94 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SOUTH-AFRICAN ORCHIDS. 
Drice, Johann Francis: d. 1881. 
Zwei Pflanzengeographische Documente von J. I. Drége, nebst 
einer Hinleitung von Dr. E. Meyer, Prof. in Kénigsberg (Besondere 
Beigabe zur Flora, 1843. Band 2). No imprint or date. Printed 
as a supplement to the botanical journal ‘Flora.’ Regensburg, 
1848. 8vo, 230 pp., with map.—There are no new species described, 
but valuable records of stations of Orchids on the Peninsula and 
elsewhere. 
Epwarps, Sydenham. 
The Botanical Register, &&. London, 1815-1847, 33 vols. 8vo, 
2702 col. plates, with text.—Contains a few Cape Orchids. 
Harvey, William Henry: b. 1811; d. 1866. 
The Genera of South-African Plants arranged according to the 
Natural System. Cape Town, 1838. 8vo, pp. i.—lxvi., 1-429. 
Second edition, edited by J. D. Hooker, M.D. Cape Town and 
London, 1868. 8vo, pp. 1-12, i.—li., 1-483. 
Thesaurus Capensis, or, Illustrations of the South-African 
Flora, being figures and brief descriptions of South-African plants, 
selected from the Dublin University Herbarium. Vol. i. Dublin, 
1859. 8vo, pp. 68, plates 1-100. Vol. u1., 2b. 1863. 8vo, pp. 68, 
plates 101-200.—Contain several plates of Peninsular Orchids. 
See also, Notes upon Cape Orchidacese, in Hooker’s Lond. 
Journal of Botany, vol. i. London, 1842. Pp. 14-18. 
Jacquin, Nicolaus Joseph: b. 1727; d. 1817. 
Plantarum rariorum horti Cesarei Schonbrunnensis descriptiones 
et icones. Vienne, 1797-1804. 4 vols. folio, 500 plates.—Con- 
tains on t. 179 a fine figure of Satyriwn.ochroleucum under the name 
of Orchis bicornis. 
JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND THE Arts. Edited at the Royal Institution of 
Great Britain. London, 8vo. Various dates. 
“Of the Three Species of the Natural Order Orchidex repre- 
sented in Plate VI.,” in vol. iv. (1818), pp. 199-206. 
“Select Orchidez from the Cape of Good Hope,” in vol. v. 
(1818), pp. 104-105, Plate I. 
‘«‘ Ditto,” continued, in vol. vi. (1819), pp. 44-46, Plate I. 
‘* Ditto,’ continued, in vol. vil. (1820), pp. 221-222, Plate III. 
*« Ditto,” continued, in vol. ix. (1820), pp. 810-811, Plate IV. 
An introductory statement in the first paper quoted above from 
this now rare work (Brit. Mus. Libr.) explains that Francis Masson, 
while at the Cape of Good Hope, ‘‘unexpectedly met with, among 
the Dutch soldiers who then guarded that colony, an artist of great 
skill as a designer of the objects of Natural History,’ and that he 
had formed a considerable portfolio of coloured drawings. Of these 
the Editor adds, ‘‘it has been allowed us to make use of such as 
might suit this Journal.’”’ The concluding statement in the last 
paper attributes this permission to Sir Joseph Banks; and it 
appears that what must be the originals of these drawings are now 
