258 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
ecoy d at k, Has olk. A week after the wood 
was carefully searched, but no more could be found.* In 1890 
iss A. M. Barnard found it in abundance in the neighbourhood 
of Holt, East Norfolk. This locality is about twelve miles as the 
crow flies from Westwick, where it is now exterminated.} On 
the 25th of July, in this year, Mr. A. W. Nicholson, of Norwich, 
to a re) 
und at Cawston, E: Norfolk, “about twenty specimens, 
: : : il 
Its nearest recorded station to Norfolk is Houghton Wood, Market 
Weighton, in South-east Yorkshire, whence I have specimens 
gathered by the late Mr. W. W. Reeves. The old reports for 
Herts (Webb & Coleman, Fl. Herts (1849), p. 293) and Hants 
(Townsend, Fl. Hants, ed. 2 (1904), p. 422) were doubtless 
rroneous. The species has generally been associated with woods 
of conifers, but Mr. Spence sent me a specimen from “hilly ground 
near Stromness, Orkney.” Mr. Barclay found two or three 
Geranium Enpresst Gay.—The above-named handsome plant 
is getting quite naturalized in the parish of Halford, Craven 
rms, Salop, where, in company with the rector of the parish, 
the Rev. E. F. Gilchrist de Castro, I visited its locality in June, 
1908. It was growing in some plenty by a hedgerow, situate 
some little distance from houses or gardens. I have also received 
from Miss Ida M. Ro i 
the whole summer through. was 
described by J. Gay (Ann. Sci. Nat. sér. 1, xxvi. (1832), p. 228), and 
ime! 
I rance. The 
leaves are never spotted, as is the case in the allied G. maculatum 
is, with which it might easil be confounded, but here the petals 
are much broader in proportion, and of a paler carnation hue. 
* Trans. Norw. and Nor, Nat, Soc. (1885), p.255. + Lc. (1890), p. 329. 
