NOTES ON THE FLORA OF SUSSEX. 265 
county, and where it grew in great profusion, has been destroyed, so 
we have a very interesting loss to chronicle. aldron Down, if I 
mistake not, was the most easterly station for it in England. 
? Linaria repens, Ait. “ Miss Smith, of Sutton, tells me she planted 
this on the wall where I found it," Borrer, ms. It has since dis- 
appeared, I am informed by the Rev. F. H. Arnold. 
? Salvia pratensis, L. This has no claim whatever to be included 
in the flora of Sussex, no authentie station having been recorded. 
? Mentha rotundifolia, L. The following are all the stations known 
to me, none of which is satisfactory :—Henfield Churchyard, Herb. 
Borrer ; near Chichester, Trevelyan ; Arundel Park, Bot. Sussex. 
? Mentha piperita, L. Near Henfield, Herb. Borrer; Hayward’s 
Heath, ete.; Messrs. Edwards and Helyer. By the road from 
Chichester to Arundel, between Ball’s Hut and Avisford Hill, Bot. 
Suss. M. sativa, B. rubra, is found in several localities. 
*Thymus Serpyllum, L. T. Chamedrys, Fr., is much the commoner 
species in the county, but this is also frequent in the Downs. 
? Ajuga Chamepitys, Schreb. The following is the only indication 
of its growing in the county :—Cornfields about Tunbridge Wells, 
Forster. “ Not in Sussex," J. Woods, Borrer manuscript notes. 
? Marrubium vulgare, L. Found in several places, but always the 
remains of or near cultivation. 
? Myosotis sylvatica, Ehrh. The late Mr. Borrer never met with 
this in the county, and believed the plant, so called by Mr. Trimen, to 
be the large-flowered variety of M. arvensis; but Mr. Trimen assures 
me that it is the true plant which he collected, and still has a specimen 
of, and that he found it in several small copses in the parish of Warn- 
ham. In the late Dr. Bromfield's manuscript notes I find the following 
observation :—“ I saw a specimen of Myosotis sylvatica, found by Dr. 
Harward, near Hastings." I have not met with it myself, but I do 
not hesitate to include it on Mr. Trimen's authority. 
Ballota ruderalis, L. Given by Watson, without doubt, as a native 
of Sussex, but I have only seen B. aida, and Borrer's specimens are 
the latter. 
? Symphytum tuberosum, L. This is only known from the neigh- 
bourhood of Slinfold Parsonage, where so many aliens are found. 
? Anchusa sempervirens, L. “ Plentifully on a bank between Lewes 
and Southoven, Mr. Woollgar," Herb. Borrer. 'This is the only 
