MANUSCRIPTS 231 



MS. II. Goodyer's Miscellaneous Papers. 



The more important of these are published or referred to in 

 this volume as MS. 11, f. — , or more briefly as MS. f. — , with 

 the leaf number but without the number of the manuscript. 



MS. 12. LOBEL. Stirpium Illustrationes ; plurimas elaborantes 

 inauditas plantas subreptitiis Joh: Parkinsoni rapsodiis 

 (ex codice MS. insalutato) sparsim gravatae : edited by 

 W" How. 37 leaves folio. 



The original MS. from which the work was printed in 1655. 

 Seep. 252. 



MS. 13-15. LOBEL. Stirpium Illustrationes. 



An unpublished work in preparation about 16 12. About 

 835 plants are described. See p. 253. 



MS. 16. GOODYERJ. Index to Gerard's Herbal (1597). Sm. 8vo. 

 With localities of British Plants. 



MS. 17. [Stonehouse, W.] Catalogus Plantarum Horti mei 

 Darfeldiae. Anno 1640. With plan i2mo. 

 See p. 348. 



MS. 18. How, W. Additional Notes to his Phytologia Britannica 

 16^0. Written 1 650-1 656. See p. 276. 



An interleaved copy with many corrections, notes, and MS. 

 lists of plants by the author who died 30 Aug. 1656. Goodyer, 

 according to a note inside the cover, received the book on 

 30 Apr. 1659, and then added marginal references throughout 

 and notes on six plants printed on p. 194. 



On the inside of the cover is a receipt dated July 29 and 

 unsigned, probably written after 1659, when the book was in 

 Goodyer's possession. ' Rec. of Mr. Goodier ten pounds for 

 Air. Bold's use.' The Mr. Bold was probably Arch. Bold, one of 

 the witnesses to Goodyer's will. 



The notes in How's handwriting are partly his own, and partly 

 from information received from Goodyer, Hunnibon, and William 

 Browne of Magdalen College. Their source is acknowledged 

 both where they occur and generally on the front page. ' Gaine 

 I was for Goodyers Plants and des. y'' like for Brownes, Lobells 

 [and Pennyes MS. vvci» review for names etc.]' (struck out). 

 Inserted are 7 coloured and 3 uncoloured drawings of plants. 



Passages from this volume have been frequently quoted by 

 Druce, but we have not found any evidence for his statement 

 that ' on the death of Goodyer the book probably came into the 

 possession of W" Browne '} It would have passed into the 

 possession of the College direct, with the rest of Goodyer's 

 library in 1664. 



^ Druce, Flora Berks., \). ciii. 



