70 GERANlACEiE. 



IV. Under the Citadel, where also a white-flowered variety grows; 

 Keys, FL ii. 67. Hoe, Plymouth, witli pinkish-white and with 

 dark purple, 1873 ; with white near West Hoe Terrace, 1872. 

 Near Laira, by the Dartmoor tramway, with white and with 

 purple, also intermixed on a neighbouring wall-top. Both near 

 Oreston quarries ; again intermixed by a limestone quarry 

 near Plymstock, 1871. 

 V. With both white and with purple flowers near Gorlofen, Brixton. 

 With Avhite flowers by a slate quarry near Lynham. With 

 whitish and with dark near Lambside. 

 VI. With whitish and with purple flowers in sandy soil by the coast 



below Ringmore. 

 The commonest species of the genus, occurring plentifully over all the 

 enclosed and cultivated country. The white -flowered plant is common, 

 and the way in which it grows intermixed with the other seems to show 

 very plainly that soil and situation have no connection with the white 

 flowers. It will moreover be seen that both occur on slate, limestone, 

 and sand. 



147. G. pusillum, L. Small -flowered Crane^s Bill. 



Native ; in dry waste spots, by roadsides ; and sometimes in 

 fields of fodder clovers and grasses, probably as an introduction. 

 Rare. May to September. 



c. I. A plant on a bank near a farm-house, a quarter of a mile from 

 the coast at Seaton, 1871 ; a small patch of plants a little nearer 

 the coast, 1874. One or two in a barley arish at Notter, 1875. 

 II. Two or three under a Avail by a road near Wilcove, 1865 ; a single 

 plant, 1872. In considerable quantity in a turfy spot in front 

 of a house at St. Johns, 1877. 



D. III. Many plants by the footpath at the head of Crown Hill, 

 Knackersknowle, 1875 ; one was noticed on the opposite side 

 of the road in July, 1866. 

 IV. [In a pit m a bushy waste spot by the Plymouth and Plymstock 

 Road, with G. molle, G. dissectum, G. rotund i folium, G. 

 lucidum, G. columhinuin, and G. Bobertianum, June, 1866 : 

 destroyed in 1871 by the pit being filled up ] By a limekiln at 

 Pomphlet ; also by a limestone quarry at the side of the road 

 from Plymstock village to Hooe, June, 1860 ; about 10 or 12 

 plants at the latter station, 1871 ; not seen for several years 

 past at the former. One plant under a wall by a farm-court at 

 Plymstock, 1871. In a field of fodder grasses on Fursdon 

 estate. Egg Buckland, July, 1866 ; probably sown with the 

 crop. A single plant on masonry by a field gate from Coleridge 

 Lane, near Knackersknowle, 1879. 



