114 JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. 
Viburnum sp. (F 363) is a very scanty, slight-growing, arching shrub, 
splaying about with a very few sprawling branches of 3-5 feet 
long occasionally in the lower alpine coppice of the Border. The 
leaves are pretty, and the flowers I believe to be negligible ; but 
autumn produces brilliant oval berries of intense opaque scarlet, 
gathered tightly here and there in twos and threes. 
Viburnum sp. (F 364) may perhaps be no more than a form of 
V. Opulus. It is, however, by far the finest fruiting Viburnum 
I know, being a tall graceful bush of 8-10 feet, with the sprays 
bowed down in autumn beneath enormous loose showers of the 
most gorgeous and luminous ruby berries. It abounds in the 
coppice of the Satanee region and the Mo-Ping pass, and its 
flower I have not seen. 
Viburnums^. (F365) is only inferior to the last. It is stiffer in habit, 
with corrugated foliage, and more stiffly borne smaller heads 
of a less diaphanous crimson, usually drooping a little askew 
with their own weight. It haunts the same copses as the last, 
has the same stature, and is equally unknown in flower. 
Viburnum spp. (F 366, 367, 388) are dim species from Chago and Mo- 
Ping, and collected by our Chinese headmen respectively. 
Vicia unijuga (F 184). — This plant has all the appearance of a 
Kennedy a, with several wiry 10-12 inch stems in August springing 
from the crown, and ejecting on fine peduncles rich racemes 
of brilliant blue violet pea-flowers from all the upper axils, more 
brilliant yet for their rich red-purple calyces. It is abundant 
throughout the alpine grass-lands of Tibet, extending south 
into the Satanee range and all over Northern Asia. 
