Broughton Woods. i7i 
species. Sedum Telephium is confined to a very limited area, and 
can hardly be a native. All three species of Drosera were found 
on Manton Warren till it was drained, though two perhaps may 
now be extinct. Lythvum still brightens the ditch sides, with 
other tiny beauties too numerous to be recorded. Myrrhis 
odovata is an alien, I fear, and difficult to discover. Next comes 
the great rarity Selinum Carvifolia. Canon Fowler made this 
locality famous in 1882, by adding this species to the British Flora 
from an isolated spot in Broughton Wood proper, where I have 
seen it this season flourishing like the true native itis. Asperula 
cynanchica, both species of Valeriana, Solidago virgaurea, Evigevon 
acre, Antennaria diotca, Carlina, Servatula and Lactuca muralis 
make up an interesting group not found readily together except- 
ing here. Hieraciarchs need not come seeking to add fresh 
leaves to their wreath of difficulties for others, for only ‘three 
species are found. All the large Campanule flourish, and the 
hybrid latifolia and trachelium has been found and recognised by 
Canon Fowler. Thehybrid, Primula acaulis and verts, is abundant 
locally at times, with Lysimachia nemorum, Anagallis pallida and 
_ A. tenella, though the latter I fear is now growing rarer. Gentiana 
~~ Pneumonanthe, G. Amarella, and G. campestris, with Polemonium 
Cynoglossum officinale, Myosotis collina, Lithospermum officinale, L. 
arvense, Hyuscyanus, Veronica montana, Melampyrum pratense, and 
Pinquicula vulgaris, help to make up a goodly list. We are not 
even at the end of our best things vet, as Origanum, both purple 
and white flowered, and the rare casual Galeopsis ochvoleuca, and 
the denizen Teucrium Chameedrys, Myrica, Ophrys apifera, O. 
mucifeva, confined to the outcrop of the Limestone Beds, and 
therefore rare, easily demonstrate. Here too are Habenaria 
_ conopsea, and H. chlovoleuca. ‘There are said to be four hundred 
acres of close grown Convallavia in Broughton Woods proper, to 
_ pulicaris, C. ligevica, C. echinata, C. acuta, C. pilulifera, C. 
Lycopodium alpinum just beyond the border of this area. Even 
