ness of its foliage and flowers. ¡Sometimes its leaves are 
quinate, as represented in the plate. 
The Thermopsis laburnifolia. of Mr. Don, which has 
also been named Thermopsis napaulensis by M. Decan- 
dolle, is, as we have shewn in the Transactions of the Horti- 
cultural Society, a genuine species of Anagyris, and should 
be called Anagyris indica. 
Easily increased by division of its creeping roots. 
A perennial, growing 2 or 3 feet high, with creeping 
roots. Stem erect, flexuose. Leaves 3-leaved, sometimes 
5-leaved ; stipules ovate, leafy; leaflets oblong, obtuse, or 
obovate,. minutely downy beneath, with smooth veins. 
Racemes axillary, much longer than the leaves, somewhat 
verticillate. Cahier silky, with ovate teeth. Corolla 
yellow, quite smooth. Pods erect, 3 inches long, linear, 
pubescent, compressed, tipped with the indurated, smooth, 
curved style. = 
J. L. 
