642 APPENDIX. 



f Bog Pimpeenel — [Anagallis tenella. Flora, p. 267.) 

 Southport, (fee. 



* Glattx — {Glatix maritima.) 

 Stems three to six inches high, much branched, glabrous, and somewhat succu- 

 lent. Leaves small, ovate or oblong, mostly opposite, sessile, and entire. Flowers 

 numerous, axillary, pink or purplish. Fl. summer. Salt marshes and muddy 

 places at Southport. (E. B. i. 13.) 



Samolus — [Samolus Valerdndi.) 

 Stems three to eighteen inches high, glabrous, upright, and somewhat branched. 

 Leaves obovate or oblong, chiefly radical. Flowers small, white, in long, loose 

 racemes, their pedicels rather long. Fl. July, August, Common at Southport in 

 wet places among the sand-hills. (E. B. s. 703.) 



LXXX.— THE THRIFT FAMILY. Plumhaginacece. 



Thrift — [Armeria maritima. Flora, p. 274.) 

 Below Southshore. Plentiful at Southport. 



LXXXI.— THE RIBWORT FAMILY. Plantaginew. 



f Btjck's-hobn — {Plantdgo Coronopus. Flora, p. 276.) 

 Abundant in di^ places all along the coast. 



* Sea Ribwort — [Plantdgo maritima.) 

 Leaves narrow linear, channelled, thick, and fleshy. Spikes cylindrical, one to 

 three inches long. Fl. July — September. Muddy places all along the coast. 

 (E. B. iii. 175.) 



f LiTTORELLA — {Littorella lacustris. Flora, p. 276.) 

 Southport, &c. 



LXXXIV.— THE FUCHSIA FAMILY. Onagracete. 



Evening Primrose — [CEnothera biennis.) 

 Stems two to three feet high, nearly simple, leafy. Leaves alternate, ovate- 

 lanceolate, slightly toothed. Flowers in terminal spikes, large, yellow, with all 

 the parts in fours, very handsome, fragrant, and not opening till towards evening. 

 Fl. July — September. Biennial. Birkdale, plentiful. A North American plants 

 very common in gardens, and now naturalized. (E. B. xxi. 1534.) 



