192 OUTLINES OF BlllTISil FUNGOLOGV. 



changing to reddisli-white, at length fibrillose and torn ; stem 

 stoxit, cylindrical, soft, violet, scaly from the remains of the 

 white veil ; gills adnate, very broad, distant, violet, inclining 

 to pnrple. — Soio. t. 125. 



In woods. Not uncommon. 



36. C. (Telamonia) armillatus, Fr. ; pilcus fleshy, campa- 

 nulate, then expanded, innato-fibrillose and scaly, torn, bright 

 red-brown ; margin thin ; stem solid, elongated, bulbous, fi- 

 brillose, reddish, girt Avith a red zone ; gills fixed, very broad, 

 distant, pallid, then dark-cinnamon. — Huss. i. /. 19; Bull, 

 t. 527./. 1. 



In woods. Uncommon. A large species, remarkable for 

 the blood-red zone on the stem. Mrs. Husscy's plant is the 

 same with Bulliard's, and both seem to me to belong to this 

 species. 



37. C. (Telamonia) limonius, Fr. ; pileus fleshy, convcxo- 

 plane, obtuse, smooth, tawny, at length rimuloso-squamulose; 

 stem solid, firm, equal, of the same colour, as well as the 

 floccoso-squamose veil ; gills adnate and emarginate, rather 

 distant, yellow, then tawny-cinnamon. — Holmsk. ii. t 40. 



In pine-woods. Scottish Highlands, Klotzsch. 



38. C. (Telamonia) hinnuleus, Fr. ; pileus carnoso-mem- 

 branaceous, conico-campanulate, then expanded, subumbonate, 

 smooth, pale tawny-cinnamon, at length pierced ; stem stuffed, 

 rigid, tawny, attenuated downwards, girt above with the white 

 silky veil; gills subemarginate, distant, broad, then tawny- 

 cinnamon, quite entire. — Sow. t. 173. 



In woods. Extremely common. This is said to be distin- 

 guished from C. geniilis by its white veil, but I fear this 

 character is not constant. 



39. C. (Telamonia) brunneus, Fr. ; pilcus campanulate, 

 flattened out, luuber, nfiked, broken up into iiniatc fibrils near 



