Lyell concentrated on botany, especially the study of
mosses; several species of these plants bear his name, besides the genus
Lyellia of
Robert Brown. He also contributed
lichens to
James Edward Smith's
English Botany. While not publishing, he corresponded with
William Jackson Hooker,
James Sowerby and Brown. In 1835 Lyell published, at his own expense, a translation
The Canzoniere of Dante ... including the poems of the Vita Nuova and Convito. In 1842 another edition of
The Vita Nuova and Convito was published in London, and in 1845 a collection of translations,
The Lyrical Poems of Dante. In 1847 he issued in Paris ''Notes to J. Hardouin's "Doutes proposées sur l'âge du Dante".'' ==Family==