870 xcvil. LABIAT.E, [^Eolanthus 



lateral lobes long-acuminate, bent upwards, erect, resembling two 

 elongated auricles ; the intermediate lobe deflected in a sigmoid 

 manner, bearded, somewhat obtuse, concave, folded over the two 

 fertile stamens for some time after the flowering ; stamens 4 ; 

 two of them fertile, a little shorter than the two sterile ones ; 

 filaments all straight ; the sterile anthers capituliform ; the fertile 

 ones oblong, 2 -celled, longitudinally dehiscent ; style but little 

 longer than the stamens, equally bifid at the apex ; stigmas 

 punctiform ; nutlets smooth, oblong-subpyriform. 



PuNGO Andongo. — At crags of gneiss rock by the streams of 

 the prtesidium on the north-west side ; fl. and fr. end of Feb. 1857. 

 Nos. 1630, 5591. 



6. M. sedoides lliern, sp. n. 



A perennial, evergreen herb, almost scentless, prostrate, rooting, 

 in habit remarkably like the perennial rock-frequenting species 

 of Sedum ; stems pale-ashy, glabrate, fleshy-wiry, dichotomously 

 branched ; branchlets pubescent, the floweiing ones elongated ; 

 leaves rosulate-fasciculate, oval, obtuse or rounded at the apex, 

 sessile or subsessile, shaggy-hoary, |^ to ^ in. long by i to ~ in. 

 broad, entire or repand-crenate, thick ; flowers bright violet in 

 colour, i in. long, sessile or subsessile, in subsecund rather dense 

 often pedicellate spikes of ^ to f in. long, arranged in terminal 

 and sometimes also axillary panicles which are n to 3 in. long ; 

 calyx about ^V ii^- long, hispid with thick pale hairs, shortly 

 toothed ; corolla bilabiate ; the tube nearly glabrous, narrowly 

 funnel-shaped ; the limb somewhat bearded at the back ; the 

 upper lip 4-lobed, its lobes obtuse and erect ; the lower lip 

 sagittate-trifid, its lateral segments long-acuminate and bent 

 backwards, its middle segment cymbiform-concave somewhat 

 compressed and hooded at the apex ; stamens 4, didynamous, 

 two of them sterile ; style rather exceeding the stamens. 



PuNGi) Andongo. — On the elevated rocks of Pedra Cabondo, 

 plentiful but only on the north-west side, in the prjesidium, where in 

 the dry season, that is, from May to October, in its apparently dead 

 state it covers them with a very sad colour ; but in March after the 

 enlivening effect of the December rains it very pleasantly ornaments 

 these rocks with its crowds of lilac flowers ; fl. April 1857. Nos. 1629, 

 5594. 



7. M. tuberosus Hiern, sp. n. 



A fleshy, creeping, glaucescent, aromatic herb, with the habit of 

 a Sedum, puberulous with glandular papillse ; root tuberous ; 

 stems slender, firm, sinuous, elongated, ascending and branched 

 at the terminal inflorescence ; leaves opposite or apparently 

 verticillate by reason of the presence of leafy axillary shoots, 

 narrowly elliptical-oblong, narrowed at both ends, sessile or sub- 

 sessile, entire repand or pauci-denticulate, mostly secund, i to 1^ 

 in. long by y\r to i in. broad ; flowers violet-purplish, about \ in. 

 long, sessile or subsessile ; verticils 2- to 4-flowered, bracteate at 

 the base, distant, arranged in spikes \ to 2^ in, long ; spikes 

 dichotomously paniculate ; panicles 3 to 6 in. long ; bracts smaller 



