396 TETRANDRIA MONOGYNIA. Buddleia, 
lanceolate to oval, two inches long, tapering at both ends, 
but more so at the base, and only there entire : the rest of the 
margin serrulate ; without any hair or down, but scabrous 
below, from a great number of minute brown shining glan- 
dular dots which impart on being rubbed, a faintly aromatic 
smell; nerves and ribs elevated and slightly scaly. Petioles 
very short, Corymbs axillary or rather supra-axillary, small, 
round, two or three times dichotomous, many times shorter 
than the leaves; peduncles short, divaricate, beset with mealy 
pubescence, with minute lanceolate scales under each sub- 
division. Flowers fragrant, purple, marked with glandular 
dots, Calyx turbinate with very small obtuse teeth. Corol 
about three times longer than the calyx, infundibuliform ; 
lacinie oval, obtuse. Filaments almost twice as long as the 
corolla, purple ; anthers large, orange-coloured, covered with 
many glandular dots. Stigma sub-capitate, elevated about 
the anthers, Berry very small, purple, at last red, wath one 
or two fertile seeds. 
“BUDDLELA. Schreb. gen. N. 184. 
Calyx four-cleft. Corol four-cleft. Capsule het bisul- 
cate, bilocular. Reademnencenin: 
1, B. Neemda, Rachel > 
Arborescent. Leaves lanceolate, ale aes schasnie under- 
neath, Spikes terminal, lengthening, with flowers three-fold. 
_Nimda the vernacular name at Chittagong, where the plant 
is indigenous, and from thence introduced into the Botanic 
garden by Dr. Buchanan, where it begins to blossom about 
the close of the-cold season, Seeds ripen in March and May, — 
Trunk erect; branches numerous, opposite. Bark of the » 
longer woolly parts ash coloured ; young shoots covered with — 
bead down. sliviobtesd of the aes in two hye about fifteen” 
jaar ‘from four to eight inches Jo : , thei 
