Page:Journal of botany, British and foreign, Volume 34 (1896).djvu/352

This page needs to be proofread.

326 THE FLORA OF THE ALPS. not want the complete Flora of Switzerland which Messrs. Nimmo, in the title of their book, profess to supply ; and the botanist will hardly find it. A clavis to the species, such as that given by Gremli, renders a lengthened description unnecessary, but Mr. Bennett gives us no help of this kind, and his diagnoses seem to us in many cases insufficient. A brief examination of one genus — Cerastium — will show how Mr. Bennett has treated his subject : — •' The following English lowland species of Mouse-ear Chick- weed are found also in Switzerland : — C. glomeratum, Fr. ; semi- decandrmn, L. ; triviale, Lk. ; arvense, L. ; vulgatum, L. ; viscosum, L. C. hrachycarpum, Schm., and sufriiticosum, L., are probably mountain forms of arvense ; and C. macrocavpum, Sch., oi vulgatum. C. brachypetaliim, Pers., is very nearly allied to glomeratum. C. glutinosum, L., covered with a glutinous down, is a Southern low- land species." Here the four names glomeratum, triviale, vulgatum^ and viscosum stand for as many plants, but it is certain that they only represent two of our English species: glomeratum '*Fr." should be assigned to Thuillier and for ^'brachycarjmm Schm. " we must read " Schur " : no glutinosum is assigned to Linnaeus in Mr. Jackson's Index. Among the *' more or less alpine " species, of which a descriptive enumeration follows, we find " C. Umatum Koch," by which C. lanatum Lam. is probably meant. Mr. Bennett rightly says that ** the specific characters are often very difiicult to determine; " but he has not succeeded in coi^trasting these in a helpful manner. If, for instance, we put side by side the characters given for C. alpinum and C. latifolium, we shall find that they are not mutually exclusive; the characters assigned to the one are so com- patible with those of the other, that all might apply to the same plant. (7. alpinum, L. " C. latifolium, L. '< Usually more or less glan- "Leaves ovate-elliptical, stiff, dular-hairy, stem 1-5-flowered, brittle, flowers large, few, petals with rosettes of leaves, flower- more than twice as long as se- stalk oblique after flowering, pals, deeply bifid, capsule nearly sepals obtuse, with a membra- globose ; high ; Switzerland, nous margin ; high altitudes ; Dauphiny." frequent." We are sorry that we cannot endorse the favourable opinion of a reviewer in the Daily Chronicle. " The descriptions," says this authority, *' are, it is true, of a technical character ; but is there a tourist who has not heard of the petals and sepals and even [!] of the anthers ? Armed with this amount of knowledge, there will be no great difficulty in running to earth a given plant." If this writer were shut up in a room with Mr. Bennett's book and a dozen given plants," we think he would soon alter his opinion ; it would be as reasonable to say that a man would be able to read an Arabic work because he had learned the English alphabet. The Spectator considers the plates " in most cases exceedingly faithfully