989 



Centaurea nigra and Scahiosa. 



Cijanus. Corn-fields at the lop of Cookham down &c. 



Arctium Lappa and minus. By road-sides. 



Onopordum Acanthium. At the corner of the village of Hurley, 

 where the road to the mill turns off. 



Carduus nutatis. Winter hill and Cookham down, abundantly. 

 ■ acanthoides, lanceolatus and arvensis. Frequent. 



palustris. Frequent by the side of ditches and wet places 



generally. 



Silyhum Marianum. By the left hand side of the Little Marlow 

 road where the lane before mentioned turns off, beyond Little Marlow; 

 also further on, near the little village on the same road. 



Lapsana cominunis. Common in dry situations. 



Cichorium Intyhus. By road-sides. 



Hypochceris radicata. 



Tragopogon .? In wet meadows. 



Pier is hieracioides. 



Lactucn muralis. Bisham wood &c. 



Barkhausia fcetida. This plant, which formerly grew, though very 

 sparingly, in Bisham wood, does not appear to grow there any longer, 

 but it occurs in the waste ground on the north side of the Great West- 

 em railway, close to the Maidenhead station, though but sparingly. 

 It may easily be distinguished in any state by its root, which has a 

 powerful smell of bitter almonds. 



Crepis virens. Everywhere. 



Sonchus oleraceus and arvensis. There were two specimens of the 

 former growing in a wet hollow at the top of Bisham wood, of an 

 enormous size ; I should think they were at least eight feet high, and 

 were proportionally large in all their parts. 



Hieracium Pilosella. On dry banks. 



Jasione montana. 



Campanula glomerata. Meadows by the river between the town 

 and Bisham wood, very abundantly; also very fine in the wood to the 

 right of the Maidenhead road, on the first ascent. 



Trachelium. Woods, frequent. 



roiundifolia. Dry places, frequent. 



patula. At the top of a lane which turns out of the 



Henley road on the right, opposite Medmenham church. 



Specularia hyhrida. Abundantly in a corn-field through which 

 the path passes which enters the town at the Crown inn ; also spar- 

 ingly on a wall at the village of Hurley. 



