cles and pedicels glandular, the latter enlarged upwards, 
Calyx very small, five-lobed. Petals five, oblongo-ovate, 
spreading, glandular at the back, and marked with a red- 
dish brown line. Stamens ten, alternately smaller, all 
nearly as long as the style. Filaments subulate, white, 
ciliated at the margin. Anthers mucronate, flesh-coloured, 
the pollen deep red. Pisiil : Germen of five, deep, ovate, 
acuminated lobes, glandular. Style about as long again as 
the germen. Stigma capitate. A glandular ring surrounds 
the base of the germen. 
Discovered by Mr. Arran Cunninenam, on rocky hills in 
the neighbourhood of Cox’s River, on the western side 
of the Blue Mountains, New South Wales, flowering in 
October; and sent to Kew in the year 1823, and given in 
Mr. Fiexp’s “ New South Wales,” under the appropriate 
name of E. cuspidatum. Mr. Cunnincuam could not pos- 
sibly then have been aware that it was published the year 
before by M. De Canvotze under the name by which Mr. 
Arron has now sent it from the Kew Gardens, where it blos- 
soms in the early spring. In New Holland its season of 
flowering is October. 
— 
Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Petal. 3. Stamen. 4. Pistil, with a portion of the 
Pedicel and the Calyx. , P 
