12^ l-XV. CAMPANULACEiE. . \JFaJdeubergia. 



A. DC. 11. cc. ; JF. miiUlcaJiUs, Benth. in Hueg. Enum. 75 ; A. DC. Prod, 

 vii. 433; JF. slmpUcicaulis, De Vr. in PL Preiss. ii. 241.. 



N. Australia. Victoria river, F. Mueller ; Port Essington, Armstrong. 



n S'^^^jrc^ »° ' ^' ^''°'^''' ^"^^"y Island, F. Mueller; Cape York, E. Daemel ; Port 

 Curtis, MUillivray; Rockingham -Q&y, Dallachy ; Rockhampton, Tiiozet ; Moreton Bav, 



• ^"f%^, ^" *^e interior, JfiVc/^e// ,- plains of the Condamine, Leichhardt. 



,. ®; Wales. Port Jackson to the Blue Mountains, R. Brown and others; in the 

 ntcrior to the Lachlan and Darling and to the Barrier Range, Victorian and other Enedi- 

 tionp I\ ew England, C. Stuart ; Hastings and Clarence rivers, Beckler. 



Victoria. Common from the coast to the mountains, F. Mueller and others ; in tlie 

 Haidiuger Range to an elevation of 5000 to 6000 ft., F. Mueller; Wimuiera, Ballachy. 

 rasmama, i?. Brown; abundant in dry places throughout the islaud, /. D. Booker. 

 ,, ^- Australia. Around St. Vincent's and Spencer's Gulf, F. Mueller and others ; ia 

 the mterior to Lake GiUies, Barhitt ; Cooper's Creek, Roicitfs Expedition. 



vv. Australia. King George's Sound, R. Broum and others, and thence to Swan 

 River i>;«w;«o«rf« 151, 153, 164, 183. 421, 425, Preiss, n. 1883, 1884, 1886, 1887 i 

 Murchison river, Oldfield ; eastward to Cape Arid, Majcwell. 



The species is also in New Zealand, in the Eastern Archipelago, and extends over the East 

 Indies if jr. agreshs, A. DC. ; Hook, and Thorns, in Jourt.. llnn. Soc. ii. 21, be, as is pro- 

 Da ue tHe same species. Several distinct vaneties have been enumerated bv various authors, 

 bin ttiej run so variously one into another that they would require to be differently defiued 

 for every separate collection of specimens. 



jtfl^T"^" ^™"^. De Vr. in PI. Preiss. ii. 241, from Preiss's specimens, n. 1892, and 



yyaMenbergia Preissti, De Vr. 1. c, from the same collector's n. 1890 are unknown to me. 



It real // ahlenbergias they probably both belong to W. gracilis, which is the onlv species 



1 have met with among the numerous W. Australian specimens I have seen. 



2. W. saxicolaj A. DO. Momgr. Camp. 144 ; Trod. vii. 433. A gla- 

 brous perennial, with a tufted or shortly creeping stock, rarely lengthening 

 out into leafy branches of 1 in. or rather more. Leaves radical and rosulate 

 or crowded on the short stems, petiolate, from obovate or spathulate to almost 

 linear, entire or obscurely crenate, i to 1 in. long in the Tasmanian speci- 

 inens longer in some New Zealand ones. Scapes leafless, 1-flowered, 3 to 6 

 in. high. J^ lowers 5-merous, sometimes like those of W. gracilis, but 

 usually more oblique and 1 or 2 of the anthers tipped with a small point. 

 ^r'SL n' 3-celled.-lIook. f. Fl. Tasm. i. 239. t. 71 ; Handb. N. Zeal. 



-°*^;^ • ^^^' ^^''^^^^^ia montana, Hook. f. in Hook. Lond. Jouru. 



VI. 267. 



J„ ^^^T'*?*^ ^'ommxt of Mount Wellington (Table Alountaiii), R. Brown, Gmn. Also 

 n t7 ^™?- .Mr. Archer writes to me that the Table Mountain of R. Brown (fre; 



Mn,„f x^if 'f ^' '^^'T'^'' ^°^""*^' °f ^^^'^ rior=i) is tli'^ one now known by the name of 

 mZ .^^^"=°-!.™- i.learu from Dr. Hooker that it was still freauently called Table 

 Mountain when he was in the island. 



Oeder lxvi. ERICACE^. 



Calyx more or less deeply divided into 4 or 5 teeth or lobes, the tube ad- 

 nate to the ovary or quite free, sometimes exceedingly short. Corolla inferior 

 or superior, the tube ovoid globular elongated or campanulate, the lobes 

 spreading valvate or imbricate in the bud, or (in a very few species not Au?- 

 trahau) the petals distinct. Stamens twice as many or rarely of the saioe f 



; 



