THE LIST OF BRITISH PLANTS, containing 

 the Spermophytes, Pteridophytes, and Charads 

 found either as Natives or growing in a wild state 

 in Britain, Ireland, and the Channel Isles. Pp. xv, 

 104. 2s. 6d. ; interleaved, 3s. 6d. Clarendon Press, 

 1908. 



This work contains a list of nearly three thousand species. 

 The native species are printed in Roman type, and have their 

 distribution through the British Isles shown. The denizens 

 are starred, the aliens which are established are in italics and 

 starred, while the alien casuals are in italics. The native 

 countries of these are given. The important synonyms are also 

 included. Extinct species are in brackets. 



' In the compilation of this work, which is the outcome of over thirty 

 years' field work in every British county, the author has . . . rendered a 

 service of immense value to botanists, and indeed to all who are interested 

 in British plants. ' — Gardener s Magazine. 



'The present little work may be regarded as the extension— a very great 

 extension — of the London Catalogue.' — Gardener's Chronicle. 



'. . . L'oeuvre d'incontestable utilite que M. Claridge Druce vient de 

 mener a chef avec distinction et au sujet de laquelle il convient de le feliciter 

 pour la maniere concise et pratique adoptee dans sa publication : 734 genres 

 en 2,958 especes, plus un nombre tout aussi considerable de varietes, 

 d'hybrides ou de plantes naturalisees y sont enumeres sur deux colonnes, 

 avec l'indication eventuelle de leur distribution lorsque celle-ci ne se rapporte 

 pas a des especes ubiquistes. . . . elegant petit volume destine a rendre 

 les plus grands services a tous ceux qu'interessent les questions si actuelles de 

 physostatique. ' — G. Beauverd in Bulletin de VHerb. Boissier. 



* It is the last word to date of painstaking science.' — County Notes and 

 Queries. 



'For scientific purposes the work accomplished by Mr. Druce is excellent.' — 

 Gardening World. 



' Surely one of the most useful from the whole English floristic literature.' — 

 Karl Domin, Prof, of Botany at Prague. 



'The masterly Oxford List of British Plants. The more students . . . 

 grow familiar with it, the better they will appreciate its sterling value.'— 



Naturalist. 



' Druce's List, with its addition of sub-species and varieties, is indispens- 

 able.' — Prof. Oscar Drude, Dresden, author of Vegetation der Erde. 



GUIDE TO THE FIELDING HERBARIUM. 

 Oxford : Clarendon Press. Pp. 20. Price 6d. 



THE DILLENIAN HERBARIA: an account of 

 the Dillenian Collection in the Herbaria of the 

 University of Oxford, by G. Claridge Druce and 

 S. H. Vines, F.R.S., Sherardian Professor. Claren- 

 don Press. Pp. cxii, 258. 1897. 126'. 6d. 



' A scholarly volume.' — Daily Mail. 



' The volume as a whole forms a noteworthy contribution to the literature 

 of botanical science. 1 — Scotsman. 



' The Correspondence is quite pleasing reading. The book has an excellent 

 index, and it contains a . . . portrait of Dillenius.'— The Field. 



