1S22. 
Nov. 
S— 31, 
Dec. 1. 
to 
Jan. 14, 
1823. 
228 . SURVEY OF THE INTERTROPICAL 
the entrance of the harbour ; and on going there, 
found the decayed flowers and seeds sufficiently 
perfect to throw a considerable light upon this 
singular plant ^ ; several were procured, and 
brought to England. A drawing of this tree is 
given in the view of King George’s Sound, in 
Captain Flinders’s account of the Investigator’s 
voyage f. In the list of the plants collected 
by me upon this occasion, was a splendid spe- 
cies of anigosanthus, which proved to be quite 
new, and had escaped the observation both of 
Mr. Brown and of Mr. Cunningham. Living 
plants of various genera were also procured: 
among which were several of the remarkable 
cephalotus follicularis, (Brown,) which, however, 
alone survived the voyage, and are now growing 
in the royal gardens at Kew. 
Having eflected our departure from King 
George’s Sound, we proceeded on our way to- 
wards Simon’s Bay at the Cape of Good Hope, 
which we reached on the 14th of January, after 
* More perfect specimens were afterwards collected by Mr. 
Baxter, and sent, throug-h Mr. Henchman his employer, to my 
friend Mr, Brown, the original discoverer of the tree in Captain 
Flinders’s voyage, and the author of the paper in the appendix 
at the end of the volume relating to it, 
t Flinders, vol. i. p. 60. 
