386 CALENDAR, 1819. 



Southern parts of Sussex also they are much cultivated. 

 Cnicits lanceolatus, Cnicus arvensis, and C. palimtris in full 

 blow every where. 



30th. Weather hot and dry, with S. and E. Winds. 

 Thermometer in the shade 76. To-day M. Thomas F. 

 Forster found Buxbaumia foliosa ut Harrison's Rocks. The 

 plant suspected to be Droscra Anglica, growing near Forest 

 Row, turns out to be Droscra longifolia. 



31st. Very hot day. Papaver rhacas (sown only in 

 June) now in full flower in my garden. P. somniferum still 

 flowers here and there. The generality of them are in 

 capsule. 



Inula dytenterica is now abundantly in flower near Cowden, 

 and elsewhere. 



Hieracium sabaudum also in bloom. 



AUG. 1st. Apargia autitmnalis in blow to-day. I found 

 Epilobium roseum and E. palustre by the river side. . 

 Irirsulum and E. tetragonum are also in flower. 



2d. Linum angustifolium in blow by the side of the lane 

 at Perry Hill, where it grows of a great size. Apricots and 

 Plums begin to be common. 



3d. The misty mornings begin to indicate autumn. The 

 Mouse Ear Hawkweed H. Pilosella in blow a second time. 

 This plant has generally a second flowering in autumn, 

 after having previously gone out of flower. 



The Sedum Forsterianum still in blow. This plant has 

 accidentally been omitted in Withering's Bot. Arrang. It 

 was found first by M. Edward Forster, at Pont y Mynach, 

 called the Devil's Bridge, in Wales, in 1805. 



We discovered to-day, on a bank near Forest Row, an 

 apparently new species of Hieracium. It grew close by 

 H. sabaudum and H. umbellatiim ; but though it resembled 



