Tas:-5772. 
CALCEOLARIA uenrict. 
Mr. Anderson-Henry’s Calceolaria. 
Nat. Ord. ScropHuLARINEa.—DIANDRIA Monoeynia. 
Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tan. 5892.) 
CatcroLaria Henrici ; erecta, foliosa, caule puberulo, foliis oppositis breviter 
petiolatis supremis sessilibus elongato-lanceolatis 3-5 poll. longis acumi- 
natis marginibus recurvis serratis supra glabris subtus pubescenti-pilosis, 
cymis pedunculatis corymbosis 6-8-floris, glanduloso-puberulis, calyce 
parvo explanato ad medium 4-lobo, lobis latis obtusis, corolla puberula, 
labiis clausis superiore inflato transverse oblongo, inferiore depresso- 
globoso ascendente. 
For the opportunity of describing this new and@* almost 
hardy and. beautiful Calceolaria, I am indebted to Isaac 
Anderson Henry, Esq., F.L.8., of Hay Lodge, Edinburgh, 
who received seeds of it from our mutual friend Professor 
Jameson, of Quito, its discoverer, who states that it grows 
on the Andes of Cuenca. A very similar plant was gathered 
on the Andes of Ecuador by Mr. Spruce (No. 6081), but differ- 
ing in the much more tomentose foliage and branches, and al- 
most villous calyces and peduncles. Mr. Henry’s specimen 
was flowered in 1865. As a species it closely approaches C. 
hyssopifolia, H. B. K. (Tab. nost. 5548), also introduced by 
Professor Jameson, and flowered by Mr. Henry, and which, 
like this, forms a beautiful greenhouse plant. 
Descr. Sfem two to three feet high, terete, slender, erect, 
pale green, very sparingly pubescent. eaves opposite, three 
to five inches long, lower and middle shortly petioled, upper 
sessile, elongate-lanceolate, acuminate, margins recurved 
serrate, glabrous and dull green above, beneath pubescent, 
with scattered rather woolly hairs, midrib and veins strong 
and prominent. Cymes, six- to eight-flowered, numerous, 
terminal and in the upper axils, corymbose or subumbellate 
at the top of the stem, glandular-pubescent, peduncles two 
MAY Ist, 1869. 
