Tab. 43;il. 
SIPHOCAMPYLOS glandulosa. 
Glandular Sij)hocampyloH. 
Nat. Ord. Lobeliace.®.—Pentandbia Monogynia. 
Gen. Char. {Vide supra. Tab. 4178.) 
SiPHOCAMPYLOS gla}idiilosa ; ubique raoUiter pubescens, caule supeme angii- 
lato lierbaceo, foliis sublouge petiolatis cordato-rugosis duplicato-dentatis 
denticubs nigro-glandulosis, pedunculis axillaribus sobtariis fobo brevioribus 
unifloris infra medium bibracteatis, calycis tubo turbinato 10-sulcato, bmbi 
lobis lanceolatis patentibus marginibus reflexis profunde glanduloso-serratis, 
eorollse (rosea?) nutantis curvatis tubo compresso 5-clavato bneis 5 elevatis 
limbi laciniis 5 oblongo-ovatis ereeto-patentibus subaequabbus, staminibus 
^styloque inclusis. 
A handsome species of Pohl’s genus Siphocampylos, from 
Bogota, of which seeds were sent to*Syon and to the Royal 
fj'ardens of Kew, by Mr. Purdie, in 1845. Our drawing was 
taken from a fine flowering specimen in the Greenhouse of His 
Grace the late Duke of Northumberland. It grows freely and 
flowers abundantly during the summer months. 
Descr. Stems herbaceous, yet apparently perennial, erect, 
two to three feet high, clothed with soft short dotvm, as is every 
part of the plant. Leaves alternate, large, cordate, petiolate, 
winkled, deeply and doubly dentate, the teeth all terminated by 
black glands. Petioles an inch or more long, slender. Pedun¬ 
cles axillary, solitary, single-flowered, shorter than the leaf, 
downy or almost tomentose like the calyx. Calyx of five somewhat 
leafy, spreading, lanceolate segments, the margins reflexed, deeply 
glanduloso-serrate, tube turbinate, sulcate; limb of five almost 
equal, spreading, glanduloso-serrate segments. Corolla rose 
colour, downy, two or tw'o and a half inches long, clavate, 
laterally compressed, contracted below the insertion of the 
stamens, and again dilated at the very base; limb of five nearly 
equal segments, of which the upper Up consists of two slightly 
incurved, the lower of three very slightly spreading segments, 
all ovato-lanceolate. Stamens scarcely protruded, inserted below 
OCTOBER 1st, 1847. 
