LIST OF THE WORKS OF LINNjEUS. 
XXI 
the thirteenth, called in the title the Eleventh ) — 
Aucta, reformata, cura J. F. Gmelin, Leipsic, 1 788, 
the six volumes of the first part in large octavo, 
comprising altogether three thousand nine hundred 
and nine pages. The first part, which contains the 
Animal reign, is completed in the six volumes. 
And Tom. ii. Pars Prima et Secunda, Leipsic, 
1792. The first part, of eight hundred and eighty- 
four pages in octavo, comprises, with new genera 
and species of near one hundred botanists, the 
twelve first Classes of the Linnean System. 
No nation can produce so complete a repertory 
of Natural History as the above. With infinite 
labour, exertion, and judgment, all the recent dis- 
coveries and observations in all the branches of 
Natural Science, have been united in it. 
In the Animal reign, the works of Sehreber, 
Pennant, Fabricius, Goetz, Schroeter, Muller, Cron- 
stedt. Yon Yeltheim, Bergmann, Kirwan, Bloch, 
Herbst, Stoll, Yoigt, Fuessli, Sestini, Buff'on, Adan- 
son, Camper, and the Travels of Pallas, Sonnerat, 
Leslie, Lcpechin, Guldenstrodt, Peyrouse, Rasu- 
mowsky, and of an infinite number of other learned 
men, have been consulted. 
Had Linnaeus even enjoyed a longer life, no such 
enlargement and perfection of his code of nature 
could have been expected from him in the North. * 
* Linnaeus himself 'wrote to Professor Gieseke, on the 
20th of December, 1774, as follows: — •“ Naturae Seientia in 
dies augetur tot novis inventis, ut vix ea eomprehendere 
valeam. 
