134 WILLIAM HENRY HARVEY. 



Dr. Han^ey was one of the few botanists of our day who excelled both in 

 phsenoafamic and cryptogamic botany. In algology, his favorite branch, proba- 

 bly hehas left no superior; in systematic botany generally, he had now an emi- 

 nent position. He was a keen observer and a capital clesciiber. He investi- 

 gated acciu-ately, worked readily and easily with microscope, pencil and pen, 

 Avrote perspicuously, and, where the subject permitted, with captivating grace; 

 affording, in his lighter productions, mere glimpses of the Avarm and poetical 

 imagination, delicate humor, refined feeling, and sincere goodness which were 

 charmingly revealed in intimate intercourse and correspondence, and which won 

 the admiration and the love of all who knew him well. Handsome in person, 

 gentle and fascinating in manners, genial and wann-liearted, but of very retir- 

 ing disposition, simple in his tastes and unaffectedly devout, it is not surprising 

 that he attracted friends wherever he went, so that his death will be sensibly felt 

 on every continent and in the islands of the sea. 



