ADDENDA ET CORRIGENDA. 
609 
Part III. 
Page line 
261 13 from bottom. Obs. A ? should be put to this syn. of 
Lindley ; for the leaves are figured pointed as in P.pomi - 
ferum L. and the fr. as not only depresso-globose but le- 
mon-y. instead of buff or golden-y. 
271 5, “ Schujia ” dele. 
275 8 from bottom, after “ erect ” insert : or ascending. 
284 16, for “ odour of musk ” read : rank musky odour. 
295 19, add to syn. : Bot. Reg. vi. t. 488. 
296 13, Obs. The more natural place of ParonychiacYe, re- 
stricted to its proper limits (i. e. excluding the Tribe 
Polycarpece which belongs to Caryophyllacece ), is un- 
doubtedly in MONOCHLAMYDEiE near Amaran- 
THACE.ZE. See Benth. and Hook. Gen. PI. i. 144. 
297 13, Obs. Belongs to Caryophyllace^:. 
300 2, “ de ” dele. 
— 7, add : And, again, the mistake of marking formerly these 
spec. “ I. cymosum ” probably arose from the misquo- 
tation by Linn, for that pi. of Bocc. Sic. 41, t. 20. f. 3, 
which really belongs to P. echinata Lam. See Desf. 
i. 204. 
301 4, for “ ovate ” read : lanceolate. 
— 6, EB. t. 351. Obs. Mr. Newbould has pointed out to me 
that Smith, in a pencil correction on the original draw- 
ing by Sowerby for this plate, remarks that the sep. 
are figured too broad and blunt. 
— 24, after “ lanceolate ” add : or linear-lanceolate. 
— 25, after “acute” add: or attenuate. 
— after line 29 add : 
2. S. perennis L. 
FI. fascicled in crowded or congested leafy tufted cymes at the 
top of the st., not axillary or loose and spreading in fr. ; sep. ovate 
with a distinct membranous w. border, subobtuse in fr. and always 
erecto-connivent. — Linn. Sp. 580 ; Till. Dauph. iii. 649 ; Lam. Diet, 
ii. 763, 111. t. 374; FI. Dan. t. 563 ; Pers. i. 491 ; EB. t. 352 ; Sm. 
E. FI. ii. 283 ; Spr. ii. 382 ; DC. iii. 378 ; Koch 281 ; Coss. et Germ. i. 
156 ; Gren. et Godr. i. 614 ; Bab. 125. Knaivel incanum &c. Raii Syn. 
160, t. 5. f. 1. Alclumilla &c. majori flore Vaill. Par. 4, t. 1. f. 5. — 
Herb. ann. Mad. reg. 3, 4, r. “ On Pico do Areeiro, P. da Silva and P. 
Grande ; on the latter near the summit, but not on the highest top, 
plentiful and luxuriant, but generally an inconspicuous mountain- 
turf pi.” Capt. Norman R.N., June 1866. — Root in Mad., and 1 
suspect elsewhere, properly ann. or only abnormally per. (see Hook. 
FI. Scot. i. 133 and Coss. et Germ. 1. c.), simple llbro-filiform or 
capillary, very fine and slender, long and tortuous. From its 
crown spring several (6 in each of my two spec.) slender leafy erect 
or ascending short jointed st., forming a small close tuft about an 
2 h 2 
