Lately introduced by Mr. Lambert: and is cultivated 
in the open garden.at Boyton, in Wiltshire, where it forms 
a large bush” of single stems from three to four feet 
high ; is in full blossom, and in great beauty, from August 
till the frost sets in. The flowers are about the size of those 
of our common Inca britannica. 
— 
NOTE. i 
In the article Narcissus Sabini (fol. 762) of this work, contributed 
by Mr. J. Lindley, the following synonym, from Parkinson’s Paradisus, 
should have been inserted. It clearly belongs to the species: 
Pseudonarcissus juncifolius luteus serotinus. Parkinson parad. 106, 
tab. 107. fig. 8. - i 
We have lately seen an authentic sample of GNIDIA imbricata, a spe- 
cies published in fol. '757 of this work, under the erroneous title denudata, 
and can have no doubt (indeed we never had any) that the plant of that ar-. 
ticle is the true imbricata; and must suppose the ingenious Botanist, to 
whom we owe this contribution, had no opportunity of comparing the draw 
ing with an authentic sample. No distinction, even in regard to variety, was 
necessary to be added; our plant being of the true type of GNIDIA im- 
bricata. ' 
We take this method of acknowledging the receipt of a valuable 
treatise on VERBASCUM (“ Monographia generis Verbasci”), sent to us by 
the author, Dr. Schrader, from Gottingen; and also of the tract «De 
Asperifoliis Linnei Commentatio,” by the same hand; and have only to 
regret that we have no equivalent to return for so useful an advance. 
. A“ Mémoire sur les Dipsacées,” by Dr. Thomas Coulter, has also been 
received; and we beg the acceptance of our thanks to the author. 
