APPENDIX 



GOODYER'S MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS 



Goodyer's miscellaneous papers and letters have recently been 

 sorted out and bound up in one folio volume (GOODYER MS. ii). 

 They include : 



1. Descriptions of new or rare plajits, mostly written on ff. 8 1-146, 

 including many rough drafts of descriptions scribbled on the backs 

 of other papers. See pages 109 to 193 of the present volume. 



2. Notes of Botanical Excursions, 1617-1658. 



Goodyer rarely allowed a summer to pass without an excursion to some part 

 of south Hampshire, Southampton, the sea-shore at Playling, or the New Forest. 

 There is evidence of journeys to Essex in 1616, 1620, 1621 ; London, 161 7, 

 1628, 1654; Wiltshire, 1618, 1624; Oxford, 1622; Northamptonshire, 1625; 

 Surrey, 1634 ; and Bath, 1638. 



3. Lists of Garden Plants. 



4. Lists of Exotic Plants. 



5. Lists of Medicinal Plajits and Materia Medica. 



6. Sundry Medical Prescriptions. 



7 . Z ists of Books. 



8. Letters addressed to GoODYER and drafts of letters written 

 by him. 



1618. Nov. 7. G. at the Red Lion in Fleet Street to some person believed to 

 be Coys, describing the botanical results of his excursion 

 in Wiltshire, p. 29. 



On back. Addresses of Nicholas Everenden, Sedles- 

 combe, Samuel Shute, Thomas Coltherste at the albus 

 Lion in Deanside. 



Last poem by Sir Walter Raleigh, ' Even such is 

 time ..." p. 32. 

 n. d. GOODIER to person unknown. Concerning payment for Canary 



Wine on back of a Terrier of Durford Priory, p. 9. 

 162 1. Nov. 9. Laurence Davis to John Goodier at Droxford. Concern- 

 ing gold weights sent by Maye the carrier, p. 48. 

 Griffith Hinton to John Goodyear at Maple Derham, 



Concerning the Bishop of Winchester, p. 56. 

 Griffith Hinton to John Goodyear at the sygnc of the 

 Angell necr Denmark House in the Strand. Concerning 

 fruit trees, p. 58. 

 G. communicating a list of plants indigenous in P' ranee to 



a traveller, p. 39. 

 G. to Mr. Wray enclosing the above, p. 60. 



