324 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 



T. SQUAMOSUM L. I gathered it by the Thames side near the 

 Earl of Peterborough's Palace in company with Mr. John Field where 

 the Sagitta minima grows. [This species, T. stellatum glahrum Ger. 

 em. 1208, though recorded (R. Syn. ed. 3, 329) for Leigh and Little 

 Holland in Essex, has apparently not been noted for Middlesex. It 

 is unfortunate that this entry is undated ; but it is probably earlier 

 than 1721. The narrow-leaved form of Sagittaria was first noticed 

 by Plukenet {Al mage stum, 326) ; " On the Thames-Shore by Lambeth 

 Bridge, over against the Archbishop of Canterbury's Palace, and 

 plentifully before the Earl of Peterborough's House above the Horse- 

 Ferry on Westminster Side, before the Gaining on the Thames for an 

 Enlargement to the Courtyard ; and I never observed it elsewhere." 

 It is figured by Petiver (Herb. Brit. Cat., 1713, tab. 43). The 

 palace built by the first Earl of Peterborough in Charles I.'s time, 

 described by Stow and shown in Hollar's map of 1708, was at Mill- 

 bank, being on the site of the Abbey water-mill, at the end of 

 College Street. It was taken down in 1809.] 



T. suBTERRANEUM L. *Great Cornard. May 7, 1745. 

 T. GLOMERATUM L. Greenwhich Park . . where Flamsted's 

 House stands. It grows plentifully about the Park. [In Ray Syn. 

 ed. 3, 329. 10, Doody is quoted as having found it " About Black- 

 heath."] 



T. FEAGiFERUM L. ^Friar's Meadow [Suff.] by River side. 

 Aug. 6, 1740. 



T. FiLiroRME L. Barber Heath. 



Trigonella orntthopodioides DC. Between Sudbury and 

 Lakenham, May 21, 1727. [In Dale's herbarium is a ticket (see 

 Journ. Bot. 1883, 196) : " Foenum grsecum humile repens, Ornitho- 

 podii siliquis brevibus erectis Rail Synop. iii. 331 . , . Mr. Jos. 

 Andrews gave me this specimen who found it. Mr. Newton, in 

 ■ company with Mr. Ray and myself, show'd it us on a sandy bank at 

 Tollesbury, Essex." As Ray records the Tollesbury locality in Gib- 

 son's Camden (1695); but not this one of Andrews's, it was probably 

 after 1727 that Dale wrote this label, or part of it.] 



Lotus corniculatus L. crassifolius Pers. Between Yarmouth 

 Town and fort plentifully. Aug. 1725. 



L. ULiGiNOSUS Schkuhr. *Kingsbury Mere, Cornard, Aug. 26, 

 1743. 



Anthtllis Vclneraeia L. *Kittingdon hills [Suff.] August, 

 1743. 



ViciA SEPiUM L. Ballingdon Hall Grove. July 4, 1744. 

 V. SATITA L. An 5 Vicia sylvestris flore ruberrimo-siliqua longa 

 nigra R. S. 3. 321. Buhner and Ballingdon. May 10, 1745. [The 

 plant is V. saliva L., though the suggested name is that of V. angus- 

 tifolia L. var. Bohartii Forst.] 



Y. LATHTROiDES L. Vicitt minima prcecoa^ Parisiensium R. S. 

 3. 321. 7. I gathered it in field on the right hand on a bank next 

 the road as you go from Ballingdon up the first hill. May 4, 1750. 

 [Of this plant Dillenius writes (R. Syn. iii. 321. 7) "Forte Pusillum 

 Pisum aliud sylvestre spontaneum Lob. Illustr. 164. Found by 

 Mr. J. Sherard and Mr. Rand on the Chalky banks near Green-hithe 



