APRIL 77 



HEKBS continued. 



Primrose (some species, in- 

 cluding P. japonica, but 

 none of the Auricula section). 



Iris (all the ' flag ' species). 



Anemone (probably all species). 



Crowfoot and Buttercup 

 (several species, including 

 Trollius, but not the pretty 

 white Ranunculus amplexi- 

 caulis). 



London Pride, and many 

 other kinds of Saxifrage, 

 but not the Crassifolia 

 section. 



Lungwort, .... Pulmonaria mollis. 



Periwinkle, both the large 

 and the small. 



Monkshood, . . . Aconitum napellus. 



Winter Aconite, . . . Eranthis hyemalis. 



Harebell (many species, espe- 

 cially the Giant Harebell, 

 Campanula grandis). 



Violets, foxgloves, asters (Michaelmas daisies), mul- 

 leins, several kinds of geranium, New Zealand flax, 

 Pampas grass, and all ferns and terrestrial orchids. 



XXXIV 



To return to the subject of vegetable poisons the 

 vastness of this field of inquiry may be realised best by 

 considering some of the commonest pheno- vegetable 

 mena of the hillside and hedgerow. All Poisons 

 through the coming summer, plants and trees, stimu- 



