336 DR. MAXWELL T. MASTERS—A GENERAL 
Icones :— Griffith, Ic. Plant. Asiat. t. 972; Murray, in Pinet.. 
Brit. 201; Loudon, Arboret. f. 2329-31; Encycl. 1076, f. 1999- 
2001; Lambert, Pinus, ed. rr. 113. 
Endlicher, Synops. 58; Dalzell et Gibson, Bombay Flor. 
Suppl. 83; Parlatore, in DC. Prodr. xvi. rr. 469; Brandis, For. 
Flor. 1874, 533 ; Gamble, Mon. Ind. Timber, 410; Hook. Flor. 
Brit. Ind. v. (1888) p. 645; C. Koch, Dendrol. ii. 159; Veitch, 
Manual, 239; Gordon, Pinetum, ed. 11. 97; Carriére, Traité, 
p. 117, ed. rr. p. 151; Forbes in Pinet. Woburn. 189. 
Cupressus Tournefortiit, Tenore in Mem. Soc. Ital. Scien. 
Modena, t. xxv. pars 2 (1853), tab. 1 a, haud Audibert. 
Var. CoRNEYANA. 
A C. torulosa typica teste cl. Parlatore, l. c. p. 470, 
differre videtur “ramis ramulisque omnino pendulis, glandulis 
foliorum vix conspicuis, strobilisque ssepius ovalibus haud 
umbonatis sed tantum apice bractew adnate libero incurvo 
mucronatis et super mucronem tantum glaucis." .. . . 
* Strobili 15-20 mill. longi, 10-14 mill. lat. Specimina culta 
tantum vidi ideoque de patria ejusdem speciei respondere 
non possum." 
C. Corneyana, Gordon ex Knight and Perry, Conif. p. 20 
(1850); Gordon, Pinet. ed. xt. p. 805 Carrière, Traité, ed. 1. 
p. 28; Parlatore, l. c. p. 470. 
C. torulosa, Corneyana, Carriére, Traité, ed. rr. p. 121 
(1867) ; Kent in Veitch, Manual, 239. 
C. funebris, Karl Koch, Dendrologie, ii. 11. 160, haud Endl. 
Strobilorum squame juventute valde umbonate, senescendis 
tamen planiuscule obscure mucronate evadunt. 
E Chiná vel e J aponià ut existimant auctores allata, 
specimina indigena hucusque tamen haud offensa. 
In hortis exstat varietas vegetior ramulis ultimis insigniter 
decurvatis cui nomen C. torulosa majestica, Gordon, Pinet. 
ed. 11. 100— C. majestica, Knight et Perry. A cl. Carriére 
varietates hortenses sequentes enumerate sunt :—viridis, 
Jiliformis, Tournefortii (Tenore non Audib.), nana, juni- 
peroides, microcarpa, Smithiana. 
Dr. Jameson says (Journ. Horticult. Soc. 1853, p. 812) that 
this species is known to the natives as *Surroo' or ‘Surin,’ 
and near Simla, where it occurs in the vicinity of temples, 
