum --. 291 ~s —— triflora... ... 96 —colonum .... “296 ae ——conglomeratum 282 Ochrosia ~ .. sige. _ O02 —— conjugatum ... .. 288 Odallam ... ... . ix.» 692 —- corymbosum _... 292 Olax imbricata .... :.. 164 —costatum ... 312 — scandens:.. ... ... 163 “—— crus corvi._.... 296 Oldenlandia alata“... 421 —= a —— biflora ve», 423 cuspidatum ~ 06 ——chrystallina 422 dactylon sae st —— diffusa avs. Se —— dimidiatum _... 287 _—— herbacea... 424 fr ei cee DOS —— paniculata ... 422 —— filiforme ..._... 290 —— repens .. ... 532 ie umbellata 421 = = -Olus-vagum — ... ... 482 297 _ Ophiorrhiza Mungos_ ... 701 300 : | | rae ep villosa tee 702 t ey 295 Ophioxylon serpentinum 694 —— hispidulum... 303- 281 286 ; . , ¢ : : arts oes Ps Cobar? P a hs . . 3: Panicum involucratum ... — italicum of ——+ lanceolatum lineare ... ——_ miliaceum... ta" mniliare ... - —_» montanum nervosum = paludosum — patens Sei ‘ —— plicatum oon i tenue’ .. * __. tomentosum - — trigonum ~ —— uliginosum vom umbrosum —— -verticillatum Panover txjerana—... Pardanthus chinensis cula confertis, &c. Paspalum Kora ~~ ——— longifloram ~ —— longifolium — — orbiculare ... INDEX. 735 Page * ss Page 284 serobiculatum 278 302 | Paullinia asiatica 616 . 294 | Pavetta indica .. 385 — 291 s. Malleamothe 385 .. 810 | Pee-Mottenga .. . 181 309 | Pee-tumba ... 118 313 | Perim toddali ... . 608 311 | Perotis latifolia 233 .. 307 | Pevetti .. 561 305 | Phalaris muricata 281 .. 811 | Pharnaceum depressum ... 165 299 -Phillyrea paniculata ... 100 . 31d robusta... «+, 101 308 | Phieum crinitum Le ss 313 . 307 | Phrynium capitatum =... 8 299 —— dichotomum 2 .. 283 | ——imbricatum ... 6 ~ 288 — —— parviflorum q .. 295° virgatum «nw A 303 | Phyllodes placentaria 8 .. 306 ~~ Physalis alkekengi 562 810 flexuosa 561 .. B01 —— minima ... ... 563 305 peruviana .... 562 .. 308 Phyteuma begonifolium ... 505 297 ~~ Piper angustifolium .... 161 i OUk arborescens 159 428 | —— Betle ae be — ee 170 | —— canninum a. ... 159 a6 | eee abe Pog 166 = | = Cubebas.:<.. ... 159 681 | —— diffusum 160 . 279 lanatum . 159 279 latifolium .. 160 ..- 280 | —— longum ... 154 279 | —-—.... 156 736 INDEX. : * . Page Page Piper Malamiris ... ... 160 | Poa punctata «ne! vente methysticum ... 159 teviélle. — cccsitnsieis. Sey —— nigrum... ... ... 150 | +— unioloides; .,.. ... 339 — peepuloides ... 157 | ——vviscosa ... «.. 336 —— qui saururus 4 ... 158 | Pommereulla Comuompia 331 rostratrum wines) AQ | Papgatt oc sai... 507 —-sarmentosum ... 160 | Porana paniculata ... 464 —saxatile ... ... 161 | racemosa... ... 466 sylvatium .., ... 156 volubilis ... 465 trioicum ... ... 151 | Porphyradichotoma ... 395 Pitsjigam mullo. ... _.,. 100 | Posoqueria dumetorum of 13 Pittosporum Tobira ... 631 fasciculata... 717 Pladera decussata ... ... 402 floribunda. 719 — perfoliata Figen: AOD —-fragrans... 717 _—— pusilla... .. 408 | ——longiflora... 718 — sessilifolia ... 400 | © H-—— longispina ... 716 —— virgata)... ... 401 | 7 inner 0 994 Plantago Isphagula ... 404 uliginosa__.. jad AZ. Plumbago rosea ..._ ... 463 | Potamogeton indicum 452 s tuberosum 452 Poa bifaria ... ... ... 331 | Pothos caudata «...... 406 — cylindrica .... ... 334 | —— gracilis jay a eo 9 heterophylla... - 437 —— elegans .... ... «.. 338: | = —— phat mina aS —— gangetica Pcs ar oo . ‘2 435 —— interrupta... ... 335 | = — =n - ag —— malabarica ... ... 327 officinalis... 431 —— multiflora... <.. 338 r— soondenserics jay S00 nutans .... .... ... 335 | Psathura borbonica ... 532 = paniculata... 6. 340 t a ci aes — , Pullassarium sco ++ ++» 700 Rottbeellia corymbosa. 6 ——incanus .-.- 603 oe —— lucidus, :ressenet 605 cylindricum 234 ___— exaltatum ... 245 po Munja.ens: ssn) 246 oficina «... 237 613 — procerum ... 243 sar) «e» 604 ~_—. Sardar inac: OM = — , cen 611 semidecumbens 236 _ sinense®.«.. 239 spicatum — + oo. awe trivalvis..... ... 262 Salvadora persica... 389 Salvia bengalensis .... --- 140_ —— brachiata ... ... 145 vaniculate: =. pee fanata acd ssc. 147 —— scandens... 524 | Samara paniculata ... 