224 BOTANICAL NOTES, NOTICES, AND QUERIES. [July. 



lo be marked, as it is now six years since I first found it there, and it has 

 increased to such an extent, that the banks on both sides of the lane, for 

 nearly half a mile, are covered with large patches of it. I shall be 

 happy to send you some fresh specimens of it per post, should you like any. 



Hampden Gr. Glasspoole. 



Dentaria bulbifera. New Station in Sussex, 

 I have much pleasure in recording what I believe to be a new locality 

 for this plant. It grows al)undantly in small copses in the parishes of 

 Warnhara and Kusper (Sussex), near Horsham, where T gathered speci- 

 mens on April 25th, at which date only one or two specimens were in 

 flower. It appears to like copses recently cleared of underwood, and I 

 have little doubt that it is abundant in the neighbourhood. I am not sure 

 whether some of the copses where I saw it were not in Surrey (parish of 

 Capel). I hope soon to get specimens, and in an advanced state. 



In the same locality I have noticed a few other good plants, such as, 

 Hellebo?'us vh'idis, Vinca minor , Daphne Laureola, Galium tricorne,Bupleu- 

 rum rotundifoUum, Hypericum Audrosfemum, Myosotis sylvatica, Habe- 

 naria cldoranlha, Clieuopudium polyspernium, OpJdoglossum vulgatum. 



The soil is the weald clay, and all the land is cultivated except a few 

 small woods. Henry Trimen. 



Allium ambiguum, or A. trigiuetrum, in Ireland. 



A series of Irish Ferns were some years ago sent me from the neighbour- 

 hood of Fermoy, and among them a number of Polypods, which were 

 planted in several parts of my fernery, and in two places the AlUnm gi-ew 

 up close to the Hil)ernian species of Poly podium. As it did not appear 

 prior to the planting of the Irish ferns, and grew in juxtaposition to two of 

 them, I infer that either the bulbs or the seeds reached Enfield in the 

 mould about the roots of the Polypody. 



I remember that my son, who sent the Ferns, said that there were many 

 wild flowers in that locality which he did not recognize, and possibly the 

 plant in question was one of the number. The locality is by a stream of 

 water, near Fermoy. M. A. Walker. 



Chase Cottage, Enfield, May 2Qth, 1862. 



Communications have been received from 

 Walter Gait ; Hampden G. Glasspoole; W. Pamplin ; M. A. Walker; 

 Mrs. E. Walker ; John Sim; H. C.; C. J. Ashfield ; H. Beislv ; H. 

 Trimen; G. B. WoUaston ; Dr. Prior; E. C. A. P. ; Mrs. Merrifield; 

 W.Ashley; W. P. ; E. B. Pen fold ; S. Beisly ; E. B.P.; The Eight 

 Hon. the Earl of Ilchester; Berthold Seemanu, Ph.D., etc. ; W. Winter, 



RECEIVED FOR REVIEW, 



CJiardons Nanciens, ou Prodrome d'un Catalogue des Plantes de la Lor- 

 raine, par le Docteur Hussenot. 



MS. Magazine of the Glasgow Naturalists' Society, Vol. II, 



Preston Chronicle, May 'iWi. 



Notes on Books. 



Canadian Naturalist and Geologist. 



