336 M'ANDswoRTH PLANTS. [Novembcr, 



Boraginacece. — Asperugo procumbens, Echium violaceum ?, 

 Lithospermum arvense. 



Solanace<s. — Datura '&>trdiVCiOimVim,Hyoscyamus albus, H. niger? 



Scrophulariace(B. — Veronica Buxbaumii. 



LahiatcB. — Galeojjsis bifida, Bosnmg; G. versicolor; Salvia 

 viridis, Linn. ; Verbena supina, L. ? 



Primulacece . — Anagallis coerulea. 



Chenopodiacea. — Clienopodium opulifolium, Schrad. ; C. fici- 

 folium^ C. glaucum, sparingly at Battersea ; C. murale, etc., 

 Blitum virgatum. 



Amaranthaceoe. — Amaranthus Blitum, A. retroflexus. 



Plantaginacece. — Plantago Lagopus, P. arenaria. 



Ui'ticacea. — Urtica pilulifera, Cannabis sativa. 



Gramineae. — Bromus diandrus, Curt. ; B. arvensis, Linn. ; B. 

 patulus, B. tectorum, B. scoparius ?, ^Egilops ovata, Lolium 

 italicum, L. linicula, L. temulentum, with var. arvense, Cyno- 

 surus echinatus, Poa sudetica (Chelsea), Phalaris canariensis, P. 

 paradowa, Setaria \dridis, Polypogon monspeliensis, Panicum 

 Crus-galli, at Battersea, plentiful for many years ; Crypsis acu- 

 leata?, at Battersea; Digitaria ciliaris [Panicum ciliare, Retz), 

 and other undetermined species of this genus. 



This list does not contain the names of all the species col- 

 lected in the above-named localities. Several of the memoranda 

 of plants noticed have been mislaid or forgotten. Some of the 

 species could not be satisfactorily determined by comparison with 

 authentic specimens in the herbaria of the Linnsean Society and 

 of the British Museum. Most of them are in my own private 

 collection, but not all ; for one or two parcels were sent to Kew 

 to be compared with the specimens in the herbaria of that mag- 

 nificent collection, and these were never returned. A few were 

 sent to the Botanical Society of London, and were dispersed 

 when the plants and effects of the Society were sold. 



The list, such as it is, is submitted as the most complete that 

 can be compiled at this remote period ; for it is now nearly ten 

 years since the observations were first made. 



The notice of these plants is ofiered to the readers of the 

 ' Phytologist ' in consequence of a suggestion made by some of 

 the more zealous supporters of the Magazine, that a precis, or 

 a synopsis, of the discoveries of the year, should be printed at 

 the close of the volume, so as to give a connected outline of 



