280 Lees : Spring s Pageant in Westmorland and Lancashire. 



Rosa mollis (71). Occasional about Kendal, but nought like 

 so plentiful as I expected to find it. 



Pyrus Aria Ehrh. (50). Rocky bank of the Mint and Kent 

 below Haugh's Bridge, as well as Baker's stations. 



Saxifraga granulata (78). Mossy niches of limestone rock by 

 the river Kent, both just above and below Haugh's Bridge. 



[Cotyledon. Not seen, and certainly no indigenous integer 

 of rocks or walls in the Kent basin ; although recorded for 

 ' Mireslack ' by Wilson.] 



Sedum anglicum (60). A lovely feature of the- rocky soil in 

 pastures on the slatestone between Lightbeck and Under- 

 barrow, and by the Gilpin at Crossthwaite Colony, owing 

 to its neat habit and innumerable black-dotted French white 

 starlike blossoms. 



Sedum rupestre* (12). Sparingly, but as at home as any 

 wilding, with Asplenium Adiantn?n-nigmm, on banks of the 

 road between Kendal and Underbarrow, about Lightbeck. 



Hippuris (90). The Marestail occurs up to 1,300 feet at 

 Skeggles Water (J. A. Martindale) in peat, near which 

 tarn the same competent naturalist found Carex limosa. 



Circata alpina {intermedia) (34). By the river Mint above 

 Beck Mill, down-brought from Bannisdale, I suppose. 



JEgopodium Podagraria (100). Called 'Dwarf Elder' at Cross- 

 thwaite. 



Sanicula. Well-nigh ubiquitous in the copses : yet in some 



counties absent over large tracts. 

 Myrrhis (65). On steep bushed declivities of the Mint, 



apparently quite above winter-flood mark, and lower down 



by the Kent ; but I did not trace it up the ravine to its first 



appearance. 



GBnanthe crocata (92). Cowbane — known to the farmers as 

 poisonous. I did not hear it styled ' Dead Tongue.' Noted 

 by the river Mint, and bordering meads from Mint Bridge 

 upwards. 



Meum (29). In the slate-fell pastures up Grayrigg. 



Adoxa (91). Road bank just above Haugh's Bridge, Natland. 



Galium boreale (43). By the Borrow beck and the Lune lower 



down, in District 3. 

 Galium sylvestre (28). Prevalent on the limestone, to the scar 



plateaux. Not noted down-washed : possibly because the 



creviced white-rock does not give rise to such forceful becks 



as the slate declivities. 

 Asperula odorata (106). Park SpringandCunswick Scar hangers. 



Naturalist. 



