Dalrymplea. | PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 633 
from six to twelve inches long. Petioles from one to two 
inches long. «Stipules one. Panicles axillary, terminal, and 
scattered amongst the leaves, composed of long-pedicelled 
umbellets, which are sometimes proliferous. Flowers numer- 
ous, pretty large. Bractes minute, villous, Calyx cup-shap- 
ed, five-toothed. Petals five, lanceolate, obtuse, inserted, 
with the stamina round the base of the germ. Filaments short- 
er than the corol, flat, Anthers sagittate. Germ oblong, pe- 
dicelled, containing many ovula, attached to two opposite, 
parietal receptacles, Style short and thick. Stigmaslight- 
ly two-lobed. Capsule oblong, one-celled, two-valved. Seeds 
several, aflixed to the- two parietal receptacles, 
DALRYMPLEA. Roxb. 
Calyx. five-leaved. Petals five, alternate with the stamina. 
Germ superior, three-celled ; cel/s many-seeded ; attachment 
of the ovula inferior. Berry three-celled. Seeds few, nuci- 
form, Lmbryo sub-inferior, and furnished witha perisperm. 
In memory of the late Alexander Dalrymple, Esq. author 
of the Oriental Repertory, &c. 
3 D. pomifera, R, , 
Junki jam the vernacular name in Silhet where it is a na- 
tive, and grows to be a large tree. Flowering in March, and 
the seed ripening in September and October. 
* Young shoots rather .succulent, round, and perfectly 
smooth, Leaves opposite, unequally pinnate, some of them 
ternate; from ten to twenty inches long. Leaflets three or 
four pair, and a terminal one, the pairs opposite, all more or 
less petiolate, oblong, obtusely serrate, acuminate, smooth, 
from five to six Gra long, by two or three broad, Peti- 
oles and petiolets round and smooth, Panicles terminal, 
spreading much, more broad than long, primary branches de- 
cussate ; partial ones alternate with the small yellowish white 
flowers, which are crowded round their extremities; every 
