Abstract

CHAPTERS in the history of the teaching of botany have now been written in the biographies of four Cambridge professors. In 1830 was published Gorham's “Memoirs of John and of Thomas Martyn,” a book of small size; and in 1862 Jenyn's “Memoir of the Rev. J. S. Henslow,” containing 278 pages. The last of this series, the volume under review, far exceeds the others in size, and contains 570 pages. Memorials, Journal, and Botanical Correspondence of Charles Cardale Babington. Pp. xciv + 475. (Cambridge: Macmillan and Bowes, 1897.)

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