40 AGARICINI. 



Telamonia. Manifestly allied to C. bivelus, &c. The gills are not of the bright tawny 

 colour of these. Easily distinguished from C. bivelus by its smoothness and 

 colour ; especially remarkable for the clay-whitish colour of the pileus. 



In grassy places. Cabalva. Sept.-Oct. 



Name urbs, city. Found in frequented places. Fr. Monogr. \\. p. 72. 

 Hym. Eur. p. 375. Grevillea, vol. viii. p. 77. Quel. Grev. t. ii2./. i. 



81. C. licinipes Fr. Pileus 5-7.5 cent. (2-3 in.) broad, very 

 pale yellow, tan-pallid when dry, fleshy-membranaceous, cam- 

 panulate then convex and flattened, obtusely umbonate, and at 

 length depressed round the umbo, even, smooth ; flesh hygro- 

 phanous. Stem 10 cent. (4 in.) and more long, 6-8 mm. (3-4 

 lin.) thick, stuffed then hollow, at length fragile, equal, often 

 flexuous, pale-white, white-villous at the base, otherwise clothed 

 with shining floccoso-plumose scales which fall off with age, even 

 above the distant membranaceous ring. Gills adnate and very 

 broad behind, as much as 12 mm. ()4 in.), somewhat crowded, 

 quite entire, watery cinnamon. 



Fragile. Odour none. Var. short -stemmed, growing in drier places. 

 Bull. t. 600. /. X. W.T. 



In woods. Locality not recorded. 



Name licinium, lint ; pes, a foot. Woolly-stemmed. Fr. Monogr. ii. 

 p. 83. Hym. Eur. p. 376. B. dr 1 Br. n. 1549. 



** Stem and gills violaceous, &>c. 



82. C. torvus Fr. Pileus 7.5-10 cent. (3-4 in.) broad, brick- 

 colour, fleshy but thin with exception of the disc, convex, margin 

 at first bent inwards, then wholly flattened, obtuse, somewhat 

 fragile, even or broken up when dry, pierced with dotted points 

 when old, at first sprinkled with hoary squamules and fibrils, and 

 marbled with the same hoariness when it becomes smooth ; flesh 

 whitish when dry, dingy. Stem 7.5-12.5 cent. (3-5 in.) long, 

 1-2.5 cent. (K-i in.) thick, solid, pierced by larvas, and at length 

 spongy, when young short and bulbous, then elongated and 

 somewhat equal, when perfect sheathed to the middle and ringed 

 with the adnate veil, above which it is more equal and pale 

 violaceous, when young furnished with a villous cortina, then 

 fibrillose ; below the white spreading ring wJiitish, fibrillose and 

 in fullest vigour floccoso-scaly, white-villous at the base. Gills 

 somewhat adnate, thick, distant, plane, fragile, very broad (6-12 

 mm., 3-6 lin.), at first violaceous, soon purplish-umber, at length 

 dark cinnamon, edge quite entire, at length veined at the base. 



Striking, commonly robust. It is difficult to describe the ground colour of 



