1861.] FOLKESTONE, AND SANDGATE. 43 



gay with it, all through the month of May ; also on the old walls 

 of the Priory Farm. 



Barbarea vulgaris. Copse and fields near Waldershare church. 

 — By no means so stout and coarse, nor of such dark green leaves, 

 as my Meuse specimens, owing probably to difference ot soil and 

 situation. Our Belgian plant is abundant on the dry, sunny 

 limestone rocks along the valley of the Meuse. 



Barbarea prcecox. In a field at the back of Charlton, and on 

 the Folkestone clifis. 



Arabis hirsuta. Borders of cornfields, and on the East Clifi", 



Brassica oleracea. Cliff's, East and West. 



Brassica campestris. Fallow fields. 



Sinapis nigra. Folkestone cliffs, where it quite replaced the 

 Chcirlock. — We searched for it in vain on the chalk, round 

 Dover. 



Diplotaxis tenuifolia, D. muralis. Both frequent on the East 

 and West Cliff's. 



Lepidium Draba. On the Cliff' at Folkestone, and on the left 

 bank of the road, near the turnpike. 



Senebiera Coronopus. Roadsides, and along the Parade. 



Crarnbe maritima. On the beach at Walmer. — There was a 

 little wooden hut near, with an enclosure in which there were 

 some plants of the Kale. But whether this sort of garden had 

 been made to secure the Kale, or whether those on the beach 

 were an escape from it, I cannot say. 



Raphanus Raphanistrum. Cornfields on the Folkestone road. 



PAPAVERACEiE. 



Pupaver somniferum. I give this on the authority of the young 

 relative who accompanied me in all my excursions, and who wrote 

 rae that she had discovered it, after I left, in walking from Dover 

 to Folkestone, by the beach. I am unable to give the exact 

 spot.* 



Glaucium luteum. All along the coast, from Folkestone to 

 Walmer, where it is particularly abundant, growing quite to the 

 water's edge. 



* The locality, or rather, the unusual station for this plant, is beyond Lydden 

 Spout, on the way from the houses on the cliff. The place is generally known by 

 the name of East Wear Bay. We particularly noticed this as a good lesson in 

 botanical geography. 



