APPENDIX. 
149 
Florence's "Worcester Guide;" Dr. Booker's " History of 
Dudley;" Scott's '^History of Stourbridge;" and Loudon's 
Magazine of Natural History," where the plants observed 
growing on the granitic and sienitic chain of the Malvern 
Hills are detailed by Mr. Edwin Lees. Ainsworth has 
likewise mentioned some of the Malvern plants, in his Essay 
on the Geology of the Malvern Hills, published in Jameson's 
Edinburgh Journal, and other notices of them occur in the 
*^ Midland Medical and Surgical Reporter." Having con- 
sulted these works, and with the kind aid and contributions of 
several botanical friends, I now proceed to give such an accu- 
rate notice of our native plants as I trust will give satisfaction 
to the friends of Natural History. In the case of the rarer 
plants, to avoid any mistake, I have introduced the name of 
the individual on whose authority it is inserted. 
Hippuris vulgaris, Mare's Tail. Pools. Rare. Clifton- 
upon-Severn. — Dr. Streeten. 
Ligiistrum vulgare, Common Privet. Abundant in the 
hedges. 
Circ(Ba lutetiana, Enchanter's Nightsliade. Perry Wood, 
Shrawley Wood, and other moist shady places. 
Veronica JnagaUis, Long-leaved Brooklime. Pools near 
Powlck, on the Malvern Road. Ashmore Common. Near 
Pershore. Duck Brook, near Worcester. 
F, scutcllatay Narrow-leaved Speedwell. Bogs on the 
Malvern Hills, especially at the w^estern base of the Worces- 
tershire Beacon. Rare. 
V, montana, Mountain Speedwell. Described by Purton 
as " very rare." Wood at the west end of Powick Ham, 
near Worcester." — Dr. Stokes ; where it has since been 
found by Dr. Streeten, but Mr. France having recently built 
upon this spot, and made alterations in the ground, the plant 
has disappeared. In a wood nearer to Malvern. — Mr. Lees. 
By the side of a stream, in a place called "the Gullet," 
