Intsaea. | LAURINER. 305 
whorled, rather rigidly chartaceous or almost coriaceous, narrowed 
and acute at the base, elliptical or oblong, rather bluntish acuminate, 
beneath pale-coloured, but hardly glaucous, 4-44 in. long, on a petiole 
hardly § an in. long, above immersed-ribbed and glabrous, beneath 
minutely scabrous; flowers clustered, rusty silk-hairy. — (After 
Meissner.) 
Has.—Tenasserim. 
2. L. angustifolia (Actinodaphne angustifolia, NE.; Bedd. 
Sylv. Madr., 186).—An evergreen large tree, the young shoots 
densely tawny or ochraceous-villous; leaves crowded at the end of 
cous beneath, 6-8 in. long (in young plants considerably larger) ; 
owers small, villous, umbellate, on very short tawny-villous pedun- 
cles usually several together clustered in the axils of the leaves, the 
umbels not exceeding the length of the petiole; pedicels in fruit 
2-3 lin. long; male flowers simply clustered ; filaments pilose ; 
berry obovate-globular, the size of a pea, 2-seeded, resting on a 
somewhat concave cup shortly tomentose outside. 
Has.—Frequent in the tropical forests of the Pegu Yomah and from Mar- 
taban down to Tenasserim.—Fl. Aug.; Fr. March.—s.—SS.— SiS. Metam. 
3. L 
fulvous or tawny villous; leaves crowded at the end of the branch- 
lets, 1-14 ft. long, elongate-lanceolate to elongate-oblong-lanceolate, 
veined between the stron nerves, more or less tawny-pubescent 
ny slightly glaucous beneath, glossy above ; male flowers clustered, 
e : i 
clustered in the axils of the leaves ; pedicels in fruit 2-24 lin. long, 
thick, tomentose ; berries resting on a fleshy little concave cup. 
HaB.—Tenasserim, 
© I, leiophylla, Kz.—An evergreen tree, all parts, except the 
rescence, quite glabrous ; leaves lanceolate to oblong-lanceolate, 
5-63 in. long, acuminate and somewhat unequal at the base, on a 
= slender glabrous petiole 1-1} in. long, slightly and blunt acuminate, 
nlaceous, quite glabrous, glossy above, beneath slightly or 
triplinerved and penninerved, the net-veination very 
thin-co 
: itd eater 
 Sd8olete ; flowers on short tomentose pedicels, tawny-villous, forming 
VOL. II, , U 
