1861.] FOLKESTONE, AND SANDGATE. 41 



Rubia peregrina. Among stones lying between the waste 

 ground already alluded to and the beach, several patches of it, 

 just coming into bloom. 



CAPRIFOLIACE^. 



Viburnum Lantana. Hedges and copses. 

 Sambucus Ebuhis. In the interior (at the back of the farms) 

 of St. Radigund's Abbey. 



Lonicera Periclymenum. Common. 



ARALIACE^. 



Adoxa MoschateUina. Frequent. 



UMBELLIFERiE. 



Sanicula europaa. Plentiful in all the copses. 



Pimpinella magna. Guston and West Langdon, 



PimpineUa Saxifraga. East Cliff. 



Bunium flexuosum. Combe Wood. 



Fceniculum officinale. One tuft on the St. Margaret's road ; in 

 greater quantity on the Folkestone cliffs, not in bloom, but un- 

 mistakable from its aromatic odour. 



Crithmum maritimum. Dover cliffs, forming in places little 

 plantations. 



Angelica sylvestris. Coombe Wood, and other shady places. 



Pastinaca saliva. Borders of fields. 



Daucus Carota. Most luxuriant on the East Cliff. I did not 

 observe D. maritimus, which I had found on the rocks at Tor- 

 quay. 



Torilis nodosa. On a bank near the turnpike between Folke- 

 stone and Sandgate ; also to the right of the road from the Arch 

 Cliff Fort to Shakspeare's Cliff. 



Petroselinum segetum. Cornfields on the St. Margaret's road. 

 — We only found two plants, but, had time permitted, further 

 search in the same direction would probably have led to the 

 discovery of more. 



Smyrnium Olusatrum. One of the commonest weeds on the 

 chalk round Dover. — It was coming into flower by the second 

 week in May, and the last was an unusually backward spring, so 

 I should think June, in ordinary years, would be late for it. 



Of the Rose family I only found the common genera and spe- 



N. S. VOL. V. 6 



