94 Dr. Francis Haurrrow's Commentary 
tion which I presented to the library at the East India House 
(No. 706). 
Nauclea? orientalis. Hort. Kew.1. 366? Willd. Sp. PI. i. 928. 
Nauclea Cadamba. Hort. Beng. 14? 
Nauclea citrifolia. Enc. Meth. iv. 4857 
Cephalanthus foliis oppositis. Linn. Fl. Zeyl. 53? 
Bancalus mas et parvifolia. Herb. Amb. iii. 84. t. 55. f. 1? 
Katou Tsjaka. Hort. Mal. ii. 29. t. 33? 
Kadamba Sanscritæ. 
Kadum Hindice et Bengalensium. 
Habitat in Indic aridioris sylvis. 
Folia oblonga, utrinque acuta. Flores odore gravi flavi, pistillo 
albido. Bracteæ nulle. Pedunculus mediocris, crassus. 
Capitulum magnitudine Pomi minoris globosum. 
Calyx longitudine dimidii tubi corollae ultra medium quinque- 
fidus, laciniis linearibus concavis obtusis. | Filamenta longi- 
tudine fere antherarum ad medium adnata. Anthere ex- 
sertæ. Stylus corollae tubo multum longior. Stigma ob- 
longum, utrinque acutum. 
hs the other Kadamba to be described in a Commentary 
on the Arbor Noctis of Rumphius, I shall here give some account 
of the tree which Gærtner seems to have confounded with the 
Katou Tsjaka, and of which specimens have been deposited in 
the library at the India House (No. 705). Others were sent 
home from Ava under the name of Nauclea odoratissima, and are 
now probably in the collection of the late Sir J oseph Banks. 
From Dr. Roxburgh I know that this is his Nauclea parvifolia. 
Nauclea parvifolia. Hort. Beng. 14. sed nescio an Willdenovii 
(Sp. Pl. i. 929. et Enc. Meth. es iv. Pag; cui calyces quin- 
quedentati acuti. : 
Nauclea 
