Torenia.] cm. SCROPHULARINE/E. (J. D. Hooker.) 277 



Closely resembles a large state of T. cordifolia in habit and foliage, but the calyx 

 is longer and narrower, with the wings produced on the pedicel, never cordate at 

 the base, and the capsule is longer and narrower. The plate in Sot. Mag. is very 

 characteristic. Hamilton's T. alba is, I assume, a white-fld. variety. 



5. To asiatica, Linn. ; Wight Ic. t. 862 ; nearly glabrous or pubes- 

 cent, diffuse, creeping below, leaves shortly petioled ovate-cordate or -lanceo- 

 late serrate, pedicels axillary and subumbellate fruiting thickened, fruiting 

 calyx 1 in., narrowly oblong keeled hardly winged, base decurrent, corolla 

 !-! in. blue with very dark violet lateral lobes, longer filaments toothed. 

 Benth. in DC. Prodr. x. 410 ; Wall. Cat. 3953 A. B. ; Miquel Fl. Ind. Sat. 

 ii. 689 ; Gaertn. Fruct. iii. 29, t. 184 ; Lamlc. III. t. 523 ; Bot. Mag. t. 4249 ; 

 Lem. III. Sortie, t. 199; FL de Serres \\.fasc. x. t. 5, and xiii. t. 1342. 

 Treisteria cordata, Griff. Notul. iv. 109. RJieede Hort. Mai. ix. t. 53. 



WESTEEN PENINSULA; Nilgherry Mts., Wight, &c. TENASSEEIM; at Mergui, 

 Griffith. CEYLON, abundant. DISTRIB. Java, China. 



Diffusely branched ; branches 6-10 in. long, slender. Leaves l|-2 in., larger and 

 usually more acuminate than in the allied species ; petiole rarely more than in. 

 Fruiting calyx narrowly winged or keeled. 



VAE. hirsuta ; more pubescent, lower filaments with a very small tooth. T. 

 hirsuta, Benth. in DC. Prodr. x. 410 ; Sot. Mag. t. 5167. T. cordifolia, Benth. in 

 Wall. Cat. 3954, not of Eoxl. ? Lamk. III. t. 523, f. 2. Nilgherry Mts. 



VAE. concolor ; corolla' of a uniform dark blue. T. concolor, Lindl. in Sot. Reg. 

 1846, t. 62. T. longiflora, Morren in Ann. de Gand. ii. 441, 471. 



VAE. .? parvifolia ; leaves much smaller longer petioled less acuminate, petiole 

 often as long as the blade. T. asiatica, Thwaites Enum. 219. Nilgherry Mts. and 

 Ceylon. This closely resembles T. bicolor in habit and foliage, and is, I suspect, speci- 

 fically distinct from T. asiatica. 



6. T. vag-ans, Eoxl. Cat. 1813, and Fl. Ind. iii. 96; nearly glabrous, 

 erect or decumbent, diffusely branched, rooting at the lower nodes, leaves 

 f-lin. all shortly petioled, pedicels scattered axillary fruiting thickened, fruit- 

 ing calyx -f in. narrowly linear-oblong keeled not winged, corolla f in. 

 pale blue, lobes small, longer filaments toothed. T. diffusa, Don Prodr. 

 86 ; Wall. Cat. 3953. T. asiatica, Wall. Cat. 3953, in part ; Griff. Notul. 

 iv. 123. T. hians, Roxb. Fl. Inol. iii. 96. T. rubens, Benth. 1. c. ? Peri- 

 steira grandiflora, Griff. Notul. iv. 118. Columnea diffusa, Roxl. mss. 



CENTEAL and EASTEEN HIMALAYA ; Nepal, Wallich ; Sikkim, ascending to 4000 

 ft. ASSAM and KHASIA MTS., common; CHITTAGONG, Clarke. NILGHEBBIES; 

 Conoor, alt. 5000 ft., Clarice. DISTRIB. China. 



Except by the usually more diffuse habit, the not winged calyx and the always 

 toothed longer filaments, I do not see how this can well be distinguished from T. 

 peduncularis. The flowers are much smaller than in T. asiatica and of a more uni- 

 form blue, and the leaves also are smaller. I cannot distinguish T. rubens as a 

 variety ; the characters assigned to it are the short obtuse tooth of the longer fila- 

 ments, and often red tips to the calyx teeth. 



7. T. hirtella, HooJc.f. ; pubescent, very slender, diffusely branched, 

 leaves -1 in. very shortly petioled upper usually sessile ovate or ovate- 

 cordate subacute serrate, pedicels solitary axillary fruiting slender, fruiting 

 calyx in. narrowly oblong keeled not winged, corolla in., longer nla- 

 ments with an obtuse tooth. T. rubens var. hirtella, Benth. in Hohen. PL 

 Nilig. H56, 1157. T. rubens, Thwaites Enum. 219. 



NiLGdEEEY MTS., Hohenacker. CEYLON ; Gardner, &c., ascending to 2000 ft. 

 A very distinct species, at once recognizable by the very slender habit and small very 

 shortly petioled leaves. The corolla is small, with short lobes. Thwaites suspects 