414 ——tetrandra ... 524 polygona ... ... 414 —— tinctoria ... 522 | Samudra-stjogam ... 489 Rottbeellia biflora’ .:. 357 | Sandal wood ... ... ... 442 — compressa .. 354 Sandalum album ee: ae VOL. I. 738 INDEX.” Page Fage Santalum album ... ... 442 Scirpus glomeratus - 224° —— myrtifolium 444 grossus ... 231 VETUM .. 442 eee Fen earagerig~ 5 |) Sarissus anceps ja ge —— incurvatus 214 Scabrita scabra — 86 —— intricatus ... ... 190 trifle... 86 juncoides 216 Sceevola oppositifolia... 528 — Kysoor .. 230 taccada << Bae — lateralis 217 Schembra-valli ... 660 maximus 231 Scheris valli canirum ... 441 |, meding 24559241... 213 Scheru-bula iy —— miliaceus ... ... 227 ec xn, 875 — minimus 219 Schetti codweli ... ... 463 monander .. ... 228 Schenanthum amboinicum 274 monostachyos... 219 — Schenanthus odoratus 274 | | —— mucronatus 216 Schenus articulata ... 184) © s_ pallescens 229 ‘Schovanna-Adamboe ... 486 ‘i pectinatus ... 218 Schrebera albens o- . 638 penitagonus. 218 : ; swietenioides ... 109 —— plantagineus eke Schunamba rabbi 406 —— quinquangularis 229 Scirpus acutangulus .... 213 ——-scaber 4. ose OOD —— aestivalis sein 5 ed —— schenoides 221 —— antarcticus 223 e_— argenteus ete wee 223 —— pbs ree 45 melongena . "566 & pubescens ~ 564 fe. — robrimi se. £566 i — ipa. 566 Ss 8 _—— stramonifolium 572 oe trilobatum » 571 - Soncorus vee HEAR. 6 15 a emaculata >... oo —— maculata 177 u — moluecana 178 ' Spermacoce articularis © 372 —— costata INDEX. Page : Page Sebestinaofficinalis ... 590 | Spermacoce exserta _—... 368 Sendera-clandi ... 475 "ke glelete. ies, 368 Sephalica «ws.» «.. 86 —— hispida { «+... 379 2Mtptala ieee nce AS —— levis. 368 . Serissa feetida «x 579 —— lineata .. 369 : Shringata ... ... +... 428 —— nana... . 369 ‘Sideroxylon tomentosum 602 —— scabra ... 371 Sirium arborescens tertium 159 semi-erectus 371 Sfrigidum 160 strictus - 390 — —— myrtifolium .. 444 —— sumatrensis 366 Solanum ethiopicum .. 568 —— teres . 367 — auriculatum ....564 | Sphenoclea Pongatium 507 he. decemdentatum 565 zeylanica. ... 507 ~—— diffasum ...) ... 568 Strumonia indies i 861 - —— fructescens ... 570 = . “1 hirsutum’... .... 571 incanum vchinense 568 a Surenus ... wi aoe Pala-Neli © vccc taxes tw 475 Tali-pulli S cuddle Palu dama . .i5:ceivy-xt.-- 14] Tardavel ...... .em — 372 Tectona grandis ... ... 600 Tekka Gestge 30 OO Teretu pullu .. ~ 279 Thalia cannaformis ... 2 Tilo-Onapa ssinves) --- 651 Tiru-talli Seni teesi Fits 500 | Pobira ... -—st Toddalia 617 Tomba-codivelli . 463 Tomex tomentosa 391 Tradescantia malabarica 173 428 Trapa bicornis 740 INDEX Page Page Trapa bispinosa ... 428 | Utricularia fasciculata... 143 quadrispinosa” ... 430 stellaris. .... 148 Triosteum hirsutum ... 538 Triticum estivum ...... 359 | Valeriana Jatamansi «i. 163 hybernum 359 spica .. «163 Trongum hortense ... 566 | Vallia-Pira-Pitica | >..661 Tsiana speciosa ... 57 | Vallia Tsjori Valli. 412 Tsiovanna-Amel-Podi ... 694 Tsjama pullu 337 Tsjana-Kua .. 58 _ Teanga pupum .. 137 Tsjera conirum ... ... 441 Tsjeria- belutta-adeka- manjen ... .. 679 kuren pulla ... 233 Tsjeroea-citambel ... ... 459 Tsjetta pulla ... 343 Tsjiregam Mulla ... ... 87 Tsjora Valli ° 409 Tsjude marum...._... 117 Tsjuria cranti ... 503 Tunga diandra 184 —— levigata ... 183 —— triceps .. . 183 — Tsjelli 214 Uncearia acida cg wir SDD _ —— cirrhiflora:... . 520 _—_— Gambier PROPOR 517 ovalifolia 519 —— pedicellata 520 ——pilosa ... .. 520. —— sclerophylla ... 520 | —— sessilifructus .... 520 | Utricularia biflora .... 143 Vangueria spinosa.» .... 536 Vareca heteroclita’.... 648 lanceolata... ... 648 —moluccana ... -» 647 Veda Kodi. -2siieivee: ».. 128 Ventilago Madraspatana 629 Verbascum thapsus ... _ 560 Vidi-marum vic ose «+ 590 Viola apetala«.. ... 650 ——enneasperma - ... 650 suffruticosa ... ... 649 Virana jbaiaese L.+——- 266 Vitis indica... ... ... 660 lanata teri a -— O88 latifolia... ... ... 661 Volubilis zeylanica 508 Warapulla — te vee DOE i aad 2 corymbosa ; Prmerophyiia eo OF __—. odorata =