799 



Fedia carinata and auricula. Fields. 

 Stachys germanica. Borders. 



annua. Fields. 



recta. 



Leouurus Cardiaca. 



Ajuga genevensis. Sandy ground 

 Teucrium Botrys. Fields. 



Chamiedrys. Slopes & banks. 



Centuuculus minimus. Moist sandy 



ground. 

 Statice Plautaginea. Sand. 

 Plantago arenaria. Ditto. 

 Amaranthus sylvestris, Blitum & retro- 



flesus. Waste ground. 

 Chenopodium glaucum. Ditto. 



hybridum. 



Atriplex oppositifolia and hortensis, /3, 



microsperma. 

 Rumex maritimus 

 Polygonum mite and dumetorum. 

 Aristolocbia Clematitis. 

 Euphorbia stricta. Fields. 



- dulcis. Woods. 



Gevardiana. Dry woods. 



Cyparissias. Banks &c. 



Salix hippopbaefolia. 



Alisma Damasonium. 



Naias major. 



Orchis fusca, Jacq. Woods. 



laxiflora. Moist meadows. 



Orchis chlorantha. 

 Lamium incisum and maculatum. 

 Ophrys aranifera, 6; arachnites, 7,8. 

 Asparagus officinalis. Sandy woods. 

 Convallaria Polygonatum and multiflora. 



Woods, 5. 

 Ornithogalum pyrenaicura . Wdy. slopes. 



umbellatum. Fields. 



Scilla autumnalis. Sandy woods. 

 Allium sphsrocephalum. 



oleraceum. Cultivated. 



Muscari comosum and racemosura. 

 Juncus Tenageia. Moist sandy places. 

 Cyperus fuscus. 

 Heleocharis uniglumis and acicularis. 



Marshy edges of ponds. 

 Carex tomentosa. 

 Cynodon Daclylon. 

 Digitaria sanguinalis. 

 Panicum Crus-galli. 

 Setaria verticillata and viridis. 

 Phleum Boehmeri. 

 Knappia minima. 

 Aira uliginosa, only two places quoted, 



perhaps the C is an error. 



canescens. Sandy banks. 



Poa bulbosa. 



Bromus arvensis. Banks. 



tectorura. Walls and banks. 



Cbara flexilis and translucens. 



My first excursion was to Charenton, on the 17tli of June, and I 

 visited that place again on the 23rd of July, in company with M. de 

 Jussieu and his party, but in the latter case it was very wet weather. 

 Taking the voiture for Charenton, the botanist will get out at the 

 bridge, and crossing it, will proceed to that over the Seine, whicli he 

 will not cross. A little above this, on the right bank of the Seine, I 

 gathered Sisymbrium supinum, a plant which was much more plenti- 

 ful formerly than it is at present, the efforts of Parisian botanists hav- 

 ing nearly succeeded in destroying it. He will then return and cross 

 the Marne in a boat, just above the bridge, to one of the islands, and 

 ascend the river : here, however, I obtained nothing but luula britau- 

 nica. On leaving the shore, the bank on the left of the road furnished 

 Anchusa italica and Orobanche amethystea; but before this the great- 

 er part of the company were driven back by the rain. I proceeded 



