CORDEAUX: LINCOLNSHIRE AGRICULTURE. 325, 
The Agricultural Survey of Lincolnshire in 1798, was a great and 
useful work in its day, and such as would be likely to suggest and 
encourage improvements, and it has, moreover, the merit of providing 
a hundred years later, a large amount of interesting information in 
connection with those now far-away times, which otherwise would 
have been lost altogether. 
My friend Mr. Peacock has sent me Arthur Young’s plant list, in 
our more modern nomenclature, with notes on the present frequency 
of the species. It is as follows :— 
Caltha palustris L. Common. 
Nasturtium amphibium R.Br. Fairly common. 
Lychnis flos-cuculi L. Common. 
Hypericum quadratum Stokes. Common. 
Lotus corniculatus L. Common. 
Potentilla anserina L. Very common. 
Potentilla comarum Nestl. Not uncommon in the bogs of our: 
sandy commons still. 4 
Myriophyllum verticillatum L. Not common. 
Lythrum salicaria L. Common. 
Epilobium hirsutum L. Very common. 
Hydrocotyle vulgaris L. Common. 
Cicuta virosa L. Extinct, I believe. 
Angelica sylvestris L. Common. 
Peucedanum palustre Meench. Very rare. 
Eupatorium cannabinum L, Common. 
Bidens cernua L. Not very uncommon. 
Senecio jacobza L. Very common. 
Senecio palustris DC. Extinct, I believe, 
Carduus palustris Hoffm. Very common. 
Sonchus palustris 1. Quite extinct. 
Lysimachia vulgaris L. Very common. 
Menyanthes trifoliata L. Not at all uncommon. 
Myosotis palustris With. Common. 
_ Convolvulus sepium R.Br. Common. 
Pedicularis palustris L. Common. 
Mentha hirsuta L. Common. 
Nov. 1895, 
