ee LEGUMINOSR. [ ee 
aria 4 in. long; keel nearly "2 in . long ; “ovary ve awny 
pubescent ; pods about 4 ft. long, Saniles, sinuate along the outer 
border, incurved- acuminate, indistinctly greyish puberulous, the 
inner suture strongly prominent ; seeds oblong, purplish black, free, 
often separated by medullary septa 
~ Has.—Common in the tidal forests and tidal savannahs, also in ae: — 
jungles, of Chittagon g, Arracan, and Lower Pegu ; also met with 1 
district along the Khaboung. clig. ne ar villages, here eultivated UHL ie. - 
March.—l.—SS.—All. Sal. 
RemMarxs.— Wood A light, very coarse and fibrous. 
4. I. Indica, Lamk. ; H.f. Ind. Fl. ii. 188; Bedd. Sylv. ‘Madr. 
87; Brand. For. Fl. 139. — Penglay-kathit. —A tree (50—60+ 10— 
154+5—9), leafless during H.S., the trunk and branches armed with 
short sharp prickles arising o from woody tubercles, the very young 
shoots more or less mealy-puberulous ; leaves 3-foliolate, on a 2-3 in. 
long petiole, the stipulary gland round, rather large ; leaflets broadly 
ovate, the lateral ones somewhat obliquely so, on a 2-3 long 
puberous at petiolule, 2-3 in. long and broad, pluntish 
— = mebrnions, glabrous, green; howe) rather 
sately truncate at the tip, ne young termina ted b eubslate 
appendages ; standard ovate-lanceolate, narrowed at the ft acute, 
i et i in the aati the beach forests ting Oe the shee fe from Chittagong yore 
re 
= 
tinuous Sire 
fe deer a LS Aren 
_ All Sal. 
