272 BORAGINACE^. 



c. I. Trevollard slate quarries ; Banks, Fl. part 7. Near Polbathick ; 

 Keys, Ft. iii. 119 : seen between that and Hessenford, 1873. 

 By the Torpoint and Liskeard Road ; near Wacker, also near 

 Trerule. Seaton. Field near Clapper liridge, 1869. 

 II. Hedges about ^lilibrook ; Banks, Fl. part 7. In the debris of a 

 slate quarry, a short mile "west of Torpoint ; S. D. Lit. CJiron. 

 191 ; two plants with Avhite flowers growing with others there, 

 1869. By Hay Lane, between Antony and Trevol, always 

 sparingly. 

 D. III. [Weston Mills ; first field leading thence to Pennycross ; Banks, 

 Fl. part 7.] Blaxton. Between Lophill and Gnatham, Beer 

 Ferrers. In plenty in waste ground near Tamar Quay at Holes 

 Hole, but looking like an introduction, 1871. 

 IV. Cattedown ; Batiks, ih. Extinct I [Hoe ; I have not noticed it 

 for several years past ; Keys, Fl. iii. 119.] On limestone rubble 

 near the Oreston Quarries, rather sparingly, 1871. About the 

 quarry at Hay. Egg Buckland ; in a poor dry field at Common 

 Wood, appearing year after year ; also a few plants in a sandy 

 marsh at Rumple, 1870. By the Dartmoor tramway, near 

 Bickleigh. 

 V. Roadside between Plymouth and Yealmpton, between four and 

 five miles from Plymouth ; ^S". D. Lit. Chron. 191, 1846 ; still 

 about Chittleburn, 1879. Hareston. On refuse from a quarry 

 near Gorlofen, Brixton. 

 VI. Field near Bigbury Bay, a little to the east of Lambside, 1875. 

 A good example of a species of sparse distribution. At the places 

 where it does occur, it for the most part does not extend widely. 

 First record : Banks, 1830. 



Puhnonaria officinalis, L. Alien. In a shrubbery al Widey, near 

 Plymouth ; Keys, Fl. iii. 120. Manadon (as amjustifolia), in Ravensh. 

 Fl. Doubtless the records have reference to one place, Widey and 

 Manadon being only separated by JNIanadon Hill. Some years ago I 

 noticed a Pulmonaria in a shrubbery at the back of Widey Lodge, 

 growing in a situation that certainly did not entitle it to any mention in 

 a list of native plants. 



LITHOSPERMUM, Tournef. 



653. L. officinale, L. Common Gromwell. 



Native ; in bushy or rocky Avaste places and on banks. Rather 



rare and quite local, mostly on calcareous soils. May to July, 

 c. I. Between St. Germans and Landrake, 1864 ; between Torpoint 



and Antony ; Keys, Fl. iii. 120 ; seen m the former locality 



near Tideford, and at the other a quarter of a mile from Antony 



village. Bank near Antony Passage. 



