184 OUTLINES OF BUITISII FUNGOLOGY. 



3. C. (Phlegmacivim) cyanopus, Fr. ; pilcus fleshy, liemi- 

 sphericalj flattened, even, viscid ; margin thin, smooth, of the 

 same colour; flesh dirty-white; stem solid, violet, then white, 

 naked above the thin veil ; bulb depressed, oblique ; gills ad- 

 nate, emarginate, broad, rather crowded, violet, turning pallid. 

 —Soiv. t. 223. 



In woods. Pilcus livid-brown, then tan. 



4. C. (Phlegmacium) anfractus, Fr. ; pilcus fleshy, unequal, 

 deeply plicate and undulated, viscid, shining when dry ; stem 

 stufied, unequal, closely flbrillose, violet above and veiled ; gills 

 arcuate, affixed, crisped, rather distant, dingy-olive, then cin- 

 namon. 



In woods. Hare. King's Cliffc. Pileus several inches 

 across, deep-bay in my specimens, which I have named after 

 a drawing sent me by Fries. The gills, however, are rather 

 emarginate than arcuato-afiixed, and the whole plant, when 

 young, is covered with a white volva. Stem very thick and 

 bulbous at the base. In outward form the two are identical. 



5. C. (Phlegmacium) multiformis, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, con- 

 vex, expanded, equal, smooth, viscid ; flesh and fugacious veil 

 white ; stem solid, attenuated, closely flbrillose, white, changing 

 to yellow ; bulb somewhat margined ; gills emarginate, crowded, 

 serrated, dirty-white, then clay- coloured, inclining to cinna- 

 mon. — Soiv. t. 102. 



In woods. Rare. Pileus yellowish. I have seen the bulb 

 so margined as to give the impression of a volva like that of 

 Ag, pantJieriiins. 



6. C. (Phlegmacium) glaucopus, Fr. ; pilcus compact, ex- 

 panded, subrepand, viscid, then floccoso-squamose or flbril- 

 lose ; flesh at length yellowish ; stem stout, solid, striate, 

 bluish, then yellowish, margined below; gills emarginate, 

 broad, blue, then clay-coloured, inclining to cinnamon. — Huss. 



