36 KAMBLES BOUND FOLKESTONE. 



the Black Nightshade (8. niyrum) occurring on road 

 sides, and in waste places. Lychun Barbarum seems 

 naturalized, but the Thorn Apple (Datura Stramonium} 

 has not appeared. I should think it probable that 

 Belladonna may exist in some of the woods. 



By the side of this pond, years ago, I found my 

 first specimen of the rare Spider Orchis (Ophrys 

 arachnites], but it has vanished again, and though 

 the Bee is not at all uncommon, i doubt if the Late 

 Spider occurs now in the Warren. The Early Spider 

 (0. arani/era) is plentiful. From hence all along the 

 seaward side of the railway the ground is excessively 

 rough and broken from the results of yearly landslips, 

 but it is picturesquely clothed with shrubs, notable 

 among which is the Sea Buckthorn (Ilip-pophae 

 rhamnoides) plentiful here as along the Lower 

 Sandgate Road. All over the chalky slopes grows 

 the Yellow Horned Poppy (Glaucium lute-uni), and in 

 one or two spots Papaver somniferum. The Bose-bay 

 Willow-herb (Epilobium anyusti/olium} fills at least 

 one hollow, and the slopes are gay with the tall 

 spikes of the Viper's Bugloss (Ecltium vulgare) rising 

 amidst masses of Mignonette (Reseda lutea), Weld 

 (R. luteola), and the Wood Sage (Teucrium Scorodonia); 

 the Purple Iris (Iris fatidissima) is very abundant, 

 and less so the Hound's Tongue (Cynoglossum 

 offidnale). 



To the entomologist I may say that out of the 

 grass in June and July we may rouse the little Venilia 

 maculata or a male of the Clouded Buff (Euthemonia 

 russula) ; on the docks there is a good chance of S. 

 ckrysidiforme ; Mi and Glyphica are spinning about 

 among the herbage, while the scarlet wings of the 



