Jasminunr. DIANDRIA MONOGYNIAY > 91 
with fine down in both sides; length from one to five inches. 
Flowers terminal, from simply tern to a large compound 
corymb, pretty large, pure white, fragrant, Pedicels clavate, 
villous. Bractes short, subulate, villous. Calyx. villous, 
five or six-cleft ; divisions short, and subulate. Corol ; tube 
swelling towards the mouth, much more than the calyx. 
Border of from six to twelve, linear, spreading divisions with 
margins revolute. Filaments short. Anthers lodged just 
within the mouth of the tube of the corol. Germ turbinate. 
Style so long as to elevate the two-lobed stigma so as to make 
it level ii the anthers. 
Obs. The species differs from my arborescens in being 
scandent, and in the shape of the leaves, as well as in the 
pubescence ; here they are lanceolate, and very villous ; there, 
cordate and smooth, 
4. J. pubescens. Linn. sp. pl. ed, Willd. 1.37. iy 
Leaves cordate, downy. Umbels scone bie may 
flowered, hes 
Katu-Tsjiregam-Mulla. Rheed. Mal. fis, 95. 1, ee 
Nyctanthes multiflora. Burm. Flor. Ind. p.5.t.3. J 
- Nyctanthes pubescens. Retz, Obs. 5. 9. 
Sans, Maghyum, Koondum, See Asiat. Res. A, 244, 
' Beng. Koonda. 
_ A very ramous shrub, brought originally from. China. into 
the Company’s Botanic garden. It is also indigenous in 
Bengal. Is in flower during the rains chiefly. 
Stem scarcely any ; branches numerous, covered with ash- 
coloured bark; the young parts very downy. . Leaves Oppo: 
lin the spinal ones phos Pieces a: siti 
the umbels, Umbels tetminal, seosiiey tending to be tricho- 
six.to sagen divisions lanceolate, Stamens within th " 
reir six-cleft ; md of 89 from, a 
