tion of seeds received from New Holland, but it was not 
known in what part of the country they were gathered. It 
flowered in the greenhouse at that establishment in March 
and April, 1841. We learn from Dr. Linptey, above quot- 
ed, that the species is a native of the Swan River Colony. 
Descr. Sem branched, very slender, twining, wiry, 
with a few adpressed hairs. Leaves scattered, spreading, 
elliptico-lanceolate, obovate or cuneate, flat, entire in the 
edge or retuse at the apex, mucronate, slightly sprinkled 
with adpressed hairs on the dark green upper surface, rather 
more closely below where the colour is somewhat lighter ; 
midrib prominent below, channelled above; petioles short ; 
stipules subulate, erect. Racemes few-flowered, terminal 
or axillary, pedicels short, springing from the axils of leaves 
reduced to the size and appearance of the stipules, which 
remain by their sides at the lower flowers, at the upper the 
bracteas are shorter and ovate (from their union with the two 
stipules ?). Calyx bilabiate, with very few adpressed hairs, 
bibracteolate at the base ; lower lip three-partite, segments 
lanceolato-ovate ; upper lip bifid, segments blunt, diverging. 
Corolla smaller than in CHorozema ovatum; vexillum sub- 
rotund, retuse in the centre, orange-coloured, with an ob- 
long, yellow spot in the throat, reflected, claw obconical ; 
ale darker and more red, about the same length as the 
vexillum, spread horizontally, their upper edges overlap- 
ping, cultrate, claw linear, tooth short and blunt ; keel pale- 
yellow, much shorter than the ale, blunt, its petals coher- 
ing only for a little way in the middle. Stamens free, in- 
cluded within the keel ; filaments colourless; anthers pale- 
yellow. Pistil rather shorter than the stamens; sé¢gma 
capitate ; style glabrous ; germen shortly stipitate, silky : 
ovules several. Graham. 
Fig. 1. Stipules. 2. Flower. from which the Corolla is removed. 3. 
Vexillum. 4. One of the Ale. 5. Carina. 6. Ovary. 7. Fruit invested 
by the Calyx :—magnified. 
