140 C. BoRAGINE£. (C. B. Clarke.) [ Cordia. 
about } in.; most of the examples are leafless when in flower, often with much 
larger calyx. 
13. C. fulvosa, Wight Ic. t. 1380; leaves ovate obtuse or acute tomen- 
tum beneath hard, corymbs closely tomentose calyx soon glabrescent, be 
3-1 in. ovoid acute. Bedd. For. Man. 166. C. polygama, Wall. Cat. 892, 
partly. —Cordia sp. n. 13, Herb. Ind. Or. H. f. & T. 
W. Deccan PeNiNsULA; Concan and Belgaum, Law, Stocks, Ritchie. . 
Leaves with hard, not woolly tomentum, becoming scabrous or subglabrate in age, 
very variable in size, obtuse or more often acute, crenately lobed or entire, obscurely 
3-nerved.—Except in its much less tomentose corymb and leaves, this is undistin- 
guishable from C. Macleodii ; it may be only a more tomentose form of C. monowa, 
as Wallich esteemed it. 
Var. evolutior ; less tomentose, leaves 8 by 4 in., corymb large, calyx at m 
time glabrescent.—Bombay; Dalzell—A very doubtful plant; it forms part p 
Cordia n. 13, Herb. Ind. Or. H. f. 4 T. and appears really to belong here, but 1 
exceedingly unlike Wight's picture of C. fulvosa. 
Secr. Il. Sebesten. Corolla larger, tube exceeding the calyx. Stamens 
14. C. octandra, 4. DC. Prodr. ix. 477; leaves ovate acuminate 
crenate-subserrate 3-nerved nearly glabrous, calyx cylindrie obscurely tomas 
tose without, corolla white tube slightly longer than the calyx, stamens usually 
8. Bedd. For. Man. 166. C. serrata, Roxb. Fl. Ind. ed. Carey § Wal. i. 
333; Wall. Cat. 890; Wight Ic. t. 469, not of Juss. 
Travancore ; Rorburgh. . . 
Arboreous. Leaves alternate, 6 by 3 in. rounded or rhomboid at the tan; 
petiole 1-2 in. Corymbs lateral, peduncled, 2-4 in., minutely rusty ; flowers Su 
sessile in small clusters. Calyzx-tube 4 in.; lobes jb in., triangular, hairy vitm 
Corolla-lobes 7-9, 4 in. Filaments hairy ; anthers ovate, small.— Described from e 
Caleutta Botanie Garden examples; no wild specimen known. 
15. C. subcordata, Lamk. Ill. ii. 421 ; leaves large ovate acute obscurely 
3-neryed nearly glabrous without, corolla large orange or reddish tube ex FH 
ing the calyx, stamens 6. Wail. Cat. 9003; DC. Prodr. ix. 477 ; Seem. A 
Viti, t. 34; Benth. Fl. Austral. iv. 385, with syn.; Kurz For. Fl. ii. 209. 
C. orientalis, Br. Prodr. 498. C. campanulata, Roxb. Fl. Ind. ed. Carey Y 
Wall. ii. 336. C. Rumphii, Blume Bijd. 843. C. hexandra, Roem. Y Seh 
Syst. iv. 799.—Rumph. Herb. Amb. ii. t. 75. 
ANDAMANS and S, Maray Pentysuta. In Bengal and various parts of India oft 
Planted.—Distrts. S.E. Asia to Australia and the Sandwich Isles. Widely eut- 
tivated. : 
A small tree. eaves 3-6 in., base rounded or subcordate; petiole ł-15 ™ 
Corymòs lateral and few-fid., nearly glabrous ; flowers usually 6-merous. Calyz $ 
in.; teeth short, triangular, villous within. Corolla-tube 3 in, lobes 4 in. Branches 
of the stigmas linear-spathulate. Fruit 1 in., ellipsoid, acute, usually 1-seeded. 
Seed grossly muricated, subspinose. 
EXCLUDED SPECIES. 
Cornia FiraAvsoxtaxa, Wall. Cat. 7010 ; without locality attached, was probably 
collected in Cochin-China, 
Cornia sr., Wall. Cat. 9064, is Mappia oblonga, Miers, var. elliptica (v. i. P- 689) 
