the next “aicstemh ‘hia to Mr. Bentham was so evident, that 
he considered our plant a mere variety of it; but the struc- 
ture of the capsule, with the corolla persisting on its top and 
the dissepiment in its base, shows that it truly belongs to 
Monogynella. The dissepiment is membranaceous, with a 
thicker See but without the thick frame-like border of the 
allied spee 
Sec. 9. Callianche. 
sanded: atansptbhean existe thin, jane ev stlesbenrt stylar 
portion small. Seeds compressed, rostrate, angled on the in- 
e 
Flowers large, 5-parted, usually on bra cted pedicels in com- 
os Mh loosely paniculate cymules; corolla deciduous after 
owering. 
The only species inhabits East-India and the adjoining 
nee 
xa, Roxb. Corom, 104; Fi. ind. I. 446.— 
This ‘beautiful species bears the largest flowers of any, in dif- 
ferent varieties from 3-5 lines long; calyx with oval or most- 
te, 
the tube ; anthers oval to a lang tacse, sessile or subsessile ; 
scales in the base of the tube, about } or 4 its length, with 
short and delicate curly fringes, curved ; pons oval, acutish, 
often attenuated into a short, slightly bifid style, or with ses- 
varieties. 
ar. a. GRANDIFLORA; C. ndiflora, Wall.! Cat. : 
1318, not H.B.K.; C. innareechy, sien gen. syst. IV. 
305; DC. Prod. IX. 455; C. megalantha, Steud. n i 
elatior, Choisy! Cuse. 177. —Flowers of the lneptets Sant la- 
cinie } or sometimes only 1 the length of the tube; anthers 
elongated, on very short filaments separating from the tube 
below the throat; stigmas elongate, subulate, divaricate, 
usually on a very short st tyle. is no doubt Roxburgh’s 
original C. reflexa, as his Soe and description, “stigmata 
” 
