I 
go C H A P T E R 33, 
plicity In the management, which it would 
have been happy for fociety, had it been 
tmiverfally adopted by fucceeding prafti- 
tioners 
■* The name of Sloane was given by Plumier to an . 
arborefcent plant of the Polyandrous clafs, firft defcribed hy 
Marcgraave. It is fo nearly allied to the Chefnut 
tree, that Miller, in his Didionary, refers it to that ge^ 
nus. LiNN^us, however, on the credit of Loefling, 
preferves Plumier's appellation, Sloanea-, and has added 
SRother fpecies from Catesby's CarcUnq Vl^nts, 
CHAP. 
