AMARYLLIDACE.E. 193 



Mr. T. F. Perkins; and Dr. St. Brody. Walton-iu- 

 Gordano. Winscombe. " lu an old orchard at Pill. 

 J. Anderson, MSS." New Bot. Guide, Snppl. 

 751. N. Pseudo-narcissus, L. Daffodil. Lent-Lily. 



Native ; in pastures and open woods, rather common in 

 Somerset. Where it does occur it usually grows in 

 great abundance. 



G. Wood at Heubury, Herb. Powell. Sparingly in 

 pasture between Stoke Bishop and Westbury-on-Trym, 

 Filtou Meads, Swete, Fl. 



S. Bishport. Churchill. Plentiful in a pasture on Failand 

 Farm. Leigh AVood ! Peer. C. B. Dunn. In thick 

 underwood at Churchill Batch. Pensford. Yattou. 

 At Edford in immense profusion, both in woodland and 

 pasture ; covering nearly a square mile of country. The 

 "Daifodil Valley," near Sidcot. Here the plant is 

 abundant on wooded slopes and grows over a consider- 

 able area. Abundant in some of the other Mendip 

 valleys, notably near Witham, and by Stoke Lane, near 

 Wells. III. IV. 



(N. incomparahilis, N. lobularis, N. poeticus, and N. 

 aurantius ? have all been recorded on good authority 

 from localities where they have been introduced from 

 gardens.) 



('" Leucojum cEstivum, L., grows in some quantity in one 

 place in Almondsbury parish ; but as the snowdrop and 

 large periwinkle are its near neighbours there may once 

 have been a cottage garden on the spot, though not in 

 the recollection of any one living." Eev. K. A. Deakin; 

 March, 1879.) 



