77 



33rd. — The Labttbitom:, ( Cytims Laburnum} at Hampton 

 Court Gardens ; and the Slopes, Windsor Park. (Jesse.) 



34th. — The Ked Swamp Maple, {^Acer ruhrum) near the 

 ranger's house, Bushy Park. (Jesse.) 



35th. — The Hoesb Chesnitt, {(Esculus hippocastanum) 

 in Bushy Park, Middlesex. (Jesse.) 



36. — The Filbeet, ( Corylus mellana alba J at Wigmore, 

 Bishops Cleave. (Mr. J. S. Haywood.) 



37th. — The Catalpa, ( Catalpa syringmfolia) in Kent. 

 (The Kev Gerard Smith.) 



38th. — The English Elm, ( Ulmus campestris) at Longdon 

 near TTpton-on-Sevem, (Eev. W. S. Symonds:) at Bushy Park 

 Parm, near Tewkshury, ("Botanical Looker out" :) Monmouth- 

 shire, (The Eev. J. Hibbert:) and at Strensham Court, Worces- 

 tershire. (Mr. Taylor, in Jesse.) 



39th. — The GoosEBEERT, {Ribes Grossularia) on some large 

 old Gooseberry bushes, Maidstone, Kent. (Journal of Horticultxire 

 December 1863.) 



40. — The Plane Tree, {Platanus occidentalis) at Wick, 

 near Worcester. (Mr. J. S. Haywood.) 



4l8t. — The Tew Tree, {Taxiis semper ~vir em) near 

 Sheffield, "on a venerable tree of many centuries growth." 

 (W. S. Sheffield, N. & Q. Vol vii. p. 199.) 



42nd. — The Cedar, {Ceirus Libani) in Somersetshire. 

 (W. C. Trevelyan, N. & Q. Vol. vi, p. 249.) 



43rd. — The Larch Fir, [Abies Larix) plentifully at Cold 

 Weston, Shropshire. (Jesse.) 



The Mistletoe has never been observed to occur spon- 

 taneously in England, so far as I am aware of, on any of the 

 following trees, although it has been successfully propagated on 

 several of them : — 



