1839] JOURNAL— CAMBRIDGE AND BATH. 79 



April 13. Dined with Joseph Power with the other members of 

 the Eay Club. 



April 20. Ee-elected President of the " Hendeka." 



April 22. Meeting of the Philosophical Society. I had a party 

 of the members and others at my rooms afterwards. 



April 25. Went with Henslow to the hills, and got Anemone 

 Pulsatilla. 



April 30. Dr. James Wood, Master of St. John's, died. 



May 7. He was buried in the College Chapel. 



May 9. Mr. Blunt was elected Lady Margaret Professor of 

 Divinity ; many of the non-resident members of St. John's came up 

 on this occasion. 



May 18. Botanical party to Gamlingay, Mr. Eix of St. Neots 

 joined us. . . . In the evening attended a supper given by the 

 " Hendeka " Society to Ball, upon occasion of his leaving the Univer- 

 sity. It went off very well. 



May 24. Went to London, and attended the Anniversary and 

 Dinner of the Linnean Society, went to a soiree at the Bishop of 

 Norwich (Stanley), the President. 



June 8. Corrected the last proof of my "Primitiae Florae 

 Sarnicae." 



June 12. My "Primitiae Florae Sarnicae" came out. 



June 13. Left Cambridge for the summer. ... To Bath. 



June 29. Went to Box Quarries to botanize. They had just 

 commenced the railroad between Bathford and Box. By the road 

 side near Shockerwick, I gathered a Valeriana, probably samhucifolia. 



July 1. Went with Mr. T. B. Flower to Bristol, and then walked 

 to Shirehampton, where we called upon a Mr. Smith, a schoolmaster, 

 who pointed out to us the fields in which Drummond found the 

 Trifolium resupinatum. They were then an open common, but now 

 cultivated and enclosed, and lie between Penpole Point and the 

 mouth of the river Avon. After a careful examination, I am now 

 of opinion that the plant is lost. On our return to Bristol we 

 gathered on St. Vincent's Rocks Bronms diandrus and Trinia glaher- 

 rima, the latter grows upon the rocks east of the Clifton footpath. 



July 2. We went to Cheddar, and spent the day upon the cliffs 

 there, gathering plenty of Dianthus caesius. 



July 3. Walked back to Bath by way of Compton Martin, Chew 

 Magna, Stanton Drew, where the circle of Druidical stones is still 

 very perfect. (There is an inner and outer circle, and apparently 

 also a cromlech). Pensford, Compton Dando, and Corston. 



July 8. Left Bath, and met Mr. Borrer at Salisbury. . . . We 

 arrived at Exeter at 8 a.m. 



