70 LXiv. GOODEN0V1E.13. [Goodeuk , 



rather stout, more or less glandular-pubescent, attaining sometimes 3 or 4 fl. ; 

 Leaves petiolate, from broadly ovate to ovate-lanceolate, truncate or cordate 

 at the base, toothed, often above 2 in. long, with or without the addition of ^ 

 a few small segments along the petiole. Peduncles axillary, shorter than the 

 leaves, 1 -flowered, without any or with very minute bracteoles at the base, 

 solitary or the lower ones sometimes 2 or 3 together on a very short, commoii 

 peduncle. Flowers large, yellow, more or less streaked with purple. Calyx- 

 lobes linear-lanceolate. Corolla glabrous or slightly pubescent outside, 

 usually about 1 in. long but sometimes larger, the 2 upper lobes more deeply 

 separated, the adnate part of the tube with a hollow protuberance, sometimes 

 scarcely conspicuous, sometimes very prominent and reacliing to the base of 

 the calyx. Dissepiment of the ovary reaching far above the middle ; ovules 

 in 2 rows in each cell. Capsule ovoid-oblong, sometimes | in. long, but often 

 smaller. Seeds broad, flat, with a thickish margin, not winged. — U. Br. Fro^- 

 576 ; DC. Prod. vii. 514 ; Bonpl Jard. Malm. t. 6 ; Bot. Reg. 1845. t. 39 ; De 

 Vr. Gooden. 143 ; P. Muell. Fragm.i. 204 ; G. append iculata, Jacq. Tragiti. \ 

 t. 92. 1 



I 



m 



Queensland. Broad Sound, i?. Brown; Wide Bay, Bidwill ; Burnett and Burdekin ^ 

 rivers, F. Mueller; Rockhampton, Ballachy and others. - . 1 



N. S. "Wales. Port Jackson to the Bkie Mountains, R. Brown and others ; Ricbmona ' 

 river, Fawcett ; Macleay and Clarence rivers, Beckler, 1 



S. {or N. ?) Australia. i\Iount Freeling, Centra] Australia, M'Botiall Stuarfs &*/■ ^ 

 dUioii . 



r 



G. mollis, R. Br. Prod. 577 ; DC. Prod. vii. 515 ; De Vr. Gooden. 151, is a variety, t^. 

 perhaps, a state of the plant, with rather shorter capsules, and no small leaf-segments along 

 the petiole. To this form belong the majority, but not all, of the Queensland specimeD?, 

 and a few of the N. S. "Wales ones. 



41. G. Chambersii^ F. 3IuelL Fragrn. i. 204. A shrub or under- 

 slirub, softly but minutely glandular-pubescent, very closely allied to G>g^<^^' 

 dijiora, and, judging from the fragmentary specimens preserved, perhaps a 

 variety. Leaves smaller on shorter petioles, orbicular, coarsely toothccij i '^^ 

 f in. diameter in our specimens, and without accessory segments. Tlower-' 

 rather smaller than in G, grandiftora^ the lobes rather naiTOwer, and the 

 upper ones less deeply separated than in that species, but the structure other- 

 wise the same, and the saccate protuberance prominent. 



S. {or N, ?) Australia. Mount Freeling, M'BouaU Stuart's Expedition, 



42. G. albiflora^ ScJiIecJd. Linncea^ xx. 599. Au erect, glabrous p^' 

 rennial, with a thick, almost woody rootstock; stems angular, 1 ft. high,^^ 

 more.- Leaves ovate-lanceolate or lanceolate, acutely toothed, l^r t*^ ^ ^"" 

 long, narrowed into a petiole without accessory lobes, the upper floral one^ 

 very much smaller, soon passing into lanceolate, entire bracts. Flo^vers 

 entirely of G, grandijlora, but white, and forming more of a terminal, leat} 

 raceme, the saccate protuberance of the corolla-tube at least as prominent a^ 

 in G. grandiflora.—FicropJigta alhijlora, P. Muell. ia Linn^a, xxv. 42L 



S. Australia. Gawler river, Behr ; common in dry, gravelly beds of streams, St. '^^' 

 rent's Gnlf, Encounter and Holdfast Bays, etc., more rare at the base of Lofty Rao?' 

 F, Mueller. 



43. G- Strangfordii, F. MmlL Fragm. vi. 11. L 52. A perennial' 



