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IRIS—LILIUM. 379 
not unlikely occur in some of the dense aboriginal woods of 
other glens of the eastern calcareous range. 
Iris foetidissima L. English type. Native. Area 87. 
5-321. Range o-100. Rare in woody places in the low 
country. Kirklington, Little Nunwick, Raskelf, Nether Silton, 
Helmsley, and in Cleveland between Busby and Kirkby, and on 
the banks of the millrace at Easby. Wood near Saltburn, 
1885 ; &. Barnes. 
Iris Pseudacorus L. British type. Native. Area 
general. Range o-300. Common in watery places in the low 
country, ascending to Gormire, and in Yore district to Hawes ; 
J. Percival. 
Crocus vernus and Crocus aureus are both occasional 
stragglers from garden cultivation. 
Narcissus Pseudo-narcissus I. English type. Native. 
Areag 8.6543. Range orro. Often simply subspon- 
taneous in fields and orchards (this usually the Spanish 
daffodil), but clearly indigenous in woods amongst the lower levels 
of the hill-country in several places. Probably a true Native 
about the Magnesian Limestone at Pierce Bridge and Thorp 
Arch, and on the east in Langbargh woods, Goathland Dale, 
Rosedale, in Eskdale near Egton Bridge, Harwood Dale, Yed- 
mandale, Cloughton, and Raincliffe. Narcissus poeticus is or 
has been subspontaneous in the castle yard at Pickering ; and 
in a field at North Kilvington; W. Joggitt, Narcissus biflorus 
occurs in a field by the side of the road between Rich- 
mond and Aske, and at Thornborough, and near the 
Kilvington Roman Catholic chapel near Thirsk. Narcissus 
incomparabilis grows with JV. diforus at Kilvington, and has also 
been’ gathered in a field near Guisbrough Spa. Galanthus 
nivalis is frequently subspontaneous in parks and near gardens, 
but I have no hesitation in placing it with the three Marcissi 
in the Alien category, so far as North Yorkshire is concerned. 
Lilium Martagon L. Alien. Occasionally subspon- 
taneous in the neighbourhood of gardens. Hedge-bank at St. 
Sept. 1892. 
