[58] William Clift, 1775-1849; curator of the Hunterian Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons.
[59] Peter Mark Roget, M. D., 1779-1869; secretary of the Royal Society, London. Wrote Animal and Vegetable Physiology, and the well-known Thesaurus.
[60] Richard Taylor; printer; for many years secretary of the Linnæan Society.
[61] Francis Bauer; botanical artist to George III.
[62] Thomas Horsfield, M. D., 1774-1859. Born in Pennsylvania. After sixteen years in Java, passed the rest of his life in London as keeper of the museum of the East India Company. Brown & Bennett published part of his collections, Plantæ Javanicæ Rariores.
[63] I forgot to mention also some bricks from Babylon, covered with arrowhead characters, which were the most interesting relics of antiquity I almost ever saw.—A. G.
[64] Nathaniel R. Ward, 1791-1868; inventor of the Wardian case.
[65] Archibald Menzies, 1754-1842; the botanist who accompanied Vancouver in his voyage to the west coasts of North and South America. His collections are in the Edinburgh and Kew Herbariums.
[66] Sir Charles Lyell, the geologist.
[67] Edwin J. Quekett, 1808-1847. Wrote much on the microscopic structure of plants and animals.