342 MR. R. A. ROLFE ON THE SELAGINEJE 
Linneus, * Hab. in Bisnagaris sylvis," must be a mistake, as the 
plant is not known from India. 
Q. vurnaanIs, Z.! Two specimens on one sheet. Founded on 
Globularia caule herbaceo, &c., L., Fl, Suec. 109, &c., and correctly 
understood by authors. 
G. spryosa, L. No specimen. Founded on Globularia spi- 
nosa, ''ournef. Institut. p. 467, and correctly understood. 
G. CORDIFOLIA, L.! One specimen. Founded on Globularia 
foliis radicalibus, &c., L. Hort. Cliff. p. 491, and correctly under- 
stood. 
P. 97. G. wvprcAvLIS, L. No specimen. Founded on Glo- 
bularia pyrenaica, &c., Tournef. Institut. p. 467, and correctly 
understood. In the Linnsan Herbarium is a sheet labelled by 
Linnzus *G. nudicaulis,’ on which Sir James Smith has written 
in pencil “ vulgaris? ". It is a specimen of G. vulgaris, L., and 
proves that Linneus i ood Tour nefort's plant on aoe 
he founded the species. 
G. onurENTALIS, L.! One specimen. Founded on Globularia 
orientalis floribus per caulem sparsis, Tournef. Institut. Corollar. 
p. 35, and correctly understood. 
P. 629. SELAGO conyMBosa, Z.! One specimen. Founded 
on Commelyn, Hort. Amstel. ii. p. 79, t. 40, &c., and correctly 
understood, excepting that Meyer wrongly reduces to this as a 
synonym 5. polystachya, L. Mant. p. 250, an error repeated by 
Choisy; while Meyer had the true S. polystachya as * S. cinerea, 
Thunb." which Choisy also followed. On the right-hand side 
of the above sheet is a small specimen with ticket “No. 8, 
Phylica ? et quinam (?);" and on it Linnzus has written * S. co- 
rymbosa e Natali;" but it is S. stricta, Berg. !, though I have not 
seen a specimen from Natal, which locality ean scarcely be 
correct. 
S. sPuRIA, Z.! One specimen. Founded on Burm. Afric. 
p. 115, t. 42. fig. 3, and correctly understood. But it must also 
include S. rapunculoides, L. Amoen. Acad. iv. p. 319, and S. coc- 
cinea, L. Amcen. Acad. vi. p. 89, two species kept up with diffi- 
eulty by Meyer and Choisy, but which absolutely break down 
in the long series of specimens I have examined. S. rapuncu- 
loides, L., is a very vigorous form from old woody plants with 
