NOTES ON THE FLORA OF SUSSEX. 261 
find no reliable record of its rediscovery. Mrs. Merrifield, however, 
says it is common on the low cliff to the west of Shoreham ! 
? E. moschatum, Sm. “ Rocks, near Hastings," according to Hooper 
in his Bot. Sus., but if so, it disappeared long ago, and should be ex- 
punged from the list. In Borrer's Herb. there is a specimen labelled 
“ Pulborough,— escaped, I suppose, —called * Wild Musk,’ " 1836 
? Geranium pyrenaicum, L. Only solitary plants of this have been 
found. 
? G. lucidum, L. One plant was found by Borrer near Lewes, and 
that undoubtedly an escape or outcast, like many others in the environs 
of that town. 
Polygala € F. Sch. Unknown to me, but Watson adduces 
it without a 
? Medicago ena L. Watson enumerates this as a doubtful 
Sussex plant, and Syme, in Eng. Bot., says it is found in the county, 
but on whose authority it is not stated. 
? Melilotus vulgaris, Willd. Now quite established on the railways 
and in other places, e. g. between Hassock's Gate and Burgess Hill. 
*Onobrychis sativa, Lam. Often seen on railway embankments, near 
chalk pits, and in similor situations. 
*Vicia sylvatica, L. In the ‘Guide to Hastings,’ and in Mrs. 
Merrifield’s Nat. Hist. of Brighton, this plant is mentioned as growing 
near these towns, owing no doubt to some error. 
V. Bithynica, L. In Borrer's Herb. there-is a specimen with the 
following note :—“ By the cliff along the road between Shoreham and 
Southwick. Prob. lost, 1841," and I am not aware that it bas been 
found subsequent to that date. 
The following additional named forms of the genus Rubus are from 
the county, most of which I have seen, but I cannot say that I am 
able to distinguish many of them myself. 
* Rubus suberectus, Anders. Ashdown Forest, etc. 
*R. fissus, Lindl.. Forest Row, Herb. Borrer 
* R. plicatus, W. and N. Near Midhurst, St. Leonard's Forest, Fo- 
rest Row, etc., Herb. Borrer. Var. fastigiatus, Tilgate Forest, Herb. 
Borrer. In Eng. Bot. Suppl., under t. 2714, is the following note by 
the late Mr. Borrer :—“ Not rare in the forests of Sussex, in heathy 
and somewhat boggy places, chiefly on the banks of streams." 
* R. nitidus, Bell. Salt. Henfield, Herb. Borrer. 
