108 DIDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA, Bignonia, 
two-cleft. -Silique erect, straight, linear, pointed, pretty 
smooth, twelve inches Jong, two broad, and half an inch 
thick, four-celled, two-valved, the dissepiment is enlarged 
in the middle on each side, with a sharp ridge which touches 
the sides of the valve, dividing each of the usual cells into two; 
into these ridges the seeds are affixed, hence I have taken my 
specific name, 
The wood of this tree is employed for many purposes by 
the natives. 
_ 9. B, stipulata, R. 
_Arboreous, tender parts villous. Leaves pinnate ; leaflets 
from four to six pairs, from oval to oblong-elliptic ; common 
petiole channelled. Stipules a tuft of sessile, orbicolar ones 
in each axill. 
A large tree, a native of Pegue, from thence noodaced by 
the Rev. Mr. F. Carey, into the Botanic garden at Calcutta, 
where in two years it rose to the height of ten feet, with a sim- 
ple trunk, which is considerably four-cornered toward the 
top. 
Leaves opposite, about two feet long ; leaflets pai nine 
to fourteen, the largest of them a foot lofig, by six inches 
broad. Common petiole much swelled at the insertion of the 
leaflets, with a channel running down the upper edge, It has 
not yet blossomed in Bengal, but the siliques sent fae Pegue 
were cylindie o tk Rae oh els : 
10. Pe rcope R. 
Arboreous. Leaves bi- and tri-pinnate ; leaflets from ob- 
liquely oblong to semi-cordate. Panicles terminal ; segments. 
of the border of the corol round, and curled. Sisoeeeoer 
crooked, ligneous, and tubercled, 
A tall, elegant tree, a native of Sousa ohene: it was Saat 
observed by Dr. Andrew Berry, and by him introduced into” 
the Botanic garden at Calcutta, where in six years the young 
trees were about twenty, or twenty-five feet high; they — 
