562 ENUMERATION OF LEGUMINOSAE. 
42. C. pusilla (Heyne! W. et Arn.! Prodr. 1, p. 189).— 
Wall.! Cat. n. 5396. Herba parva, ramosissima, Diffusis 
affinis ubi collocaverunt Wight et Arnott, sed inflores- 
centia diu terminalis et rami plerique erecti videntur. Flores 
minimi. : 
East Indian Peninsula. Dindygul Hills, Wight ! 
* * Racemis laxis, legumine dense fusco-velutino. 
43. C. leptostachya (sp. n.); caule erecto tetragono ad 
angulos hirsuto, stipulis minutis linearibus transversis, foliis 
oblongo-ellipticis lanceolatisve acutis supra glabris subtus 
hirtellis, racemis elongatis multifloris, pedicellis calyce ad- 
presse pubescente brevioribus, bracteis bracteolisque minutis, 
corolla calycem æquante, legumine sessili brevi.—Flores 
dimidio minores quam in C. juncea cui affines. Calyx vix 
4-lin. longus. à 
East India. In Jacquemont's collection, without any pre- 
cise station. 
44. C. juncea (Linn.! W. et Arn. Prodr. 1, p. 185).— 
Wall! Cat. n. 5409. C. Benghalensis, Lam. Wall! Cat. 
n. 5395. C. tenuifolia, Roxb. Wall! Cat. n. 5368. C. por- 
recta, Wall.! Cat. n. 5363. C. viminea var? Wall.! Cat. 
n. 5397 B. 
Very generally cultivated all over the southern parts of 
Asia, for the fibres of its bark, which may be called the hemp 
of India, Roxburgh ; and, consequently, it is difficult to ascer- 
tain in which of the stations given it is indigenous. It occurs 
in most collections from the Peninsula, Upper India, and 
Bengal ; in Upper Assam, Jenkins / in Burma, Wallich ! and 
a specimen collected by Fraser on the Logan River, in Aus- 
tralia, appears to be the same. 
45. C. tetragona (Roxb.! W. et Arn.! Prodr. 1, p. 185). 
Wall. ! Cat. n. 5367, A to C. 
Upper India. Kunawur, Edgeworth! Kheeree’ Pass, 
Royle ! Lower Nipal, Wallich! Roxburgh; Assam, Griffiths ! 
n. 499. All the Peninsular specimens which I have seen, are 
from gardens, 
