Indigofera. DIADELPHIA DECANDRIA. 377 
A native of Coromandel. It flowers during the rainy and 
cold seasons. 
14, 1. viscosa, Willd. iti, 1236. 
Somewhat shrubby, hairy and glutinous. Leaves pinnate; 
leaflets from four to five-paired, long-obovate. Racemes 
longer than the leaves. Legumes straight, hairy, from six to 
eight-seeded. 
Galega colutea. Burm. Ind, 172. Willd, iii, 1246, 
Colutea siliquosa. Pluk, t. 166. f. 3. 
This species grows on a very sandy soil. It flowers during 
the wetand cold seasons. 
Root simple. Stem somewhat shrubby, erect, very ramous, 
from one to three feet high; the young parts covered with 
white, depressed hairs, and other stiffer hairs with glutinous, 
enlarged, glandular extremities. Leaves alternate, pinnate, 
two or two and a half inches long. Leaflets from four to five | 
pairs, opposite ; obovate, entire ; above pretty smooth ; below 
hairy and glandular like the tender branches. Stipules fili- 
form. Racemes axillary, peduncled, longer than the leaves, 
round, like the young branches. Bractes awled, one-flower- 
ed. Flowers rather remote, small, red. sine horizontal, 
straight, round, 
15. I. cerulea, Roxb. 
Shrubby, hoary. Leaves pinnate ; “leaflets four-paired, 
obovate, emarginate, Racemes rather shorter than the leaves, 
Legumes reflexed, curved, contracted between the seeds, 
hoary, from three to stcotapssaed 
- Teling. Karneeli. ee a 
This is an erect, shrubby species ; growing on dry, barren, 
uncultivated ground to the height of three feet, and higher in 
good, garden soil, It flowers during the wet and cold seasons. 
Stem erect, woody, as thick as a man’s thumb or more, bien- 
nial or triennial, the length very various, but the whole plant, 
in its wild state, is generally about three feet high; wher wa. 
t Ao 
