50 
Ee HORE AES 3 
i 
Page. 
17. Agrimonia odorata. 1 have now seen this plant in Mr. 
Woods’s Devonshire station ; and also at Balcombe, Sussex, 
where it was first observed by the Rev. W. H. Hawker. 
276. Asplenium viride. In the deep cracks of an old brick wall at 
Mickleham, Surrey, where I was shown upwards of twenty 
plants, by a gardener of that neighbourhood, who discovered 
it a few months ago, and had taken away several roots. The 
occurrence of the one root at Danny (Hurst Pierpoint), Sus- 
sex, is not very adequately accounted for by the recorded 
fact, that Ray spent some months there in 1667—8. (See 
Phytol. iv. 842, 915, 947). Ceterach officinarum grows in 
several places in that part of Sussex. The statement that 
Polypodium Dryopteris has been found in the neighbourhood 
is, I fear, a mistake. 
504. Euphorbia stricta, Koch. Woolmer Forest, Hants, on recently 
reclaimed corn-land, Rev. W. H. Hawker, who has shown 
me specimens. 
Notices or New Books. 
‘ Species Filicum ; being Descriptions of all known Ferns. Ilus- 
trated with Plates. By Str Witiiam Jackson Hooker, K.H., 
LL.D., F.R.A. & L.S., &e., &c., &c., Vice-President of the Lin- 
nean Society of London, and Director of the Royal Botanic 
Garden of Kew.’ Part VI., or Vol. I]. Part 2. London: Wil- 
liam Pamplin, 45, Frith Street, Soho Square. 8vo. 64 pp. 
Letterpress ; 20 Plates. Price 10s. 
Having already expressed our opinion very fully on the delay in 
publishing this work, we abstain from any remarks on that head, and 
simply give the contents of the part before us; premising that the 
previous part concluded with Hypolepis tenuifolia, the first species of 
the genus. 
Suborder IV. PrerIpEz. 
Genus III. (1V.?). Hypoueris, Bernh. 
Sp. Guianensis, K/.; dicksonioides (Cheilanthes dicksonioides, 
Keze.); amaurorachis (Ch. id., Kze.); setigera (Ch. id., Blume) ; 
