116 LXXV. RUDIACEE, (J, D. Hooker.) [ Ivora.. 
have no means of verifying. The flowers vary from scarlet and pink to white and 
yellowish.—Kurz makes 2 varieties:—1. Roxburghiana, with almost sessile leaves. 
often rounded at the base, and subsessile or sessile cymes; and 2. Blumeana (Pavetta 
javanica, Blume), with short-petioled leaves acute at the base and laxer cymes on 
peduncles 1-13 in. The latter of these T take to be Z. amena, Wall. Cat. 6121 A. B. C. 
A rosea, Wall. Cat. 6124, from the Calcutta Garden, is probably a variety of this 
with aeute calyx-teeth and narrower corolla-lobes. 
26. I. amoena, Wall. Cat. 6121, D. E. F.; G. Don Gen. Syst. ii. 571; 
glabrous or cymes puberulous, leaves petioled lanceolate or oblong- or obovate-- 
lanceolate acuminate, base acute, cymes sessile or peduncled corymbiform, 
flowers crowded, calyx-teeth ovate-lanceolate shorter than the ovary, corolla- 
tube 1-1} in., lobes oblong obtuse, mouth naked. 
TENASSERIM, at. Mergui, Griffith (Kew Distrib. 2986); Drago, Wallich, Phillips, 
Maingay (Kew Distrib. 846).—Disrrip. Java. 
This differs from 7. stricta in its laxer more slender habit and longer lanceolate 
acuminate, more membranous leaves with petioles }—} in., but I suspect it will prove 
only a form of that plant. 
97. X. fulgens, Rob. Hort. Beng. 10; Fl. Ind. i. 878; glabrous, branches 
slender polished, leaves petioled linear- or obovate-oblong abruptly acutely or 
obtusely acuminate, base acute, shining above with 20-30 pair of deeply sunk 
nerves, cymes large sessile or shortly peduncled corymbiform and very open or 
sub-brachiate, branches long slender spreading, flowers shortly pedicelled, calyx- 
teeth very short obtuse, corolla-tube 1-1 in., lobes ovate acute, mouth naked, 
DC. Prodr. iv. 486; Wight Ic. t. 151; Wall. Cat. 6152 A. I. salicifolia, DC. 
l.c. 487; Bot. Mag. t. 4523. Pavetta fulgens, Mig. Fl. Ind. Bat. ii. 264. P. 
salicifolia, Blume Bid. 951. P. Lobbii, Teysm. & Binnend. in Miq. Ann. Mus. 
Ludg. Bat. iv. 194. 
'l'exassEnIM, Helfer (Kew Distrib. 2998); Maracca, Griffith (2985), Maingay 
(815); Stncavorr, Lobb; Penance, Wallich.—Disrris, Java, Borneo. 
A shrub, branches erect. Leaves 5-9 by 11-2 in., membranous, dark brown when 
dry, surface often raised between the nerves, base always acute; petiole 1-3 in.; 
stipules closely grasping the stem, with slender cusps. Cyme quite sessile, secondary 
branches long spreading horizontally, the whole forming a loose inflorescence 5-7 in, 
broad but not so high; bracts and bracteoles short, ovate, acute; flowers shortly 
pedicelled, orange then scarlet. Fruit spherical or didymous, “succulent and seed 
rugose,” Roxb. 
98. X. congesta, Korb. FI. Ind. i, 387; glabrous except the puberulous 
cymes, leaves large petioled elliptic or elliptic-oblong or -lanceolate abruptly 
obtusely acuminate, base rarely rounded, nerves strong 12-15 pair, stipules 
short with short cusps, cymes sessile or subsessile corymbiform, branches very 
stout suberect fastigate, calyx-teeth very short broadly triangular, corolla-tube 
1-13 in., lobes obtuse, mouth naked. DC, Prodr. iv. 486; Wall. Cat. 6158. 
I. Griffithii, Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 4825, I. fulgens, Wall, Cat. 6512 B. Pavetta 
congesta, Miq. Fl. Ind. Bat. i. 269. 
TENASSERIM; Tavoy and Attran, Wallich, Gomez. Prnana and SINGAPORE, 
Wallich, Se, Matacca, Griffith (Kew Distrib. 2984), Maingay (848). 
An evergreen treo (Kurz), closely allied to Z. fulgens, differing in the stouter 
habit, very large usually coriaceous broader leaves 6-12 by 2-4 in., with nerves very 
prominent beneath, and petioles 3-2 in., and the very stout eyme-branches, which do 
not spread, but are fastigiate; the stipules, too, are broader and shorter; the bracts 
aro the same, very triangular, and the flowers are sometimes sessile, at others on 
stout pedicels; fruit ovoid or globose or didymous. 
29. I. rugosula, Tall, Cat. 6158; glabrous except the cymes, leaves 
petioled ovate or elliptic or lanceolate acuminate, base acute or rounded, stipules 
