8 GENERAL INDEX OF SUBJECTS. 
Books—continued. 
Power, Flora of Cork, ii. 124. 
Presl, Hymenophyllacee, eine Bota- 
nische Abhandlung, i. 1044, 1100, 
1115. 
Rainey, Ascent and Descent of the 
Sap, ui. 1027. 
Robert, Natural History of Trufiles, 
ii. 825. 
Rusticus of Godalming, Letters on 
Natural History, iti. 517. 
Schleiden and Henfrey, The Plant, 
etc., ii. 227. 
Schouw, Earth, Plants, and Man, iv. 
833. 
Seemann, Berthold, Popular Nomen- 
clature of the American Flora, iv. 
353, 589, 680. 

—— Botany of the 
Voyage of the Herald, v. 201-3. 
Selby, History of British Forest-trees, 
i. 44, '72, 228. 
Smee, The Potato-Plant; its uses, 
etc., i. 72. 
Sowerby, Supplement to English Bo- 
tany, 1.27; u. 76. 
-—C. E., Illustrated Catalogue 
of British Plants, i. 110. 
Spratt, Lieut., Travels in Lycia, ii. 731. 

Steele, Handbook of Field Botany, 1. 
987. 
Suminski, Count, Reproduction of 
Ferns, iii. 613. 
Tenby, Plants of, iii. 183. 
Tschudi, Guano, ii. 819. 
Tyerman, On the Potato, ii. 826. 
Ward, On the Growth of Plants in 
Glazed Cases, i. 221; iv. 795. 
Watson, Geographical Distribution 
of British Plants, i. 635. 
Cybele Brit., ii.'782 ; iii. 670; 
iv. 642. 
Waterton, Essays on Natural His- 
tory, i. 1070. 
Webb, the Rev. R. H., Flora Hert- 
fordiensis, ii. 184, 461. 
Westwood, Potato Disease, ii. 889. 
Woods, Jos., Carices of Middle Eu- 
rope, ii. 768. 
— Tourist’s Flora, iii. 1042. 
Borago officinalis, with white flowers, 
ii. 651-2. 
Botanical notes, i. 42; value of, 45. 
Botany and Meteorology, relation of, v. 
134. 



cursory thoughts on, ii. 263. 
elements of, by Dr. Lindley, ii. 

866. 
London Journal of, notice of, 
ii. 23, 78, 120, 185, 221, 256. 

Botany, lecture on, by Mr. Lees, v. 139. 
of the Chesil Bank, Portland, vy. 
217 

of Falkland Islands, ii. 606-8. 
of Madeira, i. 350. 
of Texas, observations on, Iv. 



200. 
——— of the neighbourhood of Ross, 
li. 649. 
of Wiltshire. 
on Linnean and natural sys- 
tems of, iv. 211, 309, 365. 
relation of meteorology to, v. 
134-5. 
Reports and Papers on, by the 
Ray Society, ii. 945. 
structural, 1. 229, 281. 
structural and physiological, by 
Henfrey, ii. 804. 
the science of discrimimation, 
i. 912. 
Botrychium Lunaria, ii. 183, 222, - 
300. 







contribution towards a his- 
tory of a British, v. 129. 
rutaceum, v. 175-6. 
Botrydium granulosum, i. 1019. 
Bowman, J. H., death of, i. 166. 
Brakes, economical use of, i. 263. 
Brambles, iii. 53. 
——— (fruticose), experimentally 
proved to be permanent, iii. 53. 
Bromus arvensis, ii. 707. 
commutatus, i. 264, 1062; i. 




6. 
(Serrafaleus) patulus, iv. 721, 
oO. 

tectorum, iii. 1116. 
Bryum androgynum, 1. 616; v. 22. 
— pyriforme, i. 398, 425, 429. 
roseum, ii. 53. 
— Tozeri, i. 200, 521. 
Buds, leaf, from roots, i. 776. 
succession of in axil, plurality of, 
i. 776, 813. 
Bupleurum tenuissimum, i. 203, 204. 
Byssoid substance found about the roots 
of Monotropa Hypopitys, i. 41. _ 
Byssus barbata, 1. 428, 461. 




Calla sethiopica, i. 218, 612. 
Calamintha, new British, i. ‘768. 
———— officinalis and C. Nepeta, on 
the specific distinctness of, 1. 51, note. 
—- sylvatica, description of, ii. 

49. 

—— remarks on, ii. 171. 
Callitriche verna, structure of cells of, 
iv. 32. 
Campanulas, i. 935. 
