extremity, the two lower ones terminating each in a bristle- 
shaped point ; but these are so closely united, that they 
may readily be mistaken for a single hair or bristle. Ger- 
men oblongo-obovate, inferior, ribbed, crowned with the 
five subulate, somewhat toothed segments of the calyx; 
almost entirely inferior. Style longer than the anthers, 
curved: Stigma capitate, two lobed. Young Capsule two- 
celled, with numerous, oblong ovules or young seeds at- 
tached to a central receptacle. 
The seeds of this graceful and curious species of Losrnia 
were gathered by Mr. Arran Cunnineuam, at Bathurst, New 
South Wales, and by him introduced into his Majesty’s | 
garden at Kew, with the name of Los. senecioides ; under 
which appellation we know that it has been, by Mr. Arron, | 
liberally distributed to other gardens. That name should, 
therefore, unquestionably be retained in preference to the» 
one given in the Botanical Register, by Mr. Lrnptey (t. 
964). We shall rejoice to see the remarks upon the old 
genus Losetia, which our valued friend, under that article, 
promises to the public ; for scarcely any genus requires 
amore careful revision: and we know that Mr. Linney 
will do justice to the subject. With regard to the division 
of Logenia, which Mr. Brown calls Isoroma (the 5thdivi- 
sion, at p. 565 of Prodr. Fl. Nov. Holl. Cor. hypocrateri- — 
formis, tubo integro, limbo parum inequali. Anthere im- — 
berbes (2 inferiores mucronate). Flores racemosi.) and — 
which Mr. Linprey adopts for the genus of the present 
plant, it does not appear to accord so well with it as Mr. 
~ Brown’s 4th Division,—“< Cor. subequalis, infundibuli- — 
formis, tubo apice fisso. Anth. imberbes (2 inferiores mu- _ 
cronate.) Pedunculi scapiformes, uniflori.’ Our native — 
specimens of Lozetia (lsoroma) hypocrateriformis, from — 
King George’s Sound, possess a much more regular and — 
= hypocrateriform corolla than the present individual. 
e possess also native specimens of our L. senecioides, — 
gathered by Mr. Fraser in fissures of granite rocks near — 
Bathurst, which differ in no respect from our cultivated — 
ones, but in being much smaller, more shrubby, and with — 
the peduncles shorter. e 
Fig 1. Flower. 2. Stamens, with the Style ‘and Stigma, 3. Capsule. ; 
4. Section of ditto.— Magnified. estes = 
