with a List of the Plants introduced by him. 



609 



ScrophulariAcete. Pentstdmon attenuatus £ A 

 deustus )^ A 

 gracilis )£ A 

 itaticifblius £ A 

 digitaliflbrns £ A 

 Scouleri £ A 

 Chelfene centranthifblia £ A 



nemorbsa ^ A 

 ilflmulus mosehatus f A 

 cardinalis ^ A 

 guttatus i£ A 

 j'bseus ^ A 

 floribundus 

 Castilleia coccinea O 

 CoUinsia grandiflbra O 

 parvifl6ra O 

 bicolor O 

 Labiaceic. //yssftpus (Lophanthus Benth.) urtici. 

 fblius ^ A 

 Salvia sp. (Audibert/rt incSna 

 Benth.) n. 

 PrimvlAcets. Dougiasw nivJilis Lindl. ?£ A 

 yerbenacea:. Verbena bracteosa ^ A 

 Nt/ctaginacecc. Abrcjiiia (Tricratus Uerit.) mel- 



Wfera^ A 

 Volygon&cecE. Eiiogonum compositura Z. j^ A 



nCldum ^ A 

 Gnj-ri/acese. G&rrya elliptica « 

 Cuniffi\c, or Vinacea?. Pinus Lamberfj^Jna J 

 DouRlas// 5 

 ponderdsa J 

 nobilis J 

 amabilis 9 

 grandis ^ 

 Menziesw ^ 

 montlcola and insig- 

 nis J 

 with red cones J 



monocotyledo'ne.e. 

 Iriddtccce. VrU tfinax ^ A 



Sisynnchiura jjrandifl6rum ?^ A 

 'Hemerocallidd.cece. Brodise^a coiigesta 5 



grandifldra tf 

 Asphoiiildcece. 5cllla (CaOTdxiza esculenta 

 Lindl ) ?J 

 Hesperoscordum lacteum tf 

 Tritclefa laxa 5 

 Callipr6ra flkva 5 

 lAlid.cete. Calochortus Barnird? 3 

 elegans 5 

 &lbus 5 

 splendens tf 

 veniistus 5 

 luteus tf 

 pulchellus tf 

 pusillus ?J 

 niacrocarpus tf 

 iilium pudicum ?f 

 Erythrbiiium grandiflbrura tf 

 Melanthacea:. Helbnias tenax £ A 



Corn&cece. Curnus alba ffi 

 CaprifolihcecE. Symphbria racembsa Si 



Caprifbllum Douglasii ?_J 

 cilibsum ^_2 

 hispidulum J_ 

 Valeriana.ceEe. Valerianella (Plectritis) coii- 

 gesta ? O 

 Compisitte. £rigeron sp. (Stenactis speciosa 

 Lindl) ^ A ^ 

 Diplopappus incanus Lindl. 'Q_ _AJ 

 Md.dia elegans O 

 Eriophyllum cfEspitbsuin lU. a 

 Heliantlius lenticularis O 

 Gaillardto aristkta ^ A 

 Calliopsis Atkinsoniujin! £ A 

 Tanacetum boreale 

 l)bn»a villbsa ?£ ? A 

 Lasthenia californica O 

 glabrkta O 

 ioif/iaceas. Clintbn/a t'legans O 



pulchella 

 ^ric&cecE. .4'rbutus procera J 

 tomentbsa «» 

 Gaulthdr;'a Sliallon * 

 ^'accinium ovatum 

 FuUmonidceie. Phlox specibsa " «. " 



Leptosiphon densiflbriis O 



androsiiceus O 

 Gilia capitata and c. alba O 

 tricolor O 

 fich illci^/'d/M O 

 pungens O 

 splendens O 

 pharnaceoirfcs O 

 Ipomopsis elegans Q) 

 CoUbmia grandiflbra O 

 linearis O 

 pinnatifida O 

 dellidifblia 

 gracilis 

 Hudrophvlliicece. Benthami^z /ycopsoides Doug. 

 MS. (Phacfilia riidis 

 Lindl.) 

 Phacelia haslata 



tanacetifblia O 

 Eiltoca multiflbra Q) 

 viscida 

 divarickta O 

 Nemophila insignis O 

 aurlta O 

 Siilanllce(S. Nicot?«na multivalvis Q 

 Scropkulariucece. Pentstemon acuminJltus j£ A 

 specibsus if A 

 venustus £ A 

 glandulbsus j^ A 

 Kichardsbn« £ A 

 triphJUus £ A 

 ovtitus £ A 

 diflfiisus £ A 

 pruinbsus )£ A 

 conftrtus j£ A 



Several additions will require to be made to the above list; because a 

 number of plants which have been raised from seeds sent home by Douglas, 

 have not yet flowered. Sir W. J. Hooker, who is publishing an interesting 

 Memoir of Douglas, with extracts from his Journals, in the Comj^. to the Bot. 

 Mag., to the proprietor of which we are indebted for permission to copy the 

 portrait at the head of this article, states to us that the dried collections of 

 plants sent home by Douglas probably contain 800 Californian species alone, 

 of which most likely many are new, but of which Douglas could neither send 

 home roots nor seeds. The total number of species enumerated above are, — 

 ligneous plants, 53; herbaceous plants, 145; in all, 198: a greater number of 

 hardy species than were ever before introduced into Britain by one collector. 

 When, as we have already stated, it is considered that all these plants, with 

 only one or two exceptions, are quite hardy, and that they actually, at the 

 present moment, form the principal ornaments to British gardens, from the 

 cottage to the palace, the name of Douglas ought to be continually present to 

 our minds; and we ought never to forget how much we are indebted to him, 

 and to those who were his patrons and employers. 



