140 c. BOEAGiNEJ!. (C. B. Clarke.) [OordMS. 



about J in. ; most of the exampiea are leafless when in flower, often with much 

 larger calyx. 



13. C. ftilvosa, Wight Ic. t. 1380 ; leaves ovate obtuse or acute tomen- 

 tum beneath hard, corymbs closely tomentose calyx soon glabrescent, berry 

 |-1 in. ovoid acute. JBedd. For. Man. 166. 0. polygama, Wall. Cat, 892,. 

 pnr%— Cordia sp. n. 13, Seii. Ind. Or. S.f. ^ T. 



W. Dbccan Peninsula ; Conean and Belgaum, Lavi, Stocks, Bitchie. 



Leaves with hard, not woolly tomentum, becoming scabrous or subglabrate in age, 

 very variable in size, obtuse or more often acute, crenately lobed or entire, obscurely 

 3-nerved. — ^Except in its much less tomentose corymb and leaves, this is undistiu- 

 guisbable from G. Macleodii ; it may be only a more tomentose form of C numoica, 

 as Wallieh esteemed it. 



Vae. evolutior ; less tomentose, leaves 8 by 4 in., corymb large, calyx at flower- 

 time glabrescent. — Bombay ; Oalzell. — A v«ry doubtful plant ; it forms part of 

 Cordia n. 13, Herb. Ind. Or. H. f. ^ T. and appears reaUy to belong here, but it is 

 exceedingly unlike Wight's picture of C. fulvosa. 



Sect. II. Sebesten. Corolla larger, tube exceeding the calyx. Stamem 

 &-8. 



14. C. octandra, A. DC. Prodr, ix. 477; leaves ovate acuminate 

 crenate-subserrate 3-nerved nearly glabrous, calyx cylindric obscurely tomen- 

 tose without, corolla white tube slightly longer than the calyx, stamens usually 

 8. Sedd. Fm: Man. 166. 0. serrata, Ro.vb. Fl. Ind. ed. Carey Sf Watt, ii.. 

 383 ; Wall. Cat. 890 ; Wight Ic. t. 469, not of Juss. 



Tbavancoee ; Boxbm-gh. 



Arboreous. Leaves alternate, 6 by 3 in., rounded or rhomboid at the base; 

 petiole 1-2 in. Corymbs lateral, peduncled, 2-4 in., minutely rusty ; flowers sub- 

 sessile in small clusters. Calyx-tube ^ in. ; lobes i in., triangular, hairy within. 

 Corolla-lobes 7-9, J in. Fila-rmnts hairy ; anthers ovate, small. — Described from the 

 Calcutta Botanic Garden examples ; no wild specimen known. 



15. C. subcordata, Lamk. IlLu. 421 ; leaves large ovate acute obscurely 

 3-nerved nearly glabrous without, corolla large orange or reddish tube exceed- 

 ing the calyx, stamens 6. WaU. Cat. 9063; DC. Prodr. ix. 477; Seem. Fl. 

 Viti, t. 34 ; Benth. Fl. Austral, iv. 385, with syn. ; Ku7-z For'. Fl. ii. 209. 

 0. orientalis, Br. Prodr. 498. C. campanulata, Boxb. Fl. Ind. ed. Carey ^ 

 Wall. ii. 336. C. Rumphii, Blume Bijd. 843. C. hexandra, Boem. 8f Sch.. 

 Syst. iv. 799. — Bumph. Serb. Amh. ii. t. 75. 



Andamans and S. Malay Peninsula. In Bengal and various parts of India often 

 planted. — Disteie. S.E. Asia to Australia and the Sandwich Isles. Widely cul- 

 tivated. 



A small tree. Leaves 3-6 in., base rounded or subcordate; petiole I-I5 in. 

 Corymbs lateral and few-fld., nearly glabrous ; flowers usually 6-merous. Calyx ^ 

 in. ; teeth short, triangular, villous within. Corollontvbe | in., lobes f in. Branches 

 of the stigmas linear-spathulate. Fruit 1 in., ellipsoid, acute, usually l-seeded. 

 Seed grossly muricated, subspinose. 



EXCLUDED species. 



CoEDiA FiNLAYsoNiANA, Wall. Cat. 7010 ; without locality attached, was probably- 

 collected in Coehin-China. 



CoEDiA SP., WaU. Cat. 9064, is Ma'ppia oblonga, Miers, var. elliptica (v. i. p. 589).. 



