1135 



Bryonia dioica. Frequent about Selborne. Rhynchospora alba. Short-heath. 



Jasione montana. In the Lith, at Wolmer Juncus squarrosus. Wolmer-forest, and 



and Short-heath. Short-heath. 



Conyza squarrosa. Week-hill hangei'. Scirpus sylvaticus. By the bridge at Oak- 



Prenanthes muralis. Rocky lanes, very co. hanger, and in a swamp at the foot of 



Hieracium sylvaticum. Wolmer-forest & Week-hill hanger. 



rocky lanes about Selborne. Poa nemoralis. In a bank between Week- 



umbellatum. Rocky lane near hill farm and the Hanger. 



the Grange. Lastraa multifiora. Diy ditch at Wolmer 



Fedia dentata. Nore hill. Polystichum aculeatwn. Honey-lane and 



Veronica Anagallis and scutellata. Short- near Emshot, 



heath. ■ angulare. Honey-lane and 



Scutellaria minor. Wolmer-forest. near Emshot, sparingly. 



Lycopus europceus. Near Temple. Athyrium Filix-fcemina. In a shady dell 



Mentha sylvestris. In the Lith. near Emshot-church. 



Polygonum minus. Short-heath. var. molle. In a 



Littorella lacustris. Wolmer-forest and dry ditch at Wolmer-forest. 



Short-heath. Lycopodium inundatum. Short-heath 



I have not mentioned in this Hst so common a plant as Calluna vul- 

 garis, but it worth noticing that the greater part of this plant, which 

 abounds at Wolmer, is of the most hairy form. 



We did not at Wolmer see any of the Vaccinium Oxycoccos, men- 

 tioned by White as growing there, but it must be tolerably abimdant 

 in some parts, as we met a poor woman with a handkerchief full, 

 which she had collected for tarts. 



The Epilobium angustifolium mentioned above must, a little earlier 

 in the season, be a very great ornament, as it grows very tall, and in 

 great profusion. Epilobium roseum was growing in a rather unusual 

 kind of locality. I had never before seen it except in cultivated 

 ground, and, with the exception of one garden at Salisbury, never far 

 from London. In the present instances it was growing in loose sand, 

 by the side of running water, in very considerable abundance. The 

 flowers were unusually pale and little expanded, and what was fur- 

 ther noticeable, it was always growing with E. parviflorum, of intense 

 colour. 



The Sambucus Ebulus growing in the park, could not have been 

 growing there in White's time, as he mentions the plant in his cata- 

 logue, but not as growing so near him. It might possibly have been 

 planted by him. 



White speaks of the lanes as abounding in ferns ; my impression 

 was decidedly the reverse. It is remarkable that Polystichum acule- 

 atum and P. angulare were generally growing together, but both in 



