APPENDIX. 
171 
Malva rotundifolia, Dwarf Mallow. Not frequent in this 
county. At the base of the North Hill^ Malvern. About 
Kemsey. 
M. moschata, Musk Mallow. At Henwick Hill, Helbury 
Hill, and various other places, chiefly by the road side. 
Fumaria solida, Solid Bulbous Fumitory. In Abberley 
Woods, according to Mr. Hickman, in Purton. 
F, lutea, Yellow Fumitory. Found by Mr. Lees in a 
shady lane below Abberley Church, not in the immediate 
vicinity of any garden, but probably naturalized. 
F. claviculata, White Climbing Fumitory. Abundant 
among the loose stones on the declivities of the Malvern 
Hills. 
F, capreolatay Ramping Fumitory. In a hedge at Shraw- 
ley, and near Abberley. 
Genista spinosa, Prickly Broom. Whittington Common, 
near Stourbridge, plentiful, but observed nowhere else." — 
Scott. The G. tinctoria and G. anglica are very common. 
Anihyllis vulneraria, Kidney-vetch. Abundant on the 
grauwacke limestone on the western flanks of the Malvern 
Range, and equally plentiful on the lias at Cracombe Hill. 
Lathyrus Aphaca, Yellow Vetchling. Very rare. At 
Cleve, and Littleton. — Purton. " Grove Coppice, near 
Stourport." — Hickman. Near Crowle. — ^Mr. Sheppard, 
1834. 
L. Nissolia, Crimson Grass Vetch. One of our most 
beautiful and elegant native plants. The brilliancy of the 
crimson blossoms fading into purple, has a charming effect 
when seen in perfection amidst the grassy herbage where it 
lurks. In great abundance in a wood near to Pershore.'* 
— Purton. Among the bushes beyond Battenhall Lane, 
Worcester, and by the wood near the Croft Farm, Mathon. — 
Mr. Lees. Also in a meadow at Kemsey. — Dr. Streeten. 
L. sylvestris,' Narrow-leaved Everlasting Pea. Perry 
Wood, and Helbury Hill, on the east side of Worcester ; in 
