334 DR. MAXWELL T. MASTERS—A GENERAL 
Manual, 228; Eichler in Mart. Flor. Brasil., Conif. (1868) 
t. exiii. 11. ; Masters in Journ. Roy. Hort. Soc. xvii. (1894) p. 1 
(ubi arboris bujusce jucundissime historia est elata); Hansen in 
Journ. R. Hort. Soc. xiv. (1892) p. 285. 
Cupressus glauca, Lam. Encycl. ii. 248 (1786-1790) ; Spreng. 
Syst. iii. p. 889; Brotero, Fl. Lusit. i. 216 (1804); Endlicher, 
Synops. 58 (1847) ; Parlatore in DC. Prod. xvi. 11. 470 ; Willkomm 
& Lange, Prod. Flor. Hispan. (1861) i. 21; Brandis, For. Flor. 
534; Dalzell et Gibson, Bombay Fl. Suppl. 83 (1861); J. D. 
Hook. in Flor. Brit. Ind. v. 645 (1890) ; Masters in Gard. Chron. 
ser. III. x. (1891), Dec. 26, p. 761, fig. 110 ; Willkomm in Garten- 
flora (March 1890); Useful Plants of Bombay, by J. C. Lisboa, 
Bombay (1886), p. 133. 
An sit C. sempervirentis vel C. torulosc varietas dubitat cl. 
Hookerus. 
C. pendula, L’ Hérit. Stirp. 15, t. 8 (1784); non Thunb., nec 
Abel, nec Lamb. ; Nouv. Duhamel, tab. 2 (1806); Aiton, Hort. 
Kew. ed. r. (1789), iii. p. 373; Persoon, Synopsis, ii. (1807) 
p- 580; C. Koch, Dendrologie, ii. 11. (1873) p. 151. 
C. Uhdeana, Gordon, Pinet. 71, excl. loc. fide Parlatore, sed? ; 
Carriére, Traité, p. 128. 
C. sinensis, hort. 
The following names of garden-forms are referred to this species 
by C. Koch, 7. c.:—0. cinerea, C. capensis, variegata, goensis, 
sinensis, sinensis glauca, sinensis pendula, Libani glauca, mexicana 
glauca. Carriére also considers the following Mexican trees 
to belong to this species, viz., C. Benthami, C. Uhdeana, and 
C. Lindleii, but this identification is open to doubt. 
A summary of the history of this tree is given in a communication 
to the Royal Horticultural Society *. Although the Portuguese 
botanists do not consider it a native—there are no large trees 
known out of Portugal, and the species is not found wild in the 
neighbourhood of Goa,—it is possible that the Portuguese may 
have met with the plant in China and transferred it thence to 
Goa and the mother country. The tree, however, is as I am in- 
formed by Mr. Tutcher, not found in the neighbourhood of Macao. 
A cross section through the adult leaves of the “ Cedar of Goa” 
from Bussaco shows each leaf to have a semi-elliptical form, 
convex dorsally, more or less concave internally, and with the 
* Masters in Journ. Royal Hortic. Soc. vol. xvii. (1894) p. 1. 
