110 | G. Claridge Druce. 
X1.—AppITIONAL FLorıstıc Notes. 
By G. CLARIDGE Druce. 
(Oxford). 
N the preceding chapters devoted to this subject, which have 
| appeared in the New Puyrocoaist, our foreign confreres have 
dealt with the salient features of our delightful excursion in a most 
interesting manner. In one of them (Ch. V) Dr. Rübel, in his 
suggestive note on the Killarney vegetation, names the Violet we 
gathered there as V. silvestris var. pseudo- mirabilis, while Dr. 
Ostenfeld (Ch. VI) in a masterly manner gives details of some of the 
critical forms noticed on the expedition, and names some new forms 
for Britain. Dr. Graebner (Ch. VII) in his valuable paper mentions 
inter alia some of the plants which have become naturalised in 
Britain, while Professor Drude (Ch. IX) in his erudite and thoughtful 
“ Comparison of the Flora of Great Britain with that of Central 
