lions, but my expectations of this place, were 

 still disappointed ; A very rapid run which makes 

 beautifull little cascades, & nearly rises at the 

 top of this mountain was the place, were I ex- 

 pected to see something new ; but after all pains 

 <& trouble, I found it to be the old story again. 

 I made the following list of all the plants in their 

 order as I observed them. The Geranium Ro- 

 bertianum is the only plant I think not common, it 

 grows in great plenty on wet rocks & makes a 

 very handsome appearance. The banks of the 

 river are covered with Hemlock, Black Birch, 

 Beach, Chestnut, Hickory, Walnut, Carpinus, 

 Oaks, &c, in great variety & the sides of the hill 

 with the same kind of timber in proportion to 

 their more or less fertile soil. I found in full 

 flower Potentilla reptans, Rubus trivialis, Gera- 

 nium maculatum— Fragaria virgin. Yiola pal- 

 mata, Erigeron bellidifol. Cerastium vulgatum, 

 Arabis lyrata, Sanicula marylandica (b.) Mcn- 

 ispermum canadense, (b.) Ranunculus abortivus, 

 Houstonia coerulea, Spergulastrum lanuginosum? 

 Mx.; Rubus odoratus (b.) Aquilegia canad. Ileu- 

 chcra americ, (b :) Oxalis stricta, Myosotis 

 virgin ? — Veronica agrestis, Oxalis violacea, 

 corniculata, Hieracium venosum (;bf) Rumex 

 acetosclla, Crataegus coccinca, Leontodon Tar- 

 axacum, Anemone thalictriodes, Aralia nudicaul. 

 A.racemosa,Smyrnium integerr. Panax quinquc- 

 folia (b.), Medeola Virgin, three of the stamina, 

 which are placed alternate with the inside petals 

 are longer than the three which are opposite 

 them. The three side stigma is sessile. — ■ 

 Poa trivialis, viridis, compressa, Elymus cana- 



