British Botany. 



345 



Chile 1829. O s.l Bot. reg. 1396 



M. Video 1829. O s.l Bot. cab. 1677 



India 1828. C l.p Bot. reg. 1395 



Rio Jan. 1827. C Lp Bot. reg. 1397 



1415. LEDOCA'RPUM Vesf. [Karpos, fruit, ledos, a ragged garment.) 

 pedunculare imrf/. long-stalked a. | [or 1 au Y Chile 



Oxalldeis affme. 1. — 2. 

 1825. C 8.1 Bot. reg. 1392 



2193. LOA^SA. 



hispida L. hispid Jk lOJ or 2 jl.au 



L. ambrosiKfulia J. and Lindl. in Bot. reg. 1390 



2004. MA'LVA. 



campanuloides Lo.C. Campanula-lk.* _Ai cu J o 



Lima 1830. S s.l Bot. mag. 3057 



Bh N. Amer. 1825. S l.p Bot cab. 1670 



933. A^ARCI'SSUS. 

 7555a C>^pri Hutu. 



Cyprian 



tf A or 1 mr.ap W.y Cyprus 



2910. NOTHOCHLjE'NA. 



t^nera Gilf. tender-textured^ 23 or 



1985. iUFPNUS. 



Cruiksh&nksiV Hook. Cruikshank's • 



Br Mendoza 



O CO Sw. fl.gar.n.s.92 



D s.p Bot, mag. 3055 



I spl 5 jl.au Va ,Peru 1829. S s.l Bot. mag. 3056 



O or ]i jn.n P.c hybrid 1830. S co Bot. reg. 1405 

 1670. PERILC'IVIIA. H. SfK. (Per!\ around, loma, margin ; fruits with amembranous border.) Labidtce. 



1183. ffiNOTHE'RA. 

 10015a blfrons Lindl. 



ocymoldes Kth. Basil-like 



1447. PORTULA-CA. 



Gillifes^ Hook. GiUies's 



1829. C s.l Bot. reg. 1394 



«-iA)or I jn.jl R.P Mendoza 1827. S s.l Bot. mag. 3064 



2926. PTE^RIS. 

 25512a peruviana Otto 



1339. iJHODODE NDRON. 

 il025a Russelka«2<»j Swti Russell's 



2262. VERNO'N/^. 

 20477a acutifblia Hook. 



Jf E] or 1 o 



Br Peru 



or 4 mr Ro.R hybrid 



; I I or 4 d 



Pa.P S. Amer. 



1830. D s.p Bot. cab. 1665 



L s.p Sw. fl. gar.n.s.91 



C l.p Bot. mag. 3062 



British Botany. The Botany of Great Britain ; including all the Plants 

 growing wild, or such as have become apparently wild, in England, 

 Wales, Scotland, Ireland, and the British European Islands. Published 

 in Monthly Numbers, at 2s. 6c/. each ; and each Number to contain Eight 

 faithful Representations of different Species, taken from the living 

 Plants, truly and beautifully coloured from Nature, with Dissections of 

 the most essential Parts of Fructification, where required. By H. Wed- 

 dell. Botanical Engraver. 



The descriptions, and all other useful or interesting information, will be 

 given by R. Sweet, F.L.S., author of numerous botanical and horticultural 

 publications. 



We shall, if possible, notice the first Number of this work in our next. 



Talboys, D. A., a Bookseller and Stationer in Oxford : The Pursuit of 

 Literature and Science compatible with Habits of Business. A Prize 

 Essay, read before the Oxford Mechanics' Institution. Dec. 1830. 

 There is much in this pamphlet that we should wish to quote, and we 

 could say a great deal in favour of the idea that every mechanic or labour- 

 ing man might, if his natural capacity admitted, acquire as much knowledge 

 as this talented author, and yet pursue his daily labours at the loom, the 

 anvil, the bench, the spade, or the plough. All that is necessary is begin- 

 ning in time, with proper infant schools. It is as natural to love know- 

 ledge as it is to love light ; and it is knowledge, and knowledge alone, 

 to which we must look for the emancipation of man from all the evils 

 with which he is now affected. 



