Callicarpa.] CXI. VERBENACEX. (C. B. Clarke.) 569 
1834, type sheet; Blume Bijd. 817; Dene. in Nouv. Ann. Mus. iii. 401; 
Schauer in DC. Prodr. xi. 643; Benth. Fl. Austral. v. 56. C. tomentosa, 
Lemk. Dict. i. 569. C. americana, Lour. Fl. Cochinch. 70, not of Linn. 
C. adenanthera, Br. Prodr. 513. C. Heynei, Roth Nov. Sp. 82; Blume 
Bijd. 819. C. bicolor, Juss. in Ann. Mus. vii. 77; Schauer l. c. 642. C. 
sumatrana, Wig. Fi. Ind. Bat. ii. 880. C. dentata, Herb. Roxb., Wall. Cat. 
1834 by admixture, not of Roth. 
PENANG; Wallich. Matacea; Griffith, Maingay.—D1sTRIB. Malaya and 
Philippine Islands, N. Australia. 
Leaves 4} by 2j in., suddenly cuneate and narrowed into the petiole, often 
almost spathulate, mature shining above, usually very white beneath; petiole 1-3 in. 
Peduncles usually 3-1 in.; cyme 1-2 in. diam., globose. Fruit deep-purple, finally 
black.— Widely cultivated for the strong contrast between the upper and lower 
surface of the leaves, The figure in Bot. Mag. (t. 2107) is doubted by Bentham l. c., 
and with reason, 
8. C. pedunculata, Br. Prodr. 512; shrubby, leaves broadly elliptic 
acuminate base rounded closely serrulate mature puberulous above thinly 
stellate-floceulose beneath, peduncles often as long as the petiole. Benth. 
Fl. Austral. v. 57. C. cuspidata, Roxb. Fl. Ind. i. 394. C. dentata, Roth 
Nov. Sp. 81; Blume Bijd. 818; Wall. Cat. 6319. C. cana, Wall. Cat. 
1834, n. 2. C. lanata, Schauer in DC. Prodr. xi. 644, not of Linn., nor of 
Vahl. O. tiliaefolia, Teijsm. & Binnend. fide Kurz ms. 
Penang; Wallich.—DisrRIB. Malaya, Trop. Australia. . . 
Leaves 5 by 2} in., membranous, stellate tomentum somewhat deciduous ; petiole 
m., stellate-woolly. ^ Cymes 1-2 in. diam., globose, dense, stellately woolly ; 
peduncles i-i in. Fruit y» in. diam., dark purple.— Easily distinguished from 
C. cana by the nearly concolorous surfaces of the leaf. 
9. C. rubella, Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 883; arborescent, leaves very 
short-petioled cordate-oblong acuminate crenate-serrate mature softly 
pubescent above tomentose beneath, peduncles short, calyx in flower 
stellately tomentose. Schauer in DC. Prodr. xi. 645; Benth. Fl. Hongk. 
271. O. sessilifolia, Wall. Cat. 1837; Walp. Rep. iv. 130. C. tenuiflora, 
Champ. in Hook. Kew Journ. v. 135. 
t SIKKIM, alt. 2000 ft.; Clarke, Kwasta and JarwTEA Mrs., alt. 2-4000 ft., 
Tequent; Wallich, H. f. & T., &c.— DISTRIB. China. 
n erect, inglese tid shrub, 10-20 ft., with horizontal branches and com- 
planate foliage. Leaves 5 by 1-1] in, parallel-sided or slightly obovate, close y 
covered with short simple hairs above, concolorous beneath; petiole 7-4 in. 
eduncles iin; cymes 1-2 in. diam., stellately tomentose. Calyx not membranons 
nor glabrate in fruit. Corolla pink. Fruit j- in. diam., fine purple.— Lind ey's 
sure represents correctly the Chinese form of this species having the leaves crossing 
fach other ” subsessile, mature nearly glabrate above very thinly stellate-hairy DeL 
e description of Schauer l. c. is taken from the Indian form, C. sessilifolia, Wall., 
Which, however, has the petioles longer than the Chinese. 
10. P. psilocalyx, Clarke; arborescent, leaves elliptic acuminate 
denticulate mature nearly glabrous, cymes small short-peduncled stellately 
Villous, calyx membranous in flower glandular scarcely hairy. 
Enasra Mrs., alt. 4-5000 ft. ; Wallich, J. D. H., &c. ; " 
„Small tree; branchlets densely stellate-tomentose. Leaves 8 by 2i in ot 
by 1 in., baie rounded or cuneate thinly membranous, mature with scatter st hate 
ars on the midrib beneath, tertiary venation close prominent, g all "t w-üd.: 
Scattered ; petiole 44 in. Peduncles mostly very short ; cymes wih y ink ish, 
Pedicels sometimes pink. Calyx j, in, minutely 4-toothed, greenish or P , 
