THYMEL^AGE^. 115 



Stellera of Gmelin, Arthrosolen and Funifera of C. A, Meter, 

 Kelleria of Endlicher, Peddiea of Harvey, Daphnopsis and Schoeno- 

 biblus of Martids and Ztjccarini, Bicranolepis of Planchon, Co?eo- 

 phora of Miers and Goodallia and Lasiadenia of Bentham. In fact, he 

 admitted among the Thymelece thirty-three genera which we have 

 reduced to twenty-seven and to which Oliver ^ has just added 8ynap- 

 tolepis. We have also proposed, in this series, a new genus Stepha- 

 nodaphne ; ^ bringing the total Up to twenty-nine. The Aquilariece, 

 which formerly comprised only the genera Aquilaria of Lamarck ^ and 

 Gyrinops of Gartner,* have been long separated from the ThymelaceoB, 

 chiefly on account of their pluricarpellar gynsecium ; but E. Brown, 

 who ranged them beside the DichapetalecB ( ChailleUece), declares, how- 

 ever,^ " that their affinity with the Thymelece would be less difficult 

 to establish than with any other group." This opinion, the * para- 

 doxical appearance ' of which he did not dissimulate, is indeed now 

 adopted by everyone. We have seen Enulicher placing PTm- 

 laria in the series of the Thymelacece ; which entails the annexation 

 to this family of Aquilaria and Gyrinops, inseparable from Fhaleria. 

 Unfortunately, Dbcaisnb, engaged with thesis plants in 1843 ^ and 

 1864^'!' placed before the latter generic name that of Brymispermwm^ 

 which is posterior to it, and, inconsiderately multiplying generic 

 and specific divisions, introduced the utmost confusion, making 

 with the true Phaleria at the same time Brymispermum, Pseudais 

 and LeiMSOsmia, persisting in and even aggravating his errors 

 in his work of 1864, in which he appears to take no notice 

 of the progress of science or the labours of his predecessors.^ 

 Meissner,^" also, having passively admitted the valueless genera 

 established by Decaisnb, was led to divide the Aquilariece, under 

 the same title as the Thymelece, into two tribes, Gyrinopece and 

 DrymispermecB, distinguished' from each other by the presence or 

 absence of scales in the throat of the perianth, and to place the 

 same genus, under different names, in both tribes. Happily in 



1 Sook. lean. 1. 1074 (1870). ' Voy. VSms, Bot. 13, tab. 



2 Adansonia, xi. faso. 10 (1875). « Reinw. Syllog. Fl. Batisb. 15 (1828). 



' Diet, ii (1806). ' For the most complete demonstration of 



* Fruct. n {1791). these facts, now scarcely credible, a^e Adan- 



<> Congo (1818), 413 ; Mke. Works (edit. aonia, zi. fasc. 10. 



Bbnn.), i. 126. '" Prodr. xiv. 601 (1867). 

 » Ann. So. Nat. ser, 2, six. 35, 1. 1. 



a-3 



