266 BOTANICAL INFORMATION. 
Royal Gardens at Kew, and only regret that the number of 
species is not so great as I could wish, owing to the impossi- 
bility of collecting largely during a journey made with 
loaded pack-horses, except near the places where we stop for 
the night. There are a number of small sets of seeds which 
I should wish to sell, if you can obtain me any purchasers of 
them ; in all, even the smallest, of these collections there are 
abundance of seeds of the splendid Boronia Molloye, the yel- 
low Anigozanthus, and several other new and interesting 
plants. 
I also transmit a series of letters on the Botany of our 
colony, published in the “ Enquirer,” a Swan River news- 
paper ; and though incomplete, for some of them are missing, 
they contain the fullest information I have been able to give 
of those plants used for food by the natives. There are also 
five or six sheets of notes, descriptive of those plants which I 
have sent you, especially the Cryptogamia ; of the latter tribe 
there are upwards of three hundred species in the different 
boxes, which afford a fair idea of the productions of our 
colony in the way of Mosses, &c. If any of the purchasers 
of my Phenogamous plants should be desirous of having the 
Swan River Cryptogamia also, I shall be happy to supply 
them, and will take care to procure the sea-weeds, which the 
distance of this place (Hawthornden) from the coast has 
hitherto prevented my collecting.” 
James DRUMMOND. 
The Bermuda Cedar. ee 
The following interesting observations on the Bermuda 0T — 
Pencil Cedar, figured and described at Tas. I, p. 141; EC 
L 
the last volume of this Journal, have been kindly communi 
cated to the Editor, by his Excellency, Colonel Reid, the — 
Governor of that colony. E 
* 'The inhabitants of Bermuda are not aware what the de 
tinctions may be which have induced botanists to class the 
