Page:Oregon Historical Quarterly vol. 6.djvu/305

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Journal and Letters of David Douglas.
299

able and willing to do the Society justice, while such a proceedingwould be peculiarly gratifying to me."

Of the living plants of California, introduced to the Horticultural Society, besides the species of Pine, may be mentioned the following, which have flourished in the Chiswick Garden, or been published by Prof. Lindley and others:

Plants introduced by Mr.Douglas in 1834.

Antirrhinum glandulosum. Lasthenia glabrata.
Audibertia incana. Leptosiphon androsaceus.
Bartonia aurea. —— densiflorus.
—— conferta. Limnanthes Douglasii.
Calochortus luteus. Lupinus albifrons.
—— splendens. —— densiflorus.
—— venustus. —— latifolius.
Calliprora lutea. —— leptophyllus.
Chelone centranthifolia. —— nanus.
Collinsia bicolor. —— rivularis.
Cyclobothrya alba. Nemophila insignis.
—— pulchella. Œnothera densiflora.
Douglasia nivalis. —— tenella, var. albiflora.
Escholtszia crocea. Oxyura chrysanthemoides.
Eutoca viscida. Phacelia tanacetifolia.
Garrya elliptica. Pentstemon digitalifolium.
Gilia achilleæfolia. —— staticæfolium.
—— coronopifolia. Platystemon Californicum.
—— tenuifolia. Psoralea macrostachya.
—— tricolor. Ribes speciosum (first, however, introduced by Mr. Collie.)
Godetia lepida. Trifolium fucatum.
—— rubicunda. Triteleia laxa.
—— venosa.
Lasthenia California.

I have still at Fort Vancouver a good bundle of plants, perhaps about seventy species, which I shall try to send, through Mr. Garry, overland this spring, for publication with Mosses and Sea-weeds, so. that your Flora may be as complete as possible. At the Sandwich Islands a violent rheumatic fever prevented me from venturing at all to the hills during my short stay, and I sat and fretted enough about it. I have, indeed, had some hard work since I quitted England, of which I occasionally feel the effects, particularly in cold weather. Anxious that no time should be lost, I sailed from Monterey for those islands in an American vessel of forty-six tons burden, and had a passage of only nineteen days. What would have been thought, forty years ago, of passing over more than half of the great basin of the Pacific with such a craft? If steamboats and railroads are not in our way, we, poor wanderers, must take that what offers, sometimes good and sometimes bad. On my way to this river, and not far from its entrance, I had the pleasure to meet my old ship, the Eagle, and my old friend, Lieut. Grave, R.N., who handed me a parcel from Soho Square, containing the second and third parts of the Flora Boreali- Americana.