Lee: first supplement to flora of dewsbury. 259 



of West Yorkshire,' p. 378. Not indigenous here and 

 probably introduced, if it does not refer to (953) 

 Lysiinachia nevioruui. 

 957. Anagallis arvensis var. caerulea Schreb. The rare 

 form of the Pimpernel with bright blue flowers. Mr. 

 AV. Smith, an old resident at Dewsbury Moor, informs 

 me that some years ago he used to see it in corn-fields 

 there occasionally. It may have been only the arvensis 

 var. pallida with white corolla and purple eye, some- 

 times observed. The more erect carulea is very rare. 



989. Anchusa sempervirens L. Evergreen Alkanet. 



' Gomersal, by roadside; J. Emmet.' See 'The 

 Flora of West Yorkshire,' p. 370. 



990. A. arvensis Biel. Small Bugloss. AVaste ground, Hor- 



bury Bridge (G. W. Parker). A colonist, only 

 observed here during the hot summer of 1887. 



To follow 1006. Echinospermum lappula Lehm. An 

 alien member of the Boraginece, casually introduced 

 with wool-waste, its seed envelope being burr-like. 

 By old corn mill, Carlinghow. 

 Amsinckia lycopsoides Lehm. A Californian Casual. 

 ' An increasing, fugitive Casual ; on waste ground by 

 rivers where the siftings of grain have been out-thrown 

 (in fields more rarely). Of quite recent appearance.' 

 Mirfield ; vide 'The Flora of West Yorkshire,' p. 372. 



1019. Datura stramonium L. Thorn Apple. 'Alien; 

 occurring casually on waste ground or in patches of 

 cultivated ground. Near the dog-house at Lupset ; 1). 

 Dixon.' Vide ' The Flora of West Yorkshire,' p. 2,30- 



1137^. Stachys palustris x sylvatica. Hybrid nearer the 

 Marsh Woundwort than the Hedge Woundwort, and 

 more common than Smith's hybrid .S". ambigiia, which 

 is nearer sylvalica than palustris. Margin of 'Bulrush ' 

 mill-dam, Carlinghow, Batley (1S87). Also see 'The 

 Flora of West Yorkshire,' p. 794. In a damp hedge 



