Notes of a Tour in Switzerland. 



5237 



species have, of necessity, been wholly passed by in silence, belong- 

 ing respectively to such genera, among others, as the following, viz. :— 



Achillea 



Cyclamen 



Potentilla 



Aconitum 



Dianthus 



Prenanthes 



Alchemilla 



Digitalis 



Primula 



Allium 



Draba 



Prunella 



Anthericum 



Dryas 



Pyrola 



Apargia 



Erica 



Rumex 



Arabis 



Erigeron 



Salvia 



Arbutus 



Erinus 



Salix 



arenaria 



Euphrasia 



Sedum 



Artemisia 



Genista 



Sempervivum 



Aselepias 



Geranium 



Senecio 



Aster 



Geum 



Silene 



Astragalus 



Globularia 



Spiraea 



Azalea 



Gnaphalium 



Tamarix 



Bupleurum 



Helleborus 



Thalictrum 



Buphthalmum 



Hieracium 



Thesium 



Cacalia 



Hutchinsia 



Thlaspi 



Campanula 



Lactuca 



Trifolium 



Carduus 



Luzula 



Veratrum 



Carex 



Mcehringia 



Verbascum 



Centaurea 



Myosotis 



Veronica 



Cerastium 



Phyteuma 



Vicia 



Convallaria 



Pinguicula 





But to speak of all these would far exceed my limits, and I must for- 

 bear. The bare mention, however, of the above names serves to re- 

 cal many a lovely scene and pleasurable excursion : pictures, as it 

 were, and images of beauty are called up, and vividly impressed upon 

 the mind, never to be erased. To a naturalist, a lover of the 

 picturesque or of sublime mountain scenery, Switzerland is indeed a 

 delightful country. For my own part, I may say that I turned away 

 from it with feelings of reluctance and regret, and have been 



" ever since a fresh admirer 

 Of what I saw there." 



King Henry VIII. 



W. T. Bree. 



