?94 OUTLINES OF P.KITISH FUXGOLOGY. 



57. C. (Myxaciumj pluvius, Fr. ; pileus i-1 iu., pale 

 yellow-tawny wheu moist, opaque ocbrey-tau when dry, 

 slightly fleshy, at first somewhat globose, then convex, 

 gibbous, at length pellucid-striate, hygrophanous, viscid and 

 shining in rainy weather; iiesh thin, same colour; stem 

 elongated, stufted, then hollow, soft, equal or slightly 

 attenuated upwards, even, naked or obsoletely viscid, with 

 whiter silky spots ; cortina w^iite and fibrillose, slightly 

 covered with slime, fugacious ; gills adnexed, separating., 

 ventricose, crowded, light yellowish, or at first whitish, then 

 ochraceous. 



In woods. Lea, Gainsborough. Glamis. 



Subgenus 3. — Ixoloma (p. 1<S7). 

 * Gills at first white or jxdlid. 



58. C. (Inoloma) argentatus, Fi'. ; pileus 4 in., silvery- 

 shining, disc becoming pale, at first silky-lilac at margin, 

 then dun, fleshy, convexo-plane, at length gibbous, silky- 

 even, becoming smooth; flesh whitish; stem solid, attenu- 

 ated from the base, smooth, white, at length yellow at base, 

 internally white; cortina fibrillose, fugacious, adhering to 

 margin of pileus, pallid ; gills emarginate, crowded, slightly 

 serrated, pallid, then watery-cinnamon. 



In woods. Epping Forest. 



Vai'. pinetorum, Cke. ; smaller and more graceful. 



Pine woods. 



** Gills as well as the veil and stem violaceo7is. 



59. C. (Inoloma) violaceus, Fr. (p. 187) ; 3-0 in. Epping 

 Forest. 



60. C. (Inoloma) cyanites, Fr. ; pileus 3-5 in., dark 

 blue, then pallid azure-blue or livid-fuscous, fleshy, soft. 



