54 FLOWERING PLANTS. 



near the Little Barn, Gawdy Hall North Lodge (Mrs. J. 

 Sancroft Holmes), F. It is not cultivated in gardens, 

 and the locality appears natural. Cf. Introd., p. 26. 



S. noctiflora, L. Night-flowering Catch-fly. 7, 8. Frequent 

 on the clay : cultivated fields, Dickleburgh, Shinipling, F ; 

 St. Margaret's (EAH). Earsham ; Shelton (T). 



LYCHNIS, L. 



L. alba, Mill. (L. vespertina, Sibth.). White, Campion. 

 6 10. Common in cultivated fields. 



L. diurna, Sibth. Red Campion. 5 9. Common in bushy 

 places and hedge-banks. Popular name Robin Hood. 



L. Flos-CUCllli, L. Meadow Campion. 5 8. Common in 



meadows and damp places. Popular name Ragged 



Robin. This is the true Cuckoo Flower, as its name 

 implies. 



L. Githago, Lam. (Agrostemma Githago, L.). Corn Cockle. 

 6 8. Abundant in corn-fields. 



HOLOSTEUM, L. 



H. umbellatum, L. Umbelliferous Chickweed. 3, 4. Very 

 rare : sparingly on the ruins of Hoxne Abbey (JC, 1883). 

 It has long been recorded for the neighbouring parish of 

 Eye, but is rapidly disappearing from Norfolk and Suffolk, 

 its only British habitats. 



CERASTIUM, L. 



C. quaternellum, Fenzl. (Moenchia erecta, Sin.). Upright 

 Mouse-ear Chickweed. 5 8. Rare : in a dry pasture 

 adjoining Homersfield Heath, F. 



C. semidecandrum, ' L. Little Mouse-ear Chickweed. 4, 5. 

 Frequent on dry banks : Well's Lane, Harleston ; below 

 Homersfield Church ; Dickleburgh. 



C. glomeratum, Thuill. ^Broad-leaded Mouse-ear Chickweed. 

 3 9. Common on dry banks. Included under C. 

 vulgatum, L. 



C. triviale, Link. (C. viscosum, Sm.). Narrow-leaved Mouse- 

 ear Chickweed. 4 10. Common on dry banks and waste 

 places. Included under C. vulgatum, L. 



