CORRESPONDENCE OF RAY. 215 



grant, and creeping upon the ground, and nothing diffe- 

 rent, but in those very accidents of flowering, from that 

 which grows trailing on our commons, which, however 

 erroneously styled vulgar., yet in reality is the Roman, or 

 noble sort of Chanwem. But that which ordinarily goes 

 under the name of Cotula fcetida fl. plen., which I once 

 found in some plenty on the high road from London to 

 Barnet, about half a mile short of the town, is both 

 upright in its stalk, and of no scent at all ; and this I 

 dare pronounce to be the double of the Chamam. arvor. 

 vulff., which I take also to be different from the Cotula 

 fcetida Dod. [Anthemis Cotula, Linn.], or Chamam. 

 inodon^ C. B. P., of which sort I never yet beheld any 

 with a double flower. I must needs own that Dr. 

 Morison, in ' Praslud/ 249, relating there how frequently 

 this CotuL inod. sem. nigr. did occur to him upon the 

 coasts of Bretagne, in Trance, assigns our doable flower- 

 ing to a variety of this, assuring it also to produce seed 

 of a like hue. I will not question the doctor's seeing the 

 seed (though double-flowering plants seldom bear any), 

 because he seems to be very positive in it ; nor indeed 

 was I ever so curious to observe it, not having seen a 

 growing plant for above these twenty years, and so am 

 ignorant of its colour ; but the mien and air, the total 

 habit of this multiplex kind, of which I still retain a firm 

 idea in my mind the lower stature of it, though upright, 

 the brisk and vivid colour of its leaves, the fewer branch- 

 ings of its stalk, the lesser compass of its double flowers, 

 and shorter lengths of its fine-cut leaves in all which 

 the Chamcem. vulg. differs from the Cotula inodora, which 

 bespeak it to appertain rather to the former ; of which 

 in my Catalogue I have made it a more immediate 

 variety. 



Page 61. There is a Livnonium minus \Jttatice spathu- 

 lata, Desf.J said to grow with us in the north of Eng- 

 land, and which I have observed in gardens : perhaps the 

 same sort that Parkinson asserts Lobel to have found 

 about Colchester. The most peculiarity that I could 



