ADDITIONAL NOTES, ETC. 389 



being, witli few exceptions, those which might have been 

 expected to gi'ow in the Lake province, or which were 

 ah-eacly known elsewhere in that province. 



135. Viola canina, vol. i. p. 177. 



This corresponds with Viola sylvatica of the third edition 

 of Babington's Manual, and with V. caniiia of Gerarde 

 and Smith. (See page 320 of this volume.) 



137. Viola lutea, vol. i. p. 181. 



The county of Pembroke may be added to the south 

 limit, as more westerly than Monmouth, on authority of 

 Mr. Babington, who found the plant in a low situation, 

 near St. David's. It may thus be said to descend to the 

 midagrarian zone, if not to the inferagrarian zone, 



136, c. Viola Curtisii, vol. i. p. 182. (No. 137, c.) 



Mr. Babington, in the third edition of his Manual, 

 places the yellow V. Curtisii (Forster) as a variety of V. 

 lutea, while the purple V. Curtisii (Mackay) is placed as a 

 variety of V. tricolor. But the stipules are aHke in both 

 the Devonian or yellow, and the Cestrian or blue, violets 

 of the sand liills on the English coast ; and I think these 

 two cannot be satisfactorily disjoined, so as to be referred 

 to different species. The coast plants are perennial; 

 which indeed is hardly a distinction, for the V. tricolor of 

 the corn-fields, though short-lived, and frequently dying 

 off in winter, is not strictly an annual species. 



139. Drosera intermedia, \ol. i. ]^. 18i. (D. longifolia.) 

 It is better to cease any use of the name ' longifolia,' 



which intended both intermedia and anglica, or the latter 

 only ; and it thus becomes a source of frequent error in 

 its use. 



140. Drosera anglica, vol. i. p. 185. 



Mr. J. T. SjTiie finds this species in Orkney, but not D. 

 intermedia ; and a specimen of it exists among the Orkney 



