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401. 
419. 
419. 
A466. 
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478. 
482. 
on perpendicular walls of rock, mostly inaccessible. TI could 
reach one root only. 
Geranium sylvaticum. By Coniston Water: W.B. Although, 
my attention not having been called to it, [ do not recollect 
it, 1 suspect it is frequent in that part of Lancashire, as it is 
in the valleys of the rest of the Lake district. 
Fragaria elatior. Several years ago, the landlord of the 
High-Force Inn, Teesdale (Mr. Scott, I think), a person well 
acquainted with the plants of his district, showed me there a 
tall variety of F. vesca, not of rare occurrence elsewhere, as 
F. elatior of Baines’s ‘ Yorkshire Flora.’ 
Agrimonia odorata. Start Point, Devon; near Gwithian, 
Cornwall, Mr. Joseph Woods, who has given me a specimen. 
Rosa hibernica. Cumberland, decidedly native. Between 
Buttermere and Scale Hill, a single bush observed, 1845; 
hedges near Lorton, 1853: W. B. 
. Polycarpon tetraphyllum. I gathered this, a few years ago, 
on the Neck of Portland. 
Sedum turgidum, DeC. I see reason to doubt the accuracy 
of my former idea of this plant, having received from the 
Kew garden a living specimen, so named, with much more 
turgid leaves, and more rounded petals, than the plant af our 
Sussex villages. This I am now inclined to regard as a 
rather enlarged form of S. micranthum, Haw.; still sup- 
posing it distinct from the Malvern S. album (Haworth’s 8. 
teretifolium). 
Menziesia cerulea. I wrote “among the heath and crow- 
berry” (Empetrum nigrum). The misprint is scarcely worth 
correcting, as it is very probable that the Scotch “ cranberry” 
(Vaccinium Vitis-Idea) grows there too, though I do not 
recollect it. 
Pyrola minor. Mr. Reeves and another friend have sent me 
this from the neighbourhood of Canterbury. 
Thymus Serpyllum and T. Chamedrys. Mr. Babington, in 
statements now before the public, recognizes both these 
plants as British. I have found both widely distributed, but 
am inclined to think 'T. Serpyllum the more general of the 
two. 
Galeopsis versicolor. I must have omitted from inadvertence 
to mark this as a Sussex plant. I have met with it, however, 
