PLATE C C V I , 



a and b were brought by a friend from Jhansi, purchased in the bazaar there. He did not 

 know the name given there. Inquiries made by letter in Jhansi elicited the reply 

 that this elongated citrus was probably a Kaghzi nimboo. This word may mean a 

 distinct variety, or that the variety has a very thin skin. c is the section of b ; 

 seeds white, when cut. Pulp pale, with abundant pure acid juice. 



d, e, f, and </ I purchased at Auraya, Etawah district, under the name of Gulgul. No one knew 

 where they were grown. They were evidently brought there for sale, g is the 

 section of /. In section, both this and the foregoing have the stamp of a Kaghzi 

 nimboo. Almost all the specimens had the mammilla to the one side ; / had it exactly 

 in the middle ; pulp greenish-yellow ; juice abundant, very acid, with a sui generis 

 aroma of a Kaghzi. 



I tried to get specimens of these elongated limes ) with their leaves, and h, i, j, k, and I 

 were sent to me. It is probably a small specimen of the same. If so, the leaves (spring leaves) 

 appear like those of true limes. Surface of h is pale yellow and quite smooth. It is very 

 probable the Jamiri of Benares and Allahabad belong to this variety (a and d). 



P.S. On the 17th June, 1886, Mr. J. F. Holcomb sent me c' and other similar leaves, 

 stating that he took them off a tree, with fruit like' the oblong Jhansi lemon a and b, from the 

 Government garden at Bdrwa, twelve miles from Jhansi. This leaf is different from the true 

 lime leaf, and is nearest that of a lemon. 



