120 



SHORT NOTES. 



kinde growetli where the tame kinde hath been sowen." — Ger. 394. 

 11 New Barns near Ely."— Relhan, Fl. Cantab. 259 (1785). 



Crambe maritima L. Sp. PL 671 (1753). 1551. " Groweth 



at Dover harde by the sea syde." — Turn. i. 36 (90). 



Cakile maritima Scop. Fl. Carn. ed. 2, ii. 35 (1772). 1570. 

 "Anglise insulam meridionalem Vectim" [Isle of Wight]. — Lob. 

 Adv. 77. 



Raphanus Raphanistrum L. Sp. PI. 669 (1753). 1597. 

 11 Upon the borders of banks and ditches cast up and in the borders 

 of fields."— Ger. 186. 



R. maritimus Sm. Eng. Bot. t. 1643 (1806). 1696. "Mr. 

 Stonestreet found it under the cliffs by the sea side, about half a 

 mile westward of the fisher-houses at Bourne [Eastbourne] in 

 Sussex." — Ray, Syn. ii. 342. 



Reseda lutea L. Sp. PL 449 (1753). 1597. " In sundrie 

 places of Kent, as at Southfleete neere master Swanne's house 

 upon longfielde downes." — Ger. 216. 



R. Luteola L. Sp. PL 448 (1753). 1570. " Locis . . . Anglia* 

 ruderibus et semitibus occurrat. ' — Lob. Adv. 149. 



Helianthemum Breweri Planch, in Journ. Bot. 1844, 618. 



1778. M Cistus guttatus ... in monte Llech ddu prope Holyhead 

 in insula Mona, D. Brewer." — Huds. ii. 232. Found by Samuel" 

 Brewer in 1726: see his MS. "Botanical Journey" in Bot. Dept. 

 Brit. Mus. 



H marifolium Mill. Diet. 2, 24 (1768). 1690. "Found by 

 Mr. Newton on some Rocks near Kendal in Westmorland." — Bay, 

 Syn. i. 142. 



H. Chamsecistus Mill. Diet. n. 1 (1768). 1570. " Crescit 

 ... in Anglia." — Lob. Adv. 185. " In Kent, upon the chalkie 

 banks about Graves ende, Southfleete, and for the most part all the 

 way from thence unto Canterburie and Dover." — Ger. 1102. 



H. polifolium Mill. Diet. n. 11 (1768). ^ 1690. " Found by 

 the Doctor [Plukenet] upon Brent Downs in Somersetshire," 



Bay, Syn. i. 142. 



(To be continued.) 



SHORT NOTES. 

 Rosa involuta Smith, var. Doniana (Woods) in E. Sussex, 



Watson, in Topographical Botany, gives " Sussex, Borrer, Monog." 

 for the aggregate species. Mr. Francis Dickinson, of Crockham 

 Hill, has sent me a specimen of the above variety, exceedingly 

 characteristic, from East Grinstead. — Edward S. Marshall. 



Gentiana Amarella L., var. precox Raf. — On p. 216 of his 

 Flora of Hampshire, Mr. Townsend has written: — "The difference 

 in the time of flowering between the type and this var. is remarkable. 

 Possibly the plants have been browsed by sheep and rabbits in the 

 previous year, and not having: been exhausted bv the production of 



