133 
A True account of the Aloe americana or africana, which is now in 
blossom in Mr. Cowell’s garden at Hoxton ... As also of two 
other exotick plants, call’d the Cereus, or torch-thistle, 
which have likewise put forth their blossoms in Mr. Cowell’s 
said garden. The like whereof has never been seen in Eng¬ 
land before. London, Printed for T. Warner [etc.] 1729. 
44 p. (Mass, Hort. Soc.; Brit. Mus.) 
British Museum and Cecil, 2d ed., p.356, give 
under Cowell, while the evidence of the work it¬ 
self suggests that it may have been compiled for 
Cowell by another person. Johnson credits it to 
Richard Bradley, and R. P, Brotherston, in Gard, 
Chron. (3) 52:42 (1912), observes; ’’In 1729 he 
[Bradley] wrote an account of Cowell’s Aloe, to 
the latter’s great displeasure,” 
T’Samenspraecken. See Samenspraeck. 
Tulipanen geheimniss, 1662; 1663, See Stapell, Johann Fried¬ 
rich. 
Die Tulpe zu ruhm ihres schopfers. 1741, See Benemann, Johann 
Christian. 
The Twelve moneths; or, A pleasant and profitable discourse of ev¬ 
ery action. 1661, See Stevenson, Matthew, 
Tyrocinium botanicum hortulanorum; oder Botanisches hand- und wor- 
terbuch fiir die gartner, Wittenberg und Zerbst, S. G. 
Zimmermann, 1774. 204 p. (Dept, Agr.) 
