the Decandrous Papilionaceous Plants of New Holland. 25 1 



4. G. minus, foliis ternatis linearibus laevibus ad unci s mucrona- 

 tis, ramulis teretibus hirtis, carina nuda. 



This has the habit of the last, and is nearly of the same size. 

 Its flowers are unquestionably yellow. The recurved points of 

 the leaves mark it at first sight. The flowers are terminal and 

 handsome. 



5. G. pinnatum, foliis impari-pinnatis multijugis laevibus, caulc 

 tereti flexuoso glabro. 



I have seen but one specimen of the preseut species, gathered 

 by Dr. White near Port Jackson, and that has only flower-bud* 

 and ripe fruit. I can therefore say nothing of the corolla. The plant 

 is small, and seemingly annual ; its stem branches from the bot- 

 tom, and the species is distinguished from all the rest of its ge- 

 nus, and indeed of the whole tribe under consideration, as far 

 as I have any information, by its pinnated leaves, which, never- 

 theless, evidently and strictly accord in habit with those of the 

 other species of Gompholobium. 



The name of this genus applies to the tumid shape of the le- 

 gume, which swells, from a narrow base, upward ; according to 

 the primary signification of yopQos, a word thence used to ex- 

 press a club, a wedge, or any thing formed on a similar principle. 



4. Chorozema. Labillardiere's Voyage, v. J. 403. 



Calyx quinquefidus, bilabiatus. Corolla papilionacea. Stigma 

 simplex. Legumen oblongum, ventricosum, uniloculare, po- 

 lyspermum. 



1. C. ilicifolium, foliis alternis oblongis pinnatifido-dentatis spi- 



nosis, racemis terminalibus. 



C. ilicifolium. Labillard, Voy. v. 1.405. f. 21. 



2 k 2 C. nanum. 



