7iative Countnj of Hypericinn cahjcinum. 26j) 



It seems therefore that H. calycinum, though so commonly cul- 

 tivated in the English gardens and shrubberies, to .'h.ch S.r 

 Georcre Wheeler introduced it in 1G76, has not been found wild 

 in an"y other part of the world than at Belgrad near Constanti- 

 nople, and between Cork and Bandon in Ireland ; two situations, 

 thouc^h remote from each other, and differing about ten degrees 

 in latitude, not unlike with respect to their exposure. We know 

 moreover, by daily experience, that the plant under considera- 

 tion is able to bear a much colder climate than either. In con- 

 sequence of the above discovery, the Hypericum cahjcinum will 

 make the first plate in the 29th volume oi English Botany. 



Norwich, March IS, I8O9. 



Q TO- IX. Notts 



VOL. X. ^^ 



