DESCRIPTIVE LIST OF NEW PLANTS. 
63 
forming panicles; the corolla is funnel-shaped, very large, of a 
rich, full yellow, the lower half, or rather less, forming a narrow 
tube, thence suddenly expanding into a campanulate faux of a 
a deeper yellow in the inside.— Bot. Mag. 4352. 
Leguminose. —Polggamia Polyandria. 
Acacia oncinophylla (Lindley.) A very graceful Swan River 
species of acacia, flowering in the early spring months, and scent¬ 
ing the atmosphere with its agreeable fragrance. The blossoms, 
in rich yellow spikes, show more numerously upon the branches 
than even the leaves. The seeds were sent us by Mr. Drummond. 
— Bot. Mag. 4353. 
Verbenacee. —Bidynamia Angiospermia. 
Clerodendron scandens (Palisot de Beauvois.) A very pretty 
stove Clerodendron , introduced, together with the following more 
splendid species, by Messrs. Lucombe, Pince, and Co., Exeter 
Nursery, from Sierra Leone, through the instrumentality of Mr. 
Whitfield. The flowers are white, tinged with pink near the centre, 
exceedingly pretty and copious, and the plant is a climber, well 
adapted for growth on a trellis in a pot. It flowers in December. 
— Bot. Mag. 4354. 
Clerodendron capitatum (Schumacher.) Avery fine species, of 
shrubby, handsome growth; large, ample foliage, varying from 
four inches to a foot in length; the smaller leaves subovate, 
the larger ones obovate, oblong, acuminate, undulated at the 
margin, the surface reticulated, and somewhat wrinkled; the 
young ones subpilose, the older ones ferruginously hairy on the 
nerves, especially beneath. Peduncle terminal, hairy like the 
young branches, short, bearing in our specimen two small leaves 
and a dense head of numerous flowers; the great length and 
spread of the corollas giving the appearance of an umbel, or 
almost of a panicle, if the calyces be not inspected. The corollas 
are five inches long; cream-white, glanduloso-pubescent; the 
tube very slender, geniculated below the limb (where the stamens 
are inserted), and then broader; limb of five spreading, obovate, 
nearly equal segments; stamens and style very much exserted, 
the former curved upwards. Being also a native of Sierra Leone, 
it requires stove heat, and it has the merit of flowering while the 
