126 SPICILEGIA. GORGONEA. 
flore luteo nunquam atropurpureo.” (Brunner, in scheda 
speciminis nobiscum communicati.) 
. A plant, perfectly distinct from the L. anthylloides, 
Vent, of which Brunner had seen no authentic specimen 
when he originally associated them, nor of L. Jacobeus 
of which he afterwards considered it a mere variety. It 
differs from the latter by the form of its leaves, by as 
appressed and not villous and patent pubescence, by 1s 
short sessile stipules, by the teeth of the calyx being merely 
acute and not more or less filiform at the extremity and by 
the form and colour of the corolla. 
Tas. III. Fig. 1. flower; f. 2. vexillum; f. 3. ala; f. 4. ca- 
. rina; f. 5. stamina and ovaria; f. 6. ovarium; f. 7. pod; 
f. 8. seed :— magnified. . 
58. Lotus glaucus, Hort. Kew, ed. 1, 3, p. 92. Chr. Smith in 
Tuck. voy. p. 250. quanquam nulla extant in herb. Mus. 
Brit. specimina (ex cl. J. Dalton Hooker, in litt.) Phyt. 
Can. 2. p. 84.—1c. Phyt. Can. t. 61. 
Has. In regione temperata, ins. S. Jacobi, (Chr. Smith, l- e) 
In ins. S. Vincentii, (Th. Vogel, n. 75. Junio 1841, SP- 
fructifera, et n. 74. parce florifera.) 
The leaves of the Cape de Verd plant are much broader than 
those of the Canarian and Madeiran specimens, and resemble 
those of L. Lancerottensis, Nob., from which, however, 3$ 
well as the typical form it is distinguished by its one or two 
flowered capitules and by the narrow teeth of its caly%- 
Christian Smith mentions an L. lanatus, sp. n. Tuck. voy. 
P. 251.; but Dr. J. D. Hooker informs us that he bas 
not identified such a plant in his herbarium at the British 
Museum. 
59. Indigofera hirsuta, L. Sp. Pl. p. 1062. Lamck, Encycl 
. 8. p. 246. Guill. et Perr. Fl. Sen. Tent. p. 174. Walp. 
Repert. 1. p. 660.—Indigofera Guineensis, Thonn. et Schum- 
K. Darsk. Vid. Selskap. Afhandl. 4. p. 140.—1c. Astra- 
galus spicatus, siliquis pendulis hirsutis, foliis  sericels, 
Burm. Thes. Zeyl. t. 14. Hemispadon pilosus, End. Atakt. 
