ORDER BERBERACE^. 23 



and other places on the hmestone near Kendal.— (Hudson, 

 Gough.) Middlebarrow Wood, and other places about Arn- 

 side. — (J. C. Melvill, B.) Western slope of Loughrigg above 

 Scroggs.— (W. H. Hills.) 



L. Coniston, near the lake, and in Ghylls ; not plentiful. — 

 (Miss Beever.) Dalton-in-Furness, Rowdsey Wood, and 

 Plumpton rocks, Ulverstone shore. — (Miss Hodgson.) Hudson 

 mistakes the wild lake plant for A. alpina. — See Sir J. E. 

 Smith, Eng. Bot. t. 29. 



Delphiniiun Ajacis, Reich. Alien. 



C. A weed in a corn-field at Dean, 1874. — (W. B. Waterfall.) 



Aconitwn NapeHi/s, L. (Monk's Hood). Alien. Found by 

 Mr. R. Lowther, near Hugh's Crag Bridge. An escape from 

 cultivation. — (W. Hodgson.) 



34. AdcEa spicata, L. (Herb Christopher, or Bane Berries). 

 Native. Intermediate type. Range i. 



W. Mountainous pastures above Troutbeck. — (Woodward, 

 in Bot. Guide, ii. 644.) Rocky wood on the limestone 

 (Whitbarrow?) between Kendal and Arnside Knot. — (Dr. F. 

 A. Lees.) Sandwyke, Ullswater. — (Rev. W. Richardson.) 'I 

 have never found this plant at this station.' — (W. Hodgson.) 



ORDER BERBERACE^. 



T,^. Bcrberis vulgaris, 'L. {Bsxhexry). Denizen. English type. 

 Range i. Woods and hedges. Rare, and perhaps always 

 introduced. 



C. Hassness Woods, Buttermere, doubtless introduced. — 

 (B.) Irton, Muncaster, and Ravenglass. — (Whitehaven Cat.) 

 Hedgerow near Penruddock, as a substitute for Crataegus 

 Oxyacantha^ not truly wild. — (W. Hodgson.) 



