| 
pilation ap Prof. Babington and Messrs. Baker, Boulger, 
161 
WILLIAM WILLIAMSON NEWBOULD. 
i ny of these we widely missed or more generally 
ere by British botanists than he who was laid to rest in Fulham 
or reed on the 20th of last April, in the presence of a few of his 
he er workers—Messrs. Baker, Boulger, Glasspoole, B.D. Jackson, 
i oa and myself. ‘+ We could have better spared a better man” 
8 the ae with which many will have heard of the death of 
=P 
. 
the belij elf; and it is in 
e belief that those whom he has helped will be glad to have a full 
S are consecrated. have received much help in its com- 
an 
Townsend. 
oe Bohler. He then went to Cambridge, where he entered at 
inity College, and attended with great interest the lectures of Prof. 
enslow. He was introduced by Henslow to Mr. C. C. Babington, 
life, was always ready to afford, and which none could 
j years, indeed, he worked more 
hi a 
With books and less with plants; but his willingness to be of 
he same. i 
‘ his residence at Cambridge he manifested his interest 
in botany in other ways. He was one of the early Fellows of the 
‘Journan or Botany.—Vou. 24. [June, 1886.] M 
