[ 86o ] 
I got a young man to take it in two different por- 
tions, and have fent the drawings with the fifh. See 
Tab. XXXV.' 
The fmall one may be called the fea-batt y and in 
fome fort refembles that fpecies of animals when it 
is fwimming. 
Additional Remark by Charles Morton, M.D. F.R.S. 
The Patella, or Limpet Fifh, whofe generic cha- 
racters, as enumerated by Bifhop Wilkins, are, that 
it is an exanguious teftaceous animal, not turbinated ; 
an univalve, or having but one fhell j being unmoved ; 
flicking fait to rocks or other things y the convexity 
of whofe Ihell doth fomewhat refemble a fhort ob- 
tufe-angled cone, having no hole on the top.,. 
CXVI. A Difcourfe on the Cinnamon, Caffia, 
or Canella. Bji Taylor White, Ef quire , 
F. R. S. 
Rea ^ D g C ' ZI ’ r T^ H E Cinnamon, Caffia, or Canella, 
JL are fhrubs of no great height : 
they grow in Ceylon, Malabar, Java, Sumatra, and 
other places in the Eaft Indies y as I think, in the ifland 
of St. Thomas, and on the coaft of Coromandel. 
They are defcribed by Mr. Ray, in his Hiftory of 
Plants, vol. ii. f. 1555?. under the title de Arbonbus 
Pruniferis . 
Linnaeus, 
