444 Mr. Forster on the Vicia angustifolia, &c. 
Tor-hill, it seems probable that it was this species which Ray 
intended, though we have the evidence of a specimen in the 
Smithian herbarium, marked ‘from Glastonbury Tor, Somerset, 
A.B. Lambert, Esq.”, that Vicia hybrida has also been discovered . 
there. V. levigata is likewise well authenticated by specimens 
. from the same gentleman, found near Weymouth. have never 
seen the latter growing; but from the specimens in the above- 
mentioned herbarium it appears to me that V. lutea, V. hy- 
brida, and V. levigata agree in general habit, differing only 
in the vexillum and legumen, both of which in V. hybrida are 
hairy, and in V. levigata smooth, whereas in V. lutea the vex- 
illum is smooth and the legumen hairy. The V. levigata ap- 
pears to be unknown to foreigners, though discovered in this 
country many years since, and mistaken by Hudson for V. hy- 
brida. There are native specimens in the Banksian herbarium, 
from Portland Island, gathered by Lightfoot in 1774. 
XXIII. On | 
