72 
tifidis, laciniis oblongo v. lineari-lanceolatis obtusiusculis serrato-crenatis 
subpinnatifidisve, spica densa v. basi interrupt, calycibus hirsutis, den- 
tibus brevibus acutis integerrimis, rostro lineari contorto galea ipsa 
duplo longiore. 
This species of Pedicularis is a native of the North of 
India, and has been raised in the Garden of the Horticultural 
Society from seeds presented by the East India Company. It 
is a hardy perennial, and unlike most of its genus, appears to 
be cultivated without difficulty. It has pinnated leaves in a 
whorl of four, spikes of lively purple flowers, with a singularly 
long twisted beak to the corolla. It differs from P. gracilis 
and from P. tenuirostris by the long twisted galea, from P. 
pectinata chiefly by the form of the segments of the leaf. Dr. 
Royle found it in the Himalayas towards Cashmere. 
156. HEMIANDRA emarginata ; caule erecto, ramis patuli spatentim pube- 
scentibus, foliis lineari-oblongis complicatis pungentibus 3-nerviis secus 
nervos marginemque pilosis, calycibus subsessilibus villosis : _lacinis 
subeequalibus pungentibus, corolle laciniis superioribus rotundatis emar- 
ginatis. 
A pretty little herbaceous plant, related to Westringia, 
raised by the Horticultural Society from New Holland seeds 
presented by Sir George Murray. It forms a small bright 
green bush, witn rigid pungent leaves, and nearly sessile 
flowers, whose corolla is nearly white, with a few pink spots 
upon it. From H. brevifolia of Bentham it differs in having 
the segments of the calyx equal to each other, and from H. 
hirsuta in the form of the leaves, and in the lobes of the calyx 
being pungent. It is a greenhouse plant. 
157. EUCALYPTUS calophylla; foliis alternis ovato-lanceolatis petiolatis 
marginatis parcé punctatis nunc acuminatis nunc obtusis cum mucrone : 
venis primariis simplicibus pennatim dispositis contiguis subparallelis, 
umbellis terminalibus et axillaribus 4-5-floris pedunculatis, operculo 
minimo hemisphezrico umbonato hinc cupulze c. cardine affixo. 
The name of E. calophylla is current in gardens for this 
beautiful plant, but I cannot discover it in books. It is a 
native of Port Augusta on the South-west coast -of New Hol- 
land, whence its seeds were sent to Capt. Jas. Mangles, R.N. 
by Mrs. Molloy, a lady enthusiastically fond of flowers, to 
whom we are indebted for many acquisitions. Its branches 
are of a rich reddish brown. The leaf-stalks, which are rather 
