BOTANICAL NEWS. 237 
he had been appointed as his brother’s successor, and in a few months he re- 
time stron , but now impaired by the labours of his office and his devotion to 
He then visited ‘the east, south, and west c A of PEE and saia. 
to New Zealand, the and the Friendly Islands. He next proceeded to 
ere ealth gave way, and he hastened home by P. 
reaching England in 1856, after an absence of three years. Shortly after his 
ss 
y ck of hæmorrhage of the mga the of 
that disease which ultimately caused his death. still, however, diligently 
discharged his public duties, and pursued his are labours u un "er pi when 
he was unable i lecture to his class. He spent the winter e south of 
France, and with somewhat restored health he d to his pan in the 
herbarium for a little. Autumn and winter, 1865-66, were passed in Dublin, 
and in the spring of this year he visited Lady Hooker, the widow of his 
long-attached friend Sir W. J. Hooker, in os house at Torquay he 
quietly breathed his last, on the'"15th May, 1866, at the comparatively early 
age of fifty-five years. Hooker dedicated to him a genus of Cape Scrophu- 
lice of which one species, Harveya Capensis, only is known. The follow- 
a list of Dr. Harvey's ber works :—* The Genera of South African 
Planta? 1838, 8vo; ‘ Manual of British Algæ,’ 1841, 8vo ; * Phycologia Bri- 
tannica,’ 1846-1851, 4 vol. 8vo ; ‘ Nereis Australis, 1847, 8vo ; ‘The Seaside 
00 3 
Generum Algarum, 1860, 8vo; and in apaia with Dr. Sonder, ‘ Flora 
