102 FUNGUS-FLOEA. 



rileus never zoned, but sometimes smoke-colour when 

 moist; yellowish-olive and spotted when dry. Thinner thau 

 G. infracius, at first usually more sinuous and irregular. 

 Stem ascending or curved. (Pries.) 



Cortinarius (Phleg.) Berkeley!. Coolse. 



Pileus 3-6 in. across, convex then expanded, very fleshy, 

 viscid, shining when dry, brown, darkest in the centre, often 

 with a tinge of lilac towards the margin, disc even, for 

 ahout an inch round the margin coarsely plicate or rugulose, 

 hut not evenly striate, flesh i in. thick except the extreme 

 edge, white, margin with purple tinge; gills rather close, 

 narrow, slightly emarginate, cinnamon with an olive tinge 

 at first ; stem 4—0 in. long, 1 in. thick above, base bulbous, 

 solid, flesh white, silky-flbrillose, white, veil persistent as an 

 indistinct brown broken line on stem; spores yellow-brown, 

 elliptic-fusiform, rugulose, 15-16 X 8-9 /i. 



Cortinarius (Pldcgmaclmn) BerJceleyi, Cke., Hdlilc, p. 240; 

 Cke., Illustr., t. 706 (not good, margin too regularly grooved) ; 

 Ckc, Illustr., t. 707, is also said to be this species, but if 

 really so it is a very marked variety. 



Cortinarius tm-vus. Fries, Kalchbrenner, t. xxi., flg. 1 

 (excellent). 



Cortinarius anfractus, Beilc, not of Fries. 



In woods. The present species is considered by con- 

 tinental mycologists as being the true 0, torvus of Fries, but 

 the British specimens that I have seen fresh have a distinctly 

 viscid pileus, whereas C. torvus is a Telamonia. The present 

 species was named C. anfractus by Berkeley, but is certainly 

 not that species. When young the whole fungus is involved 

 in a whitish volva, patches of which frequently remain on 

 the pileus. 



tt SCAUEI. 



* Gills wMtish, then tan or pale cinnamon, 



Cortinarius (Phleg.) multiformis. Fr. 



Pileus 2-3 in. across, fleshy, regular, convex then expanded, 



very obtuse, becoming depressed, generally very viscid, even, 



glabrous, every portion the same colour, yellow, yellow-tan, 



lawny, &c., sometimes spotted, fibrilloso-virgate, or lacunose ; 



