170 DEVONIAN STATIONS OF PLANTS NOTED IN THE LAST (CENTURY. 
of the bridge. The names of this plant are cunadoua in the 
note, one made in pencil, replacing an older erased one in ink, 
with reference to what I suppose to have been a station for Poly- 
carpon tetraphyllum. Withering and Smith both state this plant to 
ha ound by Hudson at Slapton, — the collection of 
water is at present called the Lea a, vand the neighbouring sands 
y when he discovered the plant. By Caney in the 
respective statements of this station in ‘ Botanist’s Guide’ and 
‘Flora Devoniensis’ it has been copied ies both into Watson's 
‘New Botanist’s Guide,’ to appear as two stations]. 
Hypericum Elodes. On the bog nearest Budley pegiee a the 
lower part of it; on the bogs on Ere Heathfield ; ttom 
twixt Dalpnicc: and Cholwich Town; on the bogs 0 ttle ore. 
[The two last stations Te between nea ee and ‘Goeaeae both 
named for this in ‘ Flora of Plymouth.’ It is pleasing to find so 
large a number of Drake’s localities still producing the species he 
met wit 
Linum Radiola. seeds uleare ‘ana Sm. By the side of the 
hedge, on the Hight as soon as you come on Boyey Heathfield from 
Chudleigh. — L. perenne. On Wi ithay’s Farm, and in most of the 
dry me fields apaut Nutwell. [Doubtless in error for L. tenui- 
folium, the present L. angustifolium, which would seem to have been 
confused with L. perenne formerly 
Fhamnus Frangula. Am songs the rocks on the common at the 
west end of Sticklepath Villa 
Sanguisorba officinalis. ia ong the rushes just before the were 
at Buckland. [This station comes under’ Dist. ILI. of ‘Flora of 
Plymouth’; but, although doubtless gc I know of no later 
he 
eeae of “ MSS. Tour of Sir Francis Drake and Mr. Hudson,” . 
a fact of much interest viewed i in connection with the association A 
distribution over the greater part of Devon and Cone wall; appa 
rently very rare indeed in the eastern ‘ca Pima portions of the 
latter county, though, peculiarly enough, considering it 1s & 7 om 
belonging to Watson’s “ intermediate English type,” appearin os 
plenty in some of the ak ground a the Lizard, the mos 
pla sed land in Britain] . h 
Rubus Ideus. At the bottom of the wood by the side of the pat 
leading to the waterfall at Lydford. 
M, yriophyll um Seer g In the cut that runs — the pond in 
Mr. Walter’s garden at Bicton, in that part n the set 
[Whether the resttaelak spicatum of the ‘ London Catalogue,’ caged 
or the alterniflorum DC., of course doubtful] . the 
Sedum annuum. 8. anglicum Huds. On the rocky bank ake: 
