HORT. MAL. VOL. VI. 27 



Tab. 13. Cajanus bicolor. D C. C. indicus Var. W. fy A. 



Most other writers have followed Linnaeus in quoting this figure or Cy lisas 

 Cajati, which comprises the Cajanus flavus and Cajanus bicolor of De Candolle, 

 and whether they are more than varieties is rather uncertain. 



14. Adenanthera pavonina. Lin. 



15. Ailantus Pongelion. Gmelin. Ailantus malabarica. DC. 



Adenanthera triphysa. Denn. 



Misquoted by Poiret for Ailantus glandulosa. 



' > Butea frondosa. Roxb. Erythrina monosperma. Lam. 



Sir William Jones has strongly expressed a hope that this genus may be al- 

 lowed to retain the name of Palasa, its ancient and classical appellation.' 



18. Niota pendula. Smith. N. pentapetala. Poiret. Sama- 



dera indica of Gaert. W. $ A. 



Sir J. E. Smith (in Rees's Cyc.) has shewn that there are no grounds for 

 placing the N. tetrapetala and N. pentapetala as separate species. Plukenet 

 first coupled the name of Samandra with the Nagam of Rheede (tab. 21.), and 

 from hence the Samandara of Burman and the Samandura of Linnaeus's Flora 

 Zeylanica have been derived ; and, as Gsertner's Samadera has obviously the 

 same derivation, it may be queried, particularly from the references to Ray, 

 whether the name does not belong to Heritiera rather than Niota. 



19. Caesalpinia paniculata. Roxb. Guilandina paniculata. 



Lam. 



20. Csesalpinia axillaris. D C. Guilandina axillaris. Lam. 



21. Heritiera littoralis. H. Kew. Sutherlandia littoralis. 



Gmelin. 



See the foregoing note on tab. 18. 



22. Dalbergia scandens. Roxb. 



Misquoted by Willdenow, Smith, and others, for D. lanceolaria of the Supple 

 mentum Plantarum, and as a variety of that species by Lamarck ; and De 

 Candolle considered it to be either his D. Timorknsis or a species unknown. 



23. JusticiabicalyculataofWilld. Ham. MS. J. fragilis. Denn. 

 It is not much like Roxburgh's specimen, but may be a variety of Justicia 



( Peristrophe) bicalyculala. 



24. Connarus pinnatus. Lam. 



Dennstedt has arranged this for the Linnean C. asiaticus, and vol. vii. t. 26, for 

 C. pinnatus. De Candolle has not quoted this figure, but C. pinnatus is his 

 Omphalobium pinnatum; and I may here remark, that the name Omphalobium 

 is now in use for two very different genera. See Hortus Britannicus, p. 155 

 and p. 277. 



25. Pterocarpus Marsupium of Roxb.? W. # A. Cassia can. 



denatensis. Denn. 



This may possibly have been intended for a starved plant of P. Marstipium, 

 which it resembles in the leaves, but the disposition of the flowers is quite dif- 

 ferent, and the membranaceous wing of the legume is wanting. 



