ied 
o A a 
NATURAL ARRANGEMENT 
OF | 
BRITISH PLANTS, 
‘ACCORDING TO THEIR RELATIONS TO EACH OTHER, 
AS POINTED OUT BY 
JUSSIEU, DE CANDOLLE, BROWN, X&c. 
INCLUDING 
THOSE CULTIVATED FOR USE; 
WITH 
AN INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY, 
IN WHICH THE TERMS NEWLY INTRODUCED ARE EXPLAINED, 
ILLUSTRATED BY FIGURES. 
BY 
SAMUEL FREDERICK GRAY, 
Lecturer on Botany, the Materia Medica, and Pharmaceutic Chemistry. 
VOL. I. 
LONDON: 
PRINTED FOR BALDWIN, CRADOCK, AND JOY, 
PATERNOSTER-ROW,. 
a) 
AF 
at 
