CORTINARIUS. 113 



slender and doubtful. The Scotch specimens, if true, were 

 by no means typical. (Cooke.) 



Cortinarius (Phleg.) emollitus. Fr. 



Pileus 3-4 in. across, fleshy, lax, rather wavy, minutely 

 fibrilloso - virgate, viscid, tawny, ochracoous - yellow and 

 shining when dry, margin thin, incurved; stem H-2 in. 

 long, | in. and more thick, stuffed, unequal, scarcely bulbous, 

 often compressed, fibrillose, soft, white then tinged yellow, 

 veil fugacious; gills emarginate, up to | in. broad, rather 

 distant, smooth, soft, white then ochraceous. 



Cortinarius (PJilegmarium) emollitus, Fries, Epicr., p. 269 ; 

 Cke., Hdbk., p. 246 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 727. 



Amongst grass in beech woods, &c. 



Often caespitose, very variable, but very distinct from 

 neighbouring species iu the acrid taste ; snow-white very 

 soft flesh ; soft, imperfectly hollow stem ; somewhat deformed 

 pileus, and rather distant gills. 



A small form occurs with a slender stem, pileus plane, 

 fragile. 



Cortinarius (Phleg.) cristallinus. Fr. 



Pileus about 3 in. across, equally fleshy, but thin, expanded, 

 glabrous, viscid, shining, hygrophanous, disc watery-pallid, 

 towards the margin silvery-white, shining, when dry entirely 

 whitish ; gills emarginate, thin, 3 lines broad, crowded, tan- 

 -colour ; stem 3 in. long, 4 lines thick, hollow or attenuated 

 at the base, fragile, fibrillose, whitish straw-colour ; spores 

 8 x 4/z. 



Cortinarius (Plilegmacium) crislallinus, Fries, Monogr., i. 

 p. 30 ; Cke., Hdbk., p. 246 ; Cke., Illustr., pi. 728. 



In mixed woods, amongst leaves. 



Taste very acrid. A form occurs having the pileus yel- 

 lowish-white, stem slightly viscid, gills rather decurrent. 

 (Fries.) 



Cortinarius (Phleg.) decoloratus. Fr. 

 Pileus 2-4 in. across, flesh thin, equal, campanulate then 

 convex, obtuse, soft, glabrous, tan-colour, disc darkest, corru- 

 gated when old, viscid ; gills emarginate, adnate, or decur- 

 rent, depending on the situation and mode of growth, slightly 

 crowded, 3 lines broad, tan-colour then cinnamon ; stein 



VOL. II. 1 



