130 THE LIFE AND WORK OF GEORGE DON. 
H. globosum, Sackh. 
“T call this H. hyperboreum. 1 found this upon Loch-na-gar 
. it never has more than one flower on the stem, not 
ever when cultivated.” G. Don, in Herb. Brit. Mus, The 
earliest specimen, 
H. Dewari, Boswell. 
This is the plant which Don ane by Loch Rannoch and 
which Smith in Eng. Bot, t. 2122 (18i0), describes as 
denticulatum, and he says Don gatherdd itin 1794 and claims 
its first discove ery. It has been confused with H. strictum, 
Fries, but the espeace labelled denticulatum by Don in Miss 
Herb. Brit. Mus. “altisogh a polana ao cimen 
of lingulatum from the Clova mountains is tahelied: by acy 
Aylesford, H. Lawsont. 
H. sparsifolium, Linded. 
This is Don’s A. sylvaticum “from fir woods near Forfar” 
in Herb. Palmer and the earliest Scottish specimen known. 
H. prenanthoides, 7//. 
Don first found it in Forfarshire, but see Smith, Fl. Brit., 
P- 835 (1800). 
H. crocatum, /7es. 
Specimen collected by Don probably in 1812 from the river 
bed near Mar Lodge; and the earliest British specimen 
H. aurantiacum, Z. 
Woods in Banffshire. See Don’s Herb. Brit., No. 41 (1804), 
figured in Eng. Bot., t. 1469 (1805). First as British, but not 
native 
Campanula persicifolia, /. 
From Cullen, found in 1802, but not native. Don, Herb. 
Brit., No, 180 (1806 i 
