CORRECTIONS AND ADDITIONS. 269 



Page I- 



" Cal. superior, 5-cleftj segments ovate, blunt, very 

 woolly at the margin, incurved. Pet. 5, orbicular. 

 Filam. 16, flat and somewhat awl-shaped. Germen 

 roundish ; externally smooth and shining ; woolly 

 within. Styles 3, sometimes 4, thread-shaped. Fruit 

 pear-shaped, crowned with the closed calyx. Cells, 

 or capsules, of the same number as the styles, bony, 

 entire, not valvular, each bearing one style from the 

 lower part of its inner angle." 

 The fruit, at first red, is said finally to turn black. Its 

 pulp is mealy and tasteless. Linnaeus recommends this 

 shrub for making low hedges, in dry broken ground, as 

 the root runs very deeply into the earth. 



384. 1. 7 from the bottom — for subglobosa read Sherardi. 



404. 1. 4, add — Abundant in the beautiful woods of Blaize 

 Castle, near Bristol. 



415. 1. 7, aM—Fuchs. Ic. 494./ 



Vol. III. 



2. 1. 11, read — ^^ Pet. 5, or more," 



3. 1. 2 from the bottom, add — In a wood at Whitly 



Hall, near H udder sfield, Yorkshire. Mr. Roberts 

 Leyland, 

 10. 1.7 from the bottom, read — P. Rhceas. 



16. 1. 22, read — Nymphsea lutea /3, pumila. 



1 7. before 1. 6 from the bottom, insert — 



Lime Tree. Htint. Evel. Sylv.f. 



25. 1. 32, add — Found, in 1826, on the borders of a 

 wood, on Addington liill, near Croydon, by Mr. 

 W. Christy, jun. Some doubts still exist as to the " 

 permanency of this species. 



27. last line, add — 



On rocks near the sea, at Torquay. Dean of Bristol. 

 1825. 



29. 1. 11, read— "P<?^. 5, or more," 



30. I. 12, after 1839, add— i^/. Grcec. t. 504^. 



31. 1. 3 from the bottom, erase the words "a doubtful 



native." 



32. 1. 2, add— In watery ground, on both sides of a 



