388 DR. MAXWELL T. MASTERS—A GENERAL 
Pinus, ed. 11. p. 124, t. 66; Loudon, Arboretum. iv. 2479, f. 2832; 
Paxton, Flower Garden, i. 46, f. 31; Moore & Ayres, Magazine ` 
Bot. i. 276, f. 1, sub nom. C. funebris; Abelin Staunton Embassy, 
l. c. (1816); Loudon, 7. c., sub nom. C. pendule, haud Thunberg 
(1784) synonymiisque exclusis. 
Cupressus amana, C. Koch, in Monatschrift f. Garten u. 
Pflanzenkunde, i. 110 (1873), et in Dendrologie, ii. 11. 164. 
Fig. 11. Fig. 12. 
C. funebris. —Herbaceous branches, foliage, catkins, and cones, real size. 
Fig. 11, cultivated specimen ; fig. 12, natural specimen from Ichang. 
A section across the leaves of C. funebris shows an elliptic 
outline generally curved outwards, convex 
dorsally, concave on the opposite side, and 
somewhat blunted at the two ends, gene- 
rally more so than in the specimen figured. 
The epiderm is much thickened on the . f of 
distal side, but there are no hypodermal ideis x 20. 
cells except at the angles. The palissade- 
cells are well-marked, but the endodermal layer is not developed. 
Fig. 13. 
5. Cupressus BENTHAMI, Endlicher, Synopsis Conif. (1847) 
p. 59. 
Arbor coma effusa laxiuscule ramosa, ramis teretibus rubris ; 
foliis ramealibus homomorphis oblongis vel deltoideis abrupte 
subulato-acuminatis acumine laxe appresso; ramis herbaceis 
foliis undique tectis ambitu late oblongis planiuseulis ascendenti- 
bus lete viridibus subregulariter bipinnatim ramulosis ; ramulis 
