Hemigenia. | XCIII. LABIATA, 119 
leaves and very different corolla and anthers. The New England plant there men- 
tioned is the true W. a. In H. cuneifolia, the cell of the lower stamens in the 
two flowers examined appeared to be not quite so perfect as is usual in Hemigenia, 
showing thus a passage to the genus Microcorys, although still nearer to Hemigenia, 
of which it has the corolla, 
ECT. 4, DiPLANTHERA.—Üalyx-teeth 9, nearly equal, subulate- 
acuminate or acute. Lower end of the connective of the lower anthers 
and sometimes of all the anthers bearing a second imperfect cell. Leaves 
sessile, opposite. 
20. H. Drummondii, Benth. A perennial or undershrub (some- 
times shrubby ?) all the. specimens showing several simple or. slightly 
ng as the calyx, the tube rather long, the upper lip concave 
below the lobes, Anthers rather large, the connective of the upper 
ones dilated and bearded at the lower end, that of the lower anthers 
armg a second smaller cell probably sterile. 
Ww. Australia, Drummond, last coll. 
2L H. pimelifolia, F. Muell. Fragm. vi. 112. A shrub with slender 
divaricate branches, the young ones and foliage hirsute with long spread- 
mg hairs and opposite rows of shorter ones on the branches. Leaves 
ith the lower end dilated and bearded, that of the lower anthers with 
the lower branch elongated and terminating in a second cell nearly as 
large as the perfect one, but perhaps sterile. 
W. Australia, Murchison river, Oldfield. 
? 
í in hes 
es more stracoline and attaining 1 to 3 ft., the smaller branc 
slender, Leaves opposite, linear or rarely linear-oblong, acute or ob- 
e 
oad or narrow very acute, rarely as long as t 
« white,” the u pper i rather oneee BRNO aie calyx, 2-lobed and. 
scarcely concave below t e lobes, the lower lip nearly twice as long al 
the calyx, 3-lobed, all the lobes nearly equally 2-lobed. Anthers 
