«£§3 TENTANDKIA MONOGYNId. Euonymw* 



7. E. fimbriata, Wall. 



leaves ovate, finely acuminate, fringed with long, parallel, den- 

 late, sharp serratures. Flowers sub-umbellate on long filiform pe- 

 duncles. Capsules with from two to five, long, vertical, tapering wings. 



Specimens of this beautiful species were communicated from 

 the Sewalik mountains by Dr. Govan and from Shreenwgr/r by Kam- 



EOOp. 



Probably a tree. Branches round, slender, grey; while young 

 alternately compressed; all parts smooth. Buds axillary and termi- 

 nal, oval, acute, consisting of ovate, obtuse, imbricating scales. — 

 Leaves opposite, ovate, terminated by a lanceol.ar, long acumen; 

 margins most elegantly marked with narrow, linear-lanceolate, sharp, 

 slightly incumbent, parallel, and approximate serratures, which are 

 ■two or three lines long, and sharply denticulate, or serrulate ; base 

 rounded, or acute, nearly entire; the lower surface with a strong rib 

 and oblique nerves; from three to five inches long. — Tetiot half an 

 inch long, furrowed. — Peduncles lateral, approximate on the young 

 shoots, tilifoim, a little flattened, two or three inches long, divided 

 into five or six long, slender rays, each bearing a simple or com- 

 pound fascicle of te trandrou s Jlowers. — Caiycirie segments oblong, 

 obtuse. — Stamina very short.— Capsule large, turbinate, depressed, 

 lurnished with from two to five, lanceolate, tapering, vertical, hori- 

 zontally spreading wings, which are sometimes two-thirds of an inch 

 long, and as broad at the base as the capsule itself is deep. 



Obs. It is impossible to confound this with any other species. 

 While young the leaves are lanceolate, less deeply, but distinctly du- 

 plicato-senate; when old they become broad ovate, elegantly fringed 

 with numerous narrow, deep, dentate serratures. The capsules are 

 large, and leathery. — N. VV. 



8. E. grossa, Wall. 



Leaves sub-opposite, ovate, acute, obtusely and grossly serrate, on 

 longish petiols. Peduncles dichotomous, with long divaricate divi- 

 sions. 



