54 PROCEEDINGS OF XllE 



49. Australian Mosses. Trans. & Proc. Roy. Soc. Victoria, xix. (1883) 



49-96. 



50. [Muscinese in] W. B. Hemslev, Report on Botany of H.M.S. 



' Challenger,' i. (1885) 88-93, &c. 



51. Notes on the European and North American Species of Mosses of the 



Genus Fissidens (1885). Journ. Linn. Soc, Bot. xxi. (188(3) 

 550-560. 



52. Some new Species of the Genus Metzgeria (1886). lb. xxii. (1887) 



241-243. 



53. The Mosses and Hepaticae collected in Central Africa by the late 



Rig-ht Rev. James Hannington, Bishop of Mombasa, F.L.S., 

 r.G.S., &c., with some others, including those gathered by Mr. H. 

 H. Johnston on Kilimanjaro. Ih. (1887) 298-329. 



54. [Musci in] W. B. Hemsley, Report on the Vegetation of Diego Garcia. 



lb. 339-340. 



55. Musci of Roraima Expedition of 1884. Trans. Linn. Soc. ser. 2, 



Bot. ii. (1887) 296-297 (1887). 



56. [Muscinese in] I. B. Balfour, Botany of Socotra, in Trans. Rov. Soc. 



Edinburgh, vol. xxxi. (1887) 330-336. 



57. An Enumeration of all the Species of Musci and Hepaticoe recorded 



from Japan (1889). Trans. Linn, Soc. ser. 2, Bot. iii. (1890) 

 153-206. 

 With Charles Knight, F.L.S. : 



58. Contributions to the Lichenographia of New Zealand ; being an 



Account with Figures of some new Species of Graphidete and allied 

 Lichens (1860). lb. 101-106 (in collaboration with Charles 

 Knight). 

 With William Wilson, F.L.S. : 



59. Enumeration of the Mosses collected in India by Dr. J. D. Hoolcer 



and Dr. T. Thomson, with their Habits, Elevations, and the 

 Numbers under which they have been distributed (written in 

 collaboration with W. W. Wilson). Hook. Kew Journ, Bot. 

 ix. (1857) 289-300, 321-333, 363-370, 

 With Charles Henry Wright, A.L.S. : 



60. [Muscinefe in] Dr, O. Stapf's On the Flora of Mount Kinabalu, in 



North Borneo (1903). Trans. Linn. Soc, ser. 2, Bot. iv. (1894) 

 255-261 (in conjunction with C. H. Wright). 



Although failing health during the last two years had warned 

 the numerons friends of Habrt Marshall "Ward that his life 

 was approaching its term, yet the news of his death at Torquay 

 on Sunday night, the 26th August, came as a shock to many. 



Born in 1854 at Hereford, his early years were spent in the 

 country, M'here he acquired a love of botany in the field. Early 

 in the seventies he came under the influence of Darwin's researches, 

 and in 1874 he began attending the biological course under 

 Prof. Huxley at the School of Science, South Kensington, in 

 succession to his early education at Owens College, Manchester. 

 The following year, a course of practical botany, perhaps the first 

 in modern sense arranged in this country, was carried out by 

 Professor (now Sir) W, T. Thiseltou-Dyer and Professor Vines, 

 Both were struck by the promise of one of the pupils, and at 

 their suggestion, in the spring of 1876, he became a candidate 

 for an open scholarship in natural science at Christ's College, 



