= SSR SE 
Re eee te Soe atte nde Mme SRM ead op nk ee a ee ete ue See RET et oS CU—“i«*S 
= agin, et ee Pad? a, SON ica hah aed ROMA 9 ‘ig 
FRANCIS BAUER’S ‘DELINEATIONS OF EXOTIC PLANTS.” 181 
; ts Prants.—On June 17th, 1898, I found the following 
near Fleet Pond :—Rubus Koehleri W. & cognatus (N. E 
ro By the road on the N. side.—Orchis incarnata L. A form 
rosy-flowered plant being much scarcer.—FKriophorum angustifolium 
Roth, var. longifolium Hoppe. Plentiful about a mile to the S.W. 
—Carex Hornschuchiana x Oederi. ' Near the 8. shore, sparingly ; 
I am not sure whether type-Oederi or var. oedocarpa Anderss. (flava, 
minor of Townsend) was the second parent, as both grew at the spot. 
—Epwarp 8. Marsnauu. 
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTES. 
XVIII.—Franois Baver’s ‘ Devingations or Exoricx Puanrts.’ 
Tus is not a very important work from a botanical point of 
view, but as we have in the Department of Botany a copy containing 
its history, it may be worth while to place this on record. The 
in question belonged to Sir Everard Home, and was purchased for 
the Department in 1886. 
he title-page of the book, which was issued with the first 
and ‘‘ Ericacee ” , but the latter indication does not seem to 
have suggested to Pritzel the identity of the book with his no. 498, 
“ Triginta tabule Ericarum ineditw, a Mackenzie sculpt. Londini 
1790-1800. folio. Bibl. Regia Berol.” The two are of course 
identical. 
These plates represent three numbers (of ten each) of what was 
evidently intended from the preface to have been a much more 
extensive work. e following account of its production is given 
by Sir Everard Home on the blank page before title :— 
‘Of the first number there were 90 copies & 10 were spoil’d in 
colouring & hot press’g.. Of the second there were 80 and all were 
ng Fo Of the third there were only 50, and four of the plates 
are lost. 
