576 
OBITUARY NOTICES. 
Botanical Notes, 1884 (fromE. E. Linton, A. Bennett and others.) Notes. 
Vol. iv. p. 142. 
Botanical Notes, 1885. Notes. Vol. iv. p. 255. 
Notes on Plants Collected by Captain Markham, R.N., in 
Hudson’s Bay, etc., in July and August, 1886. 25th January, 1887. 
Vol. iv. p. 354. 
Botanical Notes, 1887. Vol. iv. p. 511. 
Notes on Galpin’s Flora of Harleston. 29th May, 1888. Vol. iv. 
p. 578. 
Spirea tomentosa and Sambucus racemosa. Note. Vol. iv. p. 689. 
Fauna and Flora : Flowering Plants and Ferns. Supplemental to 
previous lists. 26t/h March, 1889. Vol. iv. p. 711. 
Botanical Notes, 1889. Vol. v. p. 108. 
Botanical Notes, 1890, ’91, ’92. Vol. v. p. 328. 
Notes on Filaria sanguinis hominis (nocturna). 30th May, 1893. 
Vol. v. p. 547. 
Fauna and Flora : Flowering Plants and Ferns (5th List). 
Additions to previous list. 27th March, 1894. Vol. v. p. 652. 
Notes on a small collection of Spitsbergen Plants. By Colonel 
II. W. Feildeu and H. I). Geldart. 27th November, 1894. Vol. vi. p. 47. 
President’s Address. (Distribution of Arctic Flora.) 30th March, 
1896. Vol. vi. p. 119. 
Contributions to Flora of Russian Lapland. By Colonel H. W. 
Feilden and H. D. Geldart. 24th February, 1896. Vol. vi. p. 161. 
Contributions to Flora of Kolguev. By Colonel H. W. Feilden 
and H. D. Geldart. 24th Februarj'', 1896. Vol. vi. p. 168. 
The Mistletoe : Its Hosts and Distribution in Great Britain. 
31st January, 1899. Vol. vi. p. 453. 
The death of the Earl of Kimberley was a national loss, and 
his biography belongs to his country, but it is fitting that we as 
a Norfolk Society should bear our testimony to his worth, and 
acknowledge the assistance we derived from his long connection 
with our Society. 
The name of Lord Kimberley appeared at the head of our first 
printed list of Vice-Presidents; in the year 1875 we published in 
our Transactions a list from his pen of birds observed on the 
Kimberley estate since 1847, nearly all the species, which 
amounted to 139, having been seen by Lord Kimberley himself, 
who was a most observant naturalist as well as a keen sjiortsman 
and a good shot; a second list, published in 1888, brought the 
number to 147. 
Sir M. E. Grant Duff has given in the ‘ Spectator ’ some reminis- 
cences of Lord Kimberley, and a remark there quoted, shows him 
to have been much in sympathy with one of the objects of our 
Society— the protection where needed of our avifauna — “ Almost 
