446 75. AMARYLLIDACE.E. 



"Narcissus conspicua." — Mr. W. M. Chatterley com- 

 municated this to the Botanical Society of London, local- 

 ized from " Muggeridge's farm-yard, beyond Banstead," in 

 Surrey. 



" Narcissus moschatus." — " Has been found wild in the 

 adjoining parish of Meriden ; and has been communicated 

 to me by its discoverer. Miss Gresley, of that place." 

 (Rev. W. T. Bree, of Allesley, Warwickshire, in Mag. Nat. 

 Hist. viii. 118). But by a second notice in the same Ma- 

 gazine, it would seem that some mistake had occurred, the 

 plant being possibly a whitish variety of N. Pseudo-Nar- 

 cissus. (See Mag. Nat. Hist. ix. 494). 



"Narcissus incomparabilis." — " Grows in the Little ^^ ^ 

 Park at Margam, and Mrs. D. Llewelyn has shown me A- -^''^. 

 good ground to believe that it has continued to do so for 

 at least two centuries." (Dillwyn's Materials for a Fauna 

 and Flora of Swansea, p. 36). 



" Narcissus minor." — " Thrives on the rocks below the 

 old castle at Penrice, and no trace can be obtained of the 

 time when it was planted." (Dillwyn's Materials, &c., p. 

 36). 



" Narcissus (Ajax) lobularis." — " I have now for some 

 years cultivated in the garden a very handsome daffodil, 

 which was found wild by a friend of mine, near Tenby, in 

 Pembrokeshire, and is quite distinct from any other Bri- 

 tish Narcissus that I am acquainted with. The late Mr. 

 Haworth, to whom I sent it in 1830, considered it quite 

 new to Britain, and recorded it in the ' Philosophical 

 Magazine' under the name of Ajax lobularis." (Rev. W. 

 T. Bree, in Phytologist, i. 6^). 



