61 LIMONIA CRENULATA. 
two-three pair, opposite, sessile, oblong, nearly equal, slightly 
notch’d, obtuse, smooth, texture slight, covered with numberless 
small diaphanous points, one inch long, and half an inch broad. 
Petiole broad-wing’d, leaf-like, articulated. 
Flowers white, small, fragrant, collected on small umbells, or ra- 
cemes, over various parts of the branchlets. 
Calyx small, four-tooth’d. 
Petals four, lanced, spreading. 
Nectary: a ring surrounds the base of the germ. 
Filaments eight, rather shorter than the petals, broad towards the 
base, spreading. 
Anthers incumbent, oval. 
~ Germ above, sessile. 
Style thick, shorter than the stamens. 
Stigma oblong. 
_ Berry size of a large pea, smooth, juicy, when ripe black, four- 
cell’d. 
Seeds four, one in each cell, though it seldom happens that all come 
to maturity. 
This species is generally found on the low lands near the coast, 
in form of a shrub, but among the mountains it grows to a middle 
sized tree. Flowering time the hot season. 
87. GETONIA FLORIBUNDA. 
Bandy-moorroodoodoo of the Telingas. 
Stem woody, climbing. 
Branches twiggy. 
Leaves opposite, short-petioled, egg’d, pointed, downy, about three 
inches long, and two broad. 
Panicles terminal and axillary, middle-sized, cross-armed. 
Bractes single, below each flower, lanced. 
Flowers opposite, without smell. 
Calyx above, chaffy, very large, deeply five-tooth’d, permanent. 
Filaments inserted into the mouth of the calyx, alternately lower. 
Pericarp none, except the crust of the seed, oblong, five-striated, 
crown’'d with the large withered calyx, and covered with rusty- 
colour’d down. 
This is a large, climbing shrub, a native of forests: flowers in 
February and March. 
88. ERYTHROXYLON MONOGYNUM. 
Adave (2. e. wild) Gorinta of the Telingas. 
Branchlets two-faced. 
Leaves short-petioled, alternate, two-faced, wedge-form, rounded at 
the apex, entire, smooth, shining, about half an inch long, 
and three quarters of an inch broad. 
Stipules single, within the leaf. 
Peduncles axillary, generally one, two or three, short, one-flower’d. 
Flowers small, yellow. : 
Nectaries: two exterior, as described in the genus ; interior bell’d, 
surrounding the germ: margin ten-tooth’d, stamen-bearing. 
Filaments a continuation of the teeth of the interior nectary. 
ERYTHROXYLON MONOGYNUM. 62 
Style single, rather longer than the stamens. 
Stigma three-cleft. 
Drupe size of a french bean, oblong, succulent. 
Is a small irregularly formed tree, a native of vallies among the 
mountains in the Circars. Flowers in June or July. 
89. OCHNA SQUARROSA. 
Linn. spec. plant. 731. 
Yerra-juvie of the Telingas. 
Leaves alternate, short-petioled, oblong, acute, finely sawed, smooth, 
the youngest are remarkably colour’d, about four or five inches 
long, by two broad. 
Panicles fascicle-like, from the naked branchlets, below the young 
leaves. 
Bractes small, falling. 
Flowers large, yellow, inodorous. 
ialyx five-leaved: leaflets oblong, large as the petals in size, but not 
colour’d, permanent. 
Petals from seven to twelve, generally nine or ten, oblong, falling. 
Filaments short, permanent. 
Anthers linear, erect, falling. 
Germs generally as many as there are petals, surrounding a half- 
round receptacle. 
Style from the apex of the receptacle, rather longer than the stamens, 
permanent. 
Stigma perforated. 
Pericarp none. Receptacle half round, colour’d, with a ridge for 
each seed or petal, that was in the corol ; on each sits an ob- 
long egg’d seed (as in Quassia), about the size of a large french 
bean, smooth ; when ripe black. It is rarely that all the seeds 
come to perfection. 
It is a small tree, a native of our Circar mountains. Flowers 
about the beginning of the hot season, at which time the leaves be- 
gin to come out, having cast them during the cold season. 
90. GERARDIA DELPHINIFOLIA. 
Linn, spec. plant. 848. 
Antirrhino adfinis maderaspatana, capillaceo folio triphyllos, flore 
purpureo. Pluk. amalth. 17. tab. 353.7. 3. 
Stem herbaceous, straight, ramous, four-angl'd, four-groov’d, about 
three or four feet high, spotted with dark purple. 
Branches opposite, stem-like. 
Leaves opposite, irregularly feather-cleft ; divisions linear, as in 
Ipomoea quamoclit. 
Flowers axillary, solitary, short-pedicell’d, large, rose-colour’d. 
Bractes two, thread-form, press on the calyx laterally. 
Calyx one-leaved, five-cleft: divisions linear, erect, permanent. 
Corol one-petaled : Tube bellied, two or three times longer than the 
calyx: Border five-parted, segments equal, rounded. 
Filaments four, two-powers, the superior pair end in a recurved 
hook ; the inferior in an erect horn. 
Anthers linear: the superior pair approach archwise, so that 
