42 FLORA OF OXFORDSHIRE. 
5. Isis. Stonesfield, Wychwood, Charlbury, Handborough, Begbroke. 
A plant of V. imberbis, Leight. occurred with type at Bladon. 
6. Thame. Tetsworth. 
Berks. Wytham, Hinksey, Cumnor. 
The purple flowered form occurred at Thrupp and near Charlbury. A 
lilac coloured form is not uncommon. The Violet is, I believe, a native in 
Oxfordshire. 
V. hirta, LD. Hairy Violet. 
Top. Bot. 55. Syme, E. B. ii. 17.172. Nym. 78. 
Native. Septal. Hedgebanks, wood borders, grassy places, etc. 
Common. P. March—May. 
First record, Viola martia hirsuta major tnodora and first as British 
‘Flowers in March and April and the flowers are abusively sold to the 
shops amongst other violets, they not being so good for any of those uses 
the Apothecaries put them to, as the other violets are, Plot, 1677, p. 147. 
They grow plentifully in Mag. Col. Coppice, on Shotover Hill, Stow Wood, 
and many other places.’ 
1. Stour. Sibford Heath. 
2. Ouse, Mixbury, Ardley, Stoke Lyne. 
3. Swere. Bodicote, Gull. Crouch Lane, Bretch, Bees. Horley, 
A. Fr. Broughton, 0. Aplin. Swerford, Mrs. Davis. 
4, Ray. Stow Wood, Plot. Kirtlington, Headington Wick, Elsfield, 
H. Bos. Beckley, Bucknell, Ardley. 
5. Isis. Several parts of Wychwood, Blackst. MSS. 1737. Near 
Oxford, Hb, Banks, Hb. Br. Mus. Much the commoner about 
Oxford, we have no chalk but it occurs upon clay, gravel, and lime- 
stone, in woods, sides of ditches, in peat bogs, on hill sides, and even 
in clay pits dug out for bricks, Phyt. 5. 154, H. Bos. Southcombe, 
T. Bees. A form with narrower petals at Cornbury quarries, but 
not quite V. calearea, Bab. Woodstock Park, Charlbury, Stones- 
field, Burford, Wychwood, Ditchley, ete. 
6. Thame. Shotover, Mag. Col. Copse, Plot. Do. in Ray’s Stirp. 1688 ; 
do. in Ray's Syn. 1690, ete. Cheney Lane, Sib. Sydenham, Hb. 
Bex. Bullingdon, Bos. 
7. Thames. Maple Durham, Goring, Bledlow Ridge, H. Bos. Chin- 
nor, Penley Wood, Henley, Fawler, Lewknor, Mongewell, abundant 
on the chalk, 
Berks. Wytham, Bagley, Pangbourne, Streatley, Sinodon Hill. 
With white flowers at Ardley and Stonesfield. 
V. permixta, Jord. Nym. 87. 
Native. Septal and pascual. Dry hedgebanks and grassy places. 
Local. P. March, April. 
