Bignonia. DIDVNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA, 107 
long, by two broad. Petioles about nine inches long, chan- 
nelled, smooth. Stipules none. Panicles terminal, the 
larger ramifications decussate, the smaller or terminal two- 
forked, with a sessile flower in the cleft. Peduncles and 
pedicels round, covered with oblong, gray, scabrous specks. 
Bractes small, caducous. Flowers pretty large, yellow, very 
fragrant. Calyx five-notched. Nectary a yellow fleshy - 
ring surrounding the base of the germ. Filaments, there is a 
fifth sterile one between the lower pair. .4nthers double. 
Stigma two-cleft. Silique very long, slender, twisted ; re- 
ceptacle of the seeds spongy, white, with alternate Hfotches on 
the sides for the seeds to lodge in. | 
The wood of this tree is high coloured, hard, dardble, and 
of much use amongst the inhabitants of the hills, where it is. 
plentiful. 
8. B. quadrilocularis, Corom, pl. 2. N. 145. 
- Arboreous. Leaves three-fold, or scattered, pinnate ; leaflets 
from four to five pairs, with an odd one, serrate, smooth, Pa- 
nicles terminal, dense, downy. Siliques linear, lanceolate, 
four-celled, ; 
A large tree, a native of the Circar mountains. inet 
during the beginning of the hot season, = 
Trunk straight, and of considerable height. Bark hey! 
with’a few scabrous spots, Branches numerous, spreading, 
forming a large shady head, Leaves about the extremities 
of the branchlets, generally three-fold, unequally pinnate, 
from twelve to twenty-four inches long. Leaflets, from 
four to five pairs, opposite, oblong, serrate, acute, smooth, 
Stipules tone. —Panicles terminal, erect, large, dense, many- 
flowered, very downy. Bractes scarcely any, Flowers large, 
rose-coloured, delightfully fragrant, Calyx generally two- 
parted, with the wpper lip two-cleft, very downy. Corol ; 
orden antl “Eettions babes with aid pegs ele- 
