Cannabis] cxvii. MORAOEiE. 995 



Gingos " Liambe " ; the Portuguese name is " Canhamo.'' This com- 

 modity, which is for the most part if not wholly composed of the cut- 

 up leaves of hemp, is eagerly sought for in the markets by the natives 

 at Loanda and in all the interior of Angola for narcotic smoking ; 

 indulgence in it constitutes one of the most pernicious of their vices, 

 especially with the slaves, who when addicted to Eiamba smoking 

 become nearly useless to their owners. The plant is cultivated in all 

 the interior districts of Angola, but always in situations more or less 

 retired or lonely, in order to withdraw the plantations from the notice 

 and greed of passengers. Haemorrhage of the nose is the very frequent 

 consequence of this smoking intoxicant ; the natives in the interior of 

 Huilla are accustomed to cure it with the powdered panicles of 

 " Encotahote " (^Cymhopogon schcenanfhus Spr. var. stypticus Eendle ; 

 Welw. herb. n. 7526, Coll. Carp. 1093 and 1094), an application of 

 which nearly always has the desired effect. 



For an account of the constituents of hemp resin, see a paper by 

 T. H. Easteraeld and T. B. Wood in Proc. Cambr. Phil. Soc. ix. 3, 

 pp. 144-8 (1896) ; and on its pharmacological action, by C. E. 

 Marshall, I.e., pp. 149-50. 



The dried herb is packed for sale in cylindrical sausage-shaped 

 parcels, 2 to 3 ft. long and about 4 in. thick. The fruits of the 

 Adansonia, called "Miicua," are used by the negroes for smoking the 

 Eiamba ; see ante, p. 80. 



2. MYRIANTHUS P. Beauv. Fl. Owar. pp. xi, 16, t. 11, exol. 

 fr., non t. 12 (1804) ; Benth, & Hook. f. Gen. PL iii. p. 379. 



1. M. arboreus P. Beauv., I.e., p. 17 ; Ficalho, PI. TJteis, , 

 p. 273 (1884); Engl. Men. Morac. African, p. 37. t. 16 (1898). 



Goi.UNGO Alto. — A very elegant tree, 20 to 25 ft. high, mostly 

 dioecious but not rarely monoecious in different branches of the same 

 tree ; trunk IJ to 2 in. in diameter at the base, branched a little above 

 the isase ; branches spreading ; sap of the branchlets watery, viscid, 

 scarcely turning white, but the trunk when cut with a knife showed no 

 sap ; leaves digitate ; ayncarpium resembling both in its shape and 

 golden colour a pineapple or some species of Pandanus, its flesh edible, 

 acidulous-sweet ; seeds numerous in the syncarpium. In the dense 

 rather damp primitive forests close to streams about Sange and in the 

 Alto Queta and Cungulungulo mountains, plentiful ; male and female 

 fl. Nov. and Dec. 1855 ; fr. Dec. 1865. Native name " Musibiri," 

 " Musuviri," or " Musubiri." No. 2590 and Coll. Caep. 901. 



PuNGO Andongo. — A form with obtuse leaflets and more slender 

 male inflorescence. In the denser forests of Mata de Pungo ; male fl. 

 March 1857. No. 2591. 



The Lichens, nn. 109, 119, 151, 167, 168, 171, 183, 331, 375, 376, 467, 

 grew on the trunk or branches of this tree in Golungo Alto ; also the 

 moss n. 213 (Racopilum sp.) and the hepatic n. 316 on the bark, in the 

 same district. In Pungo Andongo it is also called " Pernambueo." 



3. MUSANGrA E. Br. in Tuckey, Congo, pp. 453, 328, 329, 

 467 (1818); Benth. & Hook. f. Gen. PI. iii. p. 379. 



1. M. cecropioides Br. ex Tedlie in Bowdich, Miss. Ashantee, 

 p. 372 (1819). 



M. Smithii E. Br. in Benn. & Br. PI. Javan. Horsfield, p. 49 

 (1838) ; Benth. in Hook. Ic. PI. xiv. p. 4. tt. 1306, 1307 (April 

 1880) ; Ficalho, PI. Uteis, p. 273 (1884) ; Engl. Mon. Morac: 



