210 SCHOMBURGK’S GUIANA PLANTS. 
Mr Pamplin has received the collections of Abyssinian 
seeds, and has already delivered the sets to those who previ- 
ously subscribed for them ; but a few sets still remain in his - 
hands, which are offered at the non-subscribers’ price of 
£2. "s. 6d. the hundred species ; and packets of two hundred 
kinds can be made up, if desired. Mr Pamplin requests - 
that if any of the original subscribers for these seeds have | 
not yet received their respective sets for the £2. 2s. per 
100 (paid in advance), they will have the goodness to apply 
without delay for them.— These seeds are said to bein excel- 
lent condition, in good full-sized packets, and to be peculi- 
arly interesting. Several of them come under the denomi- 
nation, of ** Semina Plantarum usui ceconomica in Abyssinia 
cultarum.” Fer 
Mr Pamplin wishes it to be known, that some sets of Mr 
Gardners Ceará and Piauhy plants are still unsold, which 
. are open to new subscribers on the original terms of £2 the 
100 species; and we may ourselves observe, that the very 
few remaining sets of Mr Gardner's Pernambuco and Ala- 
goas plants (only six in all), will immediately be placed in 
Mr Pamplin’s hands, as the agent for Mr Gardner. ! 
XI1.— Contributions towards a Flora of South America. —En- ] 
meration of Plants collected by Mr Scnowsunck in British zi 
Guiana, —By Grorce Bentuam, Eso., F.L.S., &c, S6 — 
[ Continued from page 146 of this Vol.] 
(CHRYSOBALANACEX, 
The only character upon which Brown is disposed to place 
an absolute reliance, as between Leguminose and Rosace@s — 
the relation of the odd sepal to the axis, (Verm. Schrift. ed. 
Nees IV. p. 56), is not an easy one to observe in Chrysoba- 
lanacee, where the pedicels are often more or less twisted, 
and the ultimate ramifications of the inflorescence very fret 
quently dichotomous, with terminal flowers; in those species» 
