CLARENDON PRESS BOTANICAL BOOKS 
Index Kewensis ’ an enumeration of the Genera and Species of Flowering 
Plants from the time of Linnaeus to the year 1885. Edited by Sir J. D. Hooker 
and B. D. Jackson. 2 vols. 4to, half-morocco, £10 105. net. 
The second supplement (1896-1900), in two parts, price 12s. net each, in paper 
covers ; or bound together in cloth, £ 1 85. net ; it is printed in 4U) (i2| x io| 
inches), uniformly in all respects with the Index Kewensis itself. 
The Index , in two volumes, half-morocco, together with the first supplement 
(1886-1895), can be procured from Mr. Frowde, price ,£12 13s. net. 
Nahire. — ‘ The best way to appreciate the Kew Index is to call to mind the time before its appearance, when 
getting at the origin of a name meant often a long book-hunt, and sometimes a remarkable revelation of the 
wonderful and remote places in which it was possible to publish names, such, for instance, as the Melbourne 
Chemist and Drtiggist , in which, if we remember rightly, some species were published by the late Baron von 
Mueller. These literary researches were often extremely interesting, but they were not botany, and a failure by 
some botanists to realize their importance often caused worry and inconvenience to subsequent workers. . . . The 
present number makes quite interesting reading, for it marks in a striking way the progress of systematic botany 
during the five years under consideration.’ 
Pfeffer’s Physiology of Plants, a Treatise upon the Metabolism and 
Sources of Energy in Plants. Second fully revised Edition, translated and 
edited by A. J. Ewart. Royal 8vo, Vol. I, half-morocco, £1 6s. net; cloth, 
£1 35. net. Vol. II, half-morocco, 16s. net; cloth, 14s. net. Vol. Ill, half- 
morocco, 21s. net ; cloth, 18s. net. Immediately . 
Journal of Botany.— English students of plant-physiology will be glad to have in their own tongue a presenta- 
tion of Dr. Pfeffer’s well-known work, with the additional advantages of Dr. Ewart’s editorial revision and 
critical notes. . . . Numerous references to special papers are given throughout the book, and add considerably to 
its value to the special student of plant-physiology. The general botanist will find in the subject-matter an expo- 
sition of a phase of his science, treated in a more readable way than was the subject of the earlier volume.’ 
Nature. — ‘The book is a unique one, for it is certain that none has ever appeared giving so complete an account 
of the physiology of plants. . . . The most notable new feature in Vol. II of the English edition is the prominence 
given to “ causes of specific shape.” . . . No one can question the value of such a mass of information grouped in 
logical sequence, connected by the thoughts and criticisms of the leading plant-physiologist of the present day, 
and representing the mature result of a long life of strenuous and successful work. Dr. Ewart, who has made the 
pTiglish translation, is well qualified for the work, being an accomplished physiologist, and his occasional remarks 
atjded in the capacity of editor are of value. . . „ The book reads as though it had been written in English.’ 
Goebel’s Organography of Plants, especially of the Archegoniatae and 
Spermaphyta. Authorized English Edition by I. Bayley Balfour. Royal 8vo. 
Part I, General Organography. Half-morocco, 125. net ; cloth, 105. net. 
Part II, Special Organography. Half-morocco, 24s. net ; cloth, 215. net. 
Oxford Magazine. — 1 It is not easy to appraise duly the magnitude of the impetus given to botanical study 
in Great Britain and America by the translations of great German botanical works that have been initiated and 
edited by Professor Bayley Balfour, who by his authoritative translation of Professor Goebel’s Organographie 
der Pflamen , has now deepened the debt which English-speaking botanists owe him. The work itself is fully 
worthy of translation, because it contains a rich store of information upon a branch of botany that is relatively 
neglected in this country, and conveys knowledge in a manner less arid than is normal to morphological textbooks. 
A contribution to botanical science that no botanist can afford to leave unread.’ 
Plant-Geography upon a Physiological Basis. By Dr. a. f. w. 
Schimper. The authorized English edition by W. R. Fisher, M.A., revised by 
P. Groom, M.A. Containing a photogravure portrait of Dr. Schimper, five 
collotypes, four maps, and four hundred and ninety-seven other illustrations. 
Royal 8vo, cloth, £ 2 , 2 s. net. Also in Four Parts, paper covers, 9s. net each. 
0 
Solms-Laubach’s Introduction to Fossil Botany. Translated by 
H. E. F. Garnsey, revised by I. Bayley Balfour. Royal 8vo, half-morocco, 
17s. net ; cloth, 15s. net. 
In preparation. 
Knuth’s Flower Pollination. Vol. I. Translated b}^ J. Ainsworth Davis. 
A Catalogue of the Herbarium of Dillenius. By G. Claridge Druce, 
with assistance of Professor Vines. 
Complete List of Botanical Works post free on application. 
LONDON: HENRY FROWDE, 
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE, AMEN CORNER, E.C. 
