8 INDEX TO THE 



of whom, t. (J. Lofling, many letters are preserved in Linne's 

 correspondence, and this valuable body of letters has been, 

 constantly appealed to for information or confirmation. 



Plan of Index. 



The method of framing the index was as follows. A list of 

 all names of genera and species issued by Linne was drawn up, 

 chiefly from Petermann's Index to Richter's ' Codex Linnseanus,'^ 

 with some additions and corrections. The herbarium was then 

 examined sheet by sheet, and the Linnean names marked against 

 the list. Many manuscript and unpublished names have been 

 found, and are distinguished by the affix (MS.) ; further, a fair 

 number of species which were published in the 'tSupplementum' of 

 the younger Linne in 1781, have been marked as in (Suppl.). 

 These last are of interest as making certain which species were 

 described by the elder Linne, about 185 in all, for the book itself 

 gives no clue as to authorship. I may remark parenthetically, that 

 the manuscript of the ' Supplementum ' sheds but little light upon 

 this question, as the earlier part has been copied by another hand, 

 and practically none of it remains in the handwriting of Linne. 



EA.BLIER EnTJMEEATIONS. 



The next step was to collate certain enumerations existing in 

 Linne's writing. 



1. An interleaved copy of 'Species Plantarum ' ed. 1,1753, 

 in which the number before each species then possessed by Linne 

 is underscored. This was copied by Jonas Dryander in or about 

 1785, when the Linnean and P»anksian herbaria were collated 

 (Proc. Linn. Soc. 1887-88, p. 28 ; Smith in Linn. Lachesis, pref. 

 p. ix.). A transcript of this copy is also at Kew (Proc. 1906-7, 

 p. 91). I found in the Linnean copy that the printed pages 849- 

 856 inclusive had been cut out, the interleaves alone remaining ; 

 as the Banksian copy has no marks on the corresponding pages, it 

 is clear that these pages were already missing when the Linnean 

 books came into the possession of Smith. 



2. A manuscript list described in the * Proceedings ' 1906-7, 

 pp. 90-95 : it was brought down to the spring of 1755, most of 

 the marking being by dots prefixed. 



3. A copy of the second volume of the twelfth edition of the 

 ' Systema Naturae,' 1767, the numbers of the species represented 

 in the Linnean herbarium being underscored as in No. 1. 



The collation of these three Linnean lists, with the actu a 

 noting from the herbarium as it now exists, permits of a few 

 observations being made. Each of these lists is faulty ; the third 

 especially so, for such genera as AWia'ci, Phlomis, and Pulmonaria 



