OF THE ANTARCTIC VOYAGE. 329 
happily recovered, comprise all the sufferers by accident or 
illness. 
. A month's stay at the Cape of Good Hope, was antici- 
pated, which, it was hoped, might yield some good herboriz- 
ing, and an agreeable meeting with Dr. Wallich, Director of 
the H. E. I. Company's Botanic Garden at Calcutta, and 
now at the Cape for the benefit of his health; unless, indeed, 
that gentleman should still be on his tour in the interior. 
His society would afford some compensation for the absence 
of Mr. Wilmot.* 
From the Cape, St. Helena was to be the next place 
visited, and then Rio; so that, we trust, ere autumn has 
closed, these enterprising and successful Antarctic Voyagers 
will be welcomed to their native shores. ~ 
-- 
Contributions towards a FLoRA or BRAZIL, by GEORGE 
GARDNER, F.L.S. 
(Continued from Vol. I. p. 548.) 
PART II. 
PLANTS FROM THE ORGAN MOUNTAINS. 
301. Clematis Brasiliana, D.C. Syst. 1. p. 143. Prodr. 1. 
p.4. St. Hil. Fl. Bras. Merid. 1. p. 2. Deless. Ic. Sel. 1. _ 
4.1. C. Bonariensis, D.C. Syst. 1. p. 145. Prodr. 1. p. 5. 
ez St. Hil. | dues 
Has. In woods at Imbuhy. Fi. March. © 
* Frederick Eardly Wilmot, Esq. (son of the recently appointed 
Governor of Van Dieman’s Island, Sir Eardly Wilmot, Bart.) one of the 
officers of the Antarctic Expedition, who had been left in charge of the 
corresponding Observatory at Cape Town, on the first arrival of the 
ships at that port, in 1840, but is now on a visit to England. Mr. Wilmot 
is about to return to the Cape, and, as we understand, to be engaged in 
an important survey of a distant part of that colony. 
+ Those species which are not otherwise mentioned, were collected - 
at an elevation of about 3,000 feet above the level of the sea. — 
