982 ENGLISH LOCAL BOTANY. 
which may some day develop into as complete and exhaustive 
a work as Colmeiro’s admirable La Botanica y los Botdanicos de la 
Peninsula Hispano-Lusitana. No other nation, I believe, possesses 
such a work as the latter, and no second nation, so far as I am 
aware, just such a work as the former. W, Borrinc Hemsuey. 
Eneutsh Locat Borany. 
Jord, Godalming, Farnham, and Haslemere. By 8. 'T. Dunn, 
-A. London: West, Newman & Co. 1893. 8vo, pp. vi, 
106. Price 3s. net. 
Memories of Malling and its Valley: with a Fauna and Flora of Kent. 
By Rev. Frevpinc, M.A. West Malling, Kent: Oliver. 
8vo, pp. vi, 291. Price 7s. 6d. 
On the Flora of Gloucestershire. By J. H. Burxirt, B.A. 8vo, 
pp. 10. 
Flora of South-west Surrey: including Leatherhead, Dorking, Guild- 
r 
HE modest claims and neat appearance of Mr. Dunn’s little 
book prepossess the reviewer favourably, and an examination of the 
work confirms the first impression. It is “‘a portable field-guide, 
t 
east by the Leatherhead, Dorking, and Horsham road; and on the 
north by the northern slopes of the chalk range. The actual limit 
Hampshire boundary.” 
The author has been fortunate in securing the help of the Rev. 
E. 8. Marshall ; there are evidences, however, of painstaking and 
i ds whi 
apparently wild in Albury Park”; Martyn’s locality for Anemone 
apennina (** Woods about Shiere and Guildford ”) is quoted. 
e abbreviations are trying—e.g., ““D.” for De Crespigny’s 
New Lendon Flora, and “J.B.” for this Journal—but Mr. Dunn 
has been anxious to economise space; this he could have done 
