&0% pentandhia mon< gynia. Campanula* 



This is another species collected by my people at Ludak in 

 28€!. 



Root long, tapering, sub-entire — Stems slender, erect, cespitose, 

 as well as the leaves and calyces covered with so r t greyish pube- 

 scence, slightly flexuose, purplish, round. — Leaves lanceolate, scat- 

 tered, an inch and half long, exceeding their interstices, acute at 

 both ends, sessile, unequally repand. denticulate, villous on both 

 sides. — Flowers axillary and terminal, on filiform lengthened pedun- 

 cles, which bear from one to three bractiform leaflets. — Calyx pur- 

 plish, di\ided into five triangular, acute, entire segments. — Corolla 

 campanulate, a little longer than the laciniaa of the calyx, pubescent; 

 lobes lanceolate, acute. Filaments very broad and ciliated at their 

 base. — Ovarium shorter than the calyx, prismatico-turbiuate. 

 Stigma three-labed. 



] 1. C. camosa, Wall. 



Smooth, fleshy, procumbent. heaves ovate, cuspidate-serrate, 

 petioled. — Flowers axillary, on capillary peduncles, which equal the 

 leaves. Calycine lacinia linear, shorter than the bilobate corolla. 

 Filaments linear, not dilated at the base. — Capsule prismatic. 



I have only found this plant on rocky near' rivulets towards the 

 middle of mount Shivapoor ; blossoming in June. 



A small, smooth, fleshy plant. Root creeping, with capillary 

 fibrillce. — Stem procumbent, creeping at the base, very thin and 

 slender, from six to eight, even as far as twelve inches long, obscure. 

 ly three-sided, with elevated ribbed angles, branched, purplish, se- 

 mi-pellucid. — Leaves alternate, petioled, ovate, sometimes slightly 

 cordate at their base, acute, serrate j serratures gibbuus, cuspidulate, 

 incumbent, soft and fleshy, an inch or an inch and half long, opaque 

 above, and with a few scattered hyaline hairs ; smooth and shining 

 underneath, and dotted with some pellucid minute points ; the up- 

 permost very close together ; all the rest rather distant. — Petiols 

 about as long as the leaves, with a slight furrow above, the base sub- 

 deeurrent and forming the elevated angles of the stem; the upper- 



