217 



Yourablj' of, as having tended to a general diffusion of a 

 knowledge of the Linniean System. 



2, Catalogue of Plants and Seeds sold by Kennedy and Lee. 



1760. Observations towards a method of preserving the seeds 

 of Plants in a state of Vegetation during long voyages 

 London. 8vo. By SAMUEL PULLEIN, M. A. 

 This Gentleman was also author of several publica- 

 tions upon the Mulberry, Cotton Plant, and Silkworm. 



1760. Adam armed ; or an Essay endeavouring to prove the 

 advantages and improvements the Kingdom may re- 

 ceive, and the inconveniences and impediments it may 

 avoid and remedy by the means of a well ordered and 

 duly rectified Charter for incorporating and regulating 

 the Professorof the Art of Gardening; humbly offered 

 and presented by the Master and Company of the 

 same. London, fol. No author's name, or date, but 

 published about this year. 



1763. The Botanist's and Gardener's new Dictionary ; con- 

 taining the Names, Classes, Orders, Generic Cha- 

 racters, and Specific distinctions of the several Plants 

 cultivated in England, according to the System of 

 Linnaeus. To which is prefixed an Introduction to 

 the Linnaean System of Botany. London. 8vo. By 

 JAMES WHEELER, nurseryman at Gloucester. 



———An Essay on the Theory of Agriculture, intended as 

 an introduction to a Rational System of the Art — 

 Anon. 12mo. 



1764. The Dutch Florist, or a true method of managing all 



sorts of Flowers with bulbous roots. Translated from 



the Dutch of Van Campen. 4to. 



2 F 



