110 
REVIEWS. 
III.— Inner. tSir John Throkmorton, 1580. 
A plate, about 21in. by 10in., upon the south wall of the 
chancel. It is not mentioned by Haines. 
The inscription is in black letter, the letters being in 
relief, and runs :— 
Ibere llctbe Interred pe boble of Sir 3obit fTbrokmorton knight 
of | jfeckenbam, tbe flvetbe sonne of Str (Beorge fTbrokmorton 
knlgbt of | Govgbton, somflnte flftastcr of pc IRequeets unto 
queeite /ibarle of bap- | pie memorle, wbo In respecte of bis 
faltbful service bestoweb upon | blm pc office of justice of 
Chester anO of blr Covitsalle In y « marches of I Males In web 
route be contlneweb null peaces & supplleO wtb in pc \ same 
time pe place of vice president pc space of tv pears, be bab to | 
wife flftargerle puttenbam Daughter of Ikobert putteba 
tEsquler I bp whom be bab 3ssue v sonnes & 1111 baugbters, be 
beparteb ! this life pc 22 of /llbap Bo 1580. bis wife survlvunge 
wbo llveb | anb bleb bis wlboe p c . . . anb ts here also 
Interreb. 
Above this is a shield with the Throkmorton arms. 
No. II. is upon an Altar-tomb at the north side of the 
chancel. Upon the same tomb is a brass cross and inscription 
to Sir C. Throkmorton, d. 1840, and an inscription to Dame 
Elizabeth Throkmorton, d. 1850. 
(To be continued.) 
lldrichs. 
Illustrations of British Fungi. Part XXXIX. M. C. Cooke. 8s. Od. 
Williams and Norgate. 
This part completes Yol. IY. of this very valuable work, and affords a 
favourable opportunity for calling attention to tbe great advance which 
has been made in the study of the fungi of late years, more especially 
since the publication of the “ Handbook” in 1871. In that work, up 
to the point now reached in the “ Illustrations,” 433 species of the 
Agaricmi are described and recorded as British species, and this was 
an advance, since the publication of Berkeley’s “ Outlines,” of 90 
species. The number now reached in the index of the “ Illustrations” 
is 794, or nearly double the number of species recorded in 1871, and of 
these all but 54 are figured in this work. The four volumes before us 
contain 622 plates, upon which are given coloured figures of 740 species 
and varieties of the Agaricini. Of these, 24 are entirely new species or 
varieties, and at least 100 are species or varieties that have never been 
figured before. The true value of this work will be better understood 
by a comparison with the previous illustrated works on the fungi. 
