Stem of a rusty brown colour: Jeaves deep green on the 
upper somewhat convex surface, whence the pubescence 
at last disappears, leaving it roughened by the small glan- 
dular promiuent points on which each hair had stood. The 
two floral leaves are sometimes bent.so far back as to em- 
brace the flower between them in the manner of au invo- 
lucre, «The coherent petals of the corolla, when fallen from 
the calyx, separate by a space at the base, about equal to 
that by which they diverge at the top. In the Banksian 
Herbarium we find several species of this genus from dif- 
ferent parts of Terra Australis, none of which, according 
to Mr. Brown, grow in any part of those regions lying 
within the tropic. 
- After some contestation, Corr@a seems to be now una- 
nimously allotted to Jussieu’s natural order of Rutacex 
(Diosmex. Brown in Bot. of Terra Australis: appended to 
Hinders’s Voyage. ). 
The drawing was made in November, at the nursery of 
Messrs. Colville, King’s Road, Fulham. 
1e corolla reversed. 6 One of the four 
rous cavity on the inner side of the di+ 
d A branched hair of the 
. a A portion of the upper half of tl 
shorter stamens, showing the nectarife cay 
lated base of its filament. c Calyx and pistil. 
pubescence, magnified. 
