sylvanicum by its large, quite entire leaves, and wider 
mouth to the corolla, and from both by the very hairy leaves. 
It seems to have been first discovered: by Katm; whose spe- 
cimen, under the name adopted by Dr. Ricarpson, is pre- 
served in the Banksian Herbarium. 
Descr. _ Stem much branched, from six to eight or ten 
inches high, the branches clothed with a dingy-coloured, 
downy bark. Leaves often an inch long, lanceolate, acute 
at both extremities, quite entire at the margin, membrana- 
ceous, deciduous, soft and flaccid, the veins above downy, 
the whole underside clothed, but especially on the midrib 
and veins, with copious spreading hairs. Racemes short, 
four to six-flowered, subcorymbose. Calyx nearly erect, 
green. Corolla short and campanulate, white tinged with 
red, the mouth open, five-toothed, the teeth reflexed: Sta- 
mens shorter than the style: and the style itself is included 
within the corolla. Berries blue-black, agreeable to the 
taste. 
Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Calyx. 3, 4, Stamens. 5. Underside of a Leaf. 
