CORTINARIUS. 25 



cent. (3-5 in.) long, 1-2.5 cent. (/4.-1 in.) thick, the villous base inoioma. 

 however very bulbous, 2.5-5 cent. (1-2 in.) thick, solid, spongy, at 

 first silky, then fibrillose, violaceous then whitish, internally deep 

 saffron-ochraceous. Cortina continuous with the silky covering 

 of the pileus, pallid violaceous, then cinnamon with the spores. 

 Gills emarginate, broad, distant, distinct, firm, saffron-ochraceous, 

 at length cinnamon, somew r hat crenate at the edge. 



Readily distinguished by its very fcetid odour, and by its thick distant gills 

 being at the first saffron-ochraceous. 



In pine woods. Forres, &c. Aug.-Sept. 



Spores sphaeroid-ellipsoid, 8-10x5-6 mk. K. Name tragits, a goat. 

 With goat smell. Fr. Monogr. ii. p. 51. Hym. Eur. p. 362. B. & Br. n. 

 1499. S. Mycol. Scot. n. 463. Ag. Schceff. t. 56. 



Var. finitimus Weinm. Pileus silky, at length smooth, lilac, 

 as is the stem, which is yellowish and mottled within, but not 

 saffron-coloured nor brown. Smell not at all that of the typical 

 form, but pleasant though peculiar, resembling that of gum just 

 beginning to ferment. 



Forres. Namejlnitimus, nearly related. Weinm. p. 155. B. & Br. n. 

 1499. S. Mycol. Scot. sub. n. 463. 



49. C. tophaceus Fr. Pileus about 7.5 cent. (3 in.) broad, 

 77/d5?#-tawny, opaque, not becoming pale, compactly fleshy, thin 

 towards the margin, hemispherical, everywhere villoso-squamu- 



lose, varying slightly silky and shining ; flesh soft, 'white, strong- 

 smelling. Stem solid, bulbous, villoso-squamulose, tawny, the 

 fibrillose veil of the same colour. Gills broadly emarginate, 12 

 mm. (y z in.) and more broad, distant, of the same colour, at 

 length tawny-cinnamon. 



Commonly springing up in a dense band, somewhat csespitose, but also 

 solitary and then larger, in form, stature, and villoso-squaimdose covering of 

 pileus, appearing like C. violaceus, only that species is of an entirely different 

 colour. Odour not remarkable. It glitters from its golden colozcr. 



In woods. King's Lynn. 



Spores ellipsoid or subglobose, 6-8 mk. C.B.P. ; 7x5 mk. W.P. Name 

 tophus, tufa, a volcanic rock of an earthy texture. Of the colour. Fr. 

 Monogr. ii. p. 52. Hym. Eur. p. 363. Quel. Grev. t. 109. f. 2. 



* C. redimitus Fr. Pileus thinner, obtusely umbonate, sbin- 

 ing, golden, streaked with innate fibrils ; flesh white. Stem 2.5-5 

 cent. (1-2 in.) long, slightly thickened at the base, 12 mm. (y z in.) 

 thick, solid, internally soft, fibroso-striate, yellowish. Gills ad- 

 nate, with a small decurrent tooth, light yellow then tawny. 



In mixed wood. Glamis, 1875. Oct. Name redimio, to wreathe round, 



