WOODRUFFE-PEACOCK : CATALOGUE OF LINCOLNSHIRE PLANTS. 137 
enough to find the spot. My sister, who saw a specimen, took 
it without doubt to be V. /actea Sm.—and I understand 
Mr. Richard Hutchinson, its finder, took it on the heath and 
not in the bog; which would almost settle the question if I did 
not depend wholly in this catalogue on specimens. 
Viola tricolor L.+ Native. Aggregate common enough. 
V. eu-tricolor Syme. N.—6+. S.—Doddington; + Rev. R. E. G. 
Cole, 12-6-’56. Metheringham,f 1-792. This is a most 
curious specimen, taken in a cornfield by Mr. J. Burtt Davy, 
a hybrid apparently with a garden Pansy. It was not in the 
neighbourhood of a house where it grew. I once saw a similar 
variety at Bottesford in N., but as it was near a garden I did 
not take it. 
Viola arvensis Murr.t Native. Common in N., and I have no 
doubt as common in §,, but I have no proof yet. 
POLYGALE#. 
Polygala vulgaris L.t Native. Common N. and §,. Flowers 
white, pink, and blue 
Polygala gepreay Wend.t Native. N,—Linwood Warren, 
6-79; Mr. F. A. Lees (?) in Mr. J. Saunders’ Herb. Santon ; 
Rev. ee Fowler, B.R.C., 1877. S.—Doddington ;t Rev.R.E.G. 
Cole, 29-5-1859 (Ar. B.). 
CARYOPHYLLE#:. 
Diantuus Graucus L. Native, if a Dianthus were ever with us. 
S.—Lincoln Heath. T. Martyn’s Plante Cantabrigienses, 1763, 
and perhaps from another source (?) in Richard Gough’s edition 
_ of William Camden’s Avitannia, 1789. Mr. F. A. Lees’ Outline 
Flora says—* D. deltoides L. meant ;’ this must have been the 
species. . 
Diantuvus c#sius Sm. Turner and Dillwyn’s Botanist’s Guide, 
1805. Mr. F. A. Lees says rightly a ‘ misreference. 
Saponaria Vaccaria L.j Casual. N.—Brigg! by railway 
embankment, 1893 (F. A. L.). 
Saponaria officinalis L.t. A garden escape and casual. N.—1o. 
Var. flore pleno. N.—Tattershell, 1893; Rev. F. S. Alston! 
Broughton, 1893; Rev. H. C. Brewster! 
Silene cucubalus Wibel. Native. Common N., and S, 
Silene maritima With. Native. N.—Cleethorpes; collector 
unknown ; this specimen is in the Simpson Coll. Mr. F. A. Lees 
found it there again in 1873, Herb. Brit. Mus. Mr. J. Jarvis 
Rainey reports it from Skegness, but I have seen no specimen, 
metas 
