ROBERT UVEDALE. 9 
K. montanum X opscurum. In the same locality as the last. 
Also collected in 1865 by Mr. Hiern near the Wrekin, Salop, and 
in 1866 (forma minor) aoiediege sapan Bk and Ilfracombe, N. Devon. 
E. ROSEU Clapton Station, Middlesex, Mr. rar 
bury! and also in his pariens: a ‘the two species occur as W 
It came up in my own garden at Witley, where I have sictivetal 
them 
E. osscurum X PARviFLoRUM. Woods between Chilham and 
Crundall, E. Kent. A curious form, with quite amorphous stigmas, 
grows -_ Breslin Surrey. 
BE. 0 ALUST. Authentic specimens of F. ligulatum 
Baker which. I tes seen are ; certainly this cross, as pointed out by 
Haussknecht. I have seen it this year at Inchnadamph, W. Suthiae? 
land; Milford and Worplesdon, Surrey; and specimens have been 
forwarded by Mr. Hiern from 8. Fig ton, N. Devon, and by Dr. B. 
White from Corrie Ardran, Mid-Perth—a small alpine state 
approaching palustre, and very like one found by me in descending 
m Ben More of Assynt, at 1100 ft. 
E. opscurum X roseum. Ditch near Withyham, E. Sussex 
(Miller !). 
E. PALUSTRE X PARVIFLoRUM. Between Churt and Thursley, 
urrey. 
*H. (oBscURUM X PALUSTRE) X PaLUSTRE (teste Haussknecht). 
Glen Lochay, Mid-Perth; Elstead, Surrey. This naming is, 
) queried so: some of the Elstead specimens. 
Triple hybrids, as in Salix, are perhaps not extremely rare; but 
their determination must in general cng exceedingly critical and 
uncertain, and I soaks the pdaes f giving them a permanent 
place in our list. 
ROBERT UVEDALE. 
By G. 8S. Bouncer, F.L.S., F.G.8. 
In the botanical literature of the close of the seventeenth and 
name vghont Dr. ion of Enfield. most of us, however, he is 
onl t may be worth while to collect —_ the 
akira i evigtion which we have epee sd him 
The aphid Pu rags s -pomeeeting meagre accoun 
“ Dr. Uve ie lived Enfield, where he ptcacrer a Gort 
which eaapenre to have eal rich in exotic productions. And although 
he is not known among those who ater the aera! botany of 
Britain, yet his enn as a botanist, or his patronage of the science 
at large, spre considerable cecigk! pes incline Petiver to apply his 
name to a new plant, which Miller retained in his dictionary, but 
which Mei Gass passed into the genus Polymnia, of the Linnean 
system; the author of which has nevertheless retained Uvedalia as 
the trivial epithet. 
* Sketches of the Progress of Botany, vol. ii. p. 30. 
