% Catiilagite uf tjje Hatte plante nf 

 tjie Cttrf &lora nf hmml 



BY THOMAS CLARK. 



IT will be observecl that this catalogue is not strictly 

 confined to rare plants ; a few are admitted which 

 are far from rare, as well as sevei'al others which, though 

 not common, are of not unfrequent occurrence. My aim 

 has been to give, so far as my knowledge goes, a more 

 characteristic vievv of this wide and rieh botanical field, 

 than an aecount less extended could have given. Hence, 

 in the genus Carex, and a few other genera, containing 

 several species, I have given the whole which have been 

 observed by me, whether rare or not. I have also given 

 the whole of the Ferns, and of the Orchis tribe. The 

 names of all the plants are those of the Botanical Society 

 of London. 



Alisma ranuneuloides. Occasionally in shallow pits in 

 the neighbourhood of Catcot drove. The common species, 

 A. plantago, oecurs in watery places in various parts of the 

 moor, associated with Typha latifolia, Iris pseud-acorus, 

 Caltha palustris, and other common marsh plants. 



Anagallis tenella. Marshy fields towards the southern 



