172 
APPENDIX. 
the woods about Bredon Hill 5 amd Tiddesley Wood^ near 
Pershore. 
L» latifolius, Broad-leaved Everlasting Pea. " Severn 
Stoke Copse." — Mr. Ballard, in Withering. Unnoticed in 
Worcestershire by any other botanist. 
Vicia sylvatica, Wood Vetch. A beautiful plant, climbing 
up the branches of trees, and presenting its clusters of blue- 
streaked flowers for the admiration of those who follow 
Nature into her most retired recesses. On Bredon Hill. — 
Nash. In the Devil's Den, Clifton-on-Teme, and in a wood 
near the Spout, Malvern. In the greatest luxuriance at 
Lower Sapey, covering the shrubs and trees for a considera- 
ble distance along the banks of the brook celebrated for con- 
taining the sacred impressions of St. Catherine's mare and 
colt. — Dr. Feild, and Messrs. Allies and Lees, 1834. 
V. angustifoUa, Narrow-leaved Crimson Vetch. Near 
the Giant's Grave, Habberley. Ankerdine Hill. 
V, lathyroides, Spring Vetch. Battenhall Lane, Cra- 
combe Hill, and numerous other places in the county. 
F. bithynica, Rough-podded Purple Vetch. Woods at 
Clifton-on-Teme. — Dr. Stokes. Below the Ivyscar Rock, 
Great Malvern. — Mr. Lees. 
Ornithopus ijerpusillus, Bird's Foot. On the Malvern 
Hills, Hartlebury Common, Kemsey Common, and Blake- 
brook, near Kidderminster. 
Hippocrepis comosa, Tufted Horse-shoe Vetch. South 
side of Bredon Hill, below the Camp." — Nash. No other 
habitat has been found for it in Worcestershire. 
Hedysarum Onobrychis, Saintfoin. Abundant on the 
Abberley Hills. Also on the limestone west of the Malvern 
Chain, and on the lias at Cracombe. 
Astragalus glycyphyllos, Liquorice Vetch. Helbury Hill, 
Worcester, the Trench Woods, &c. 
A. hypoglottis, Purple Mountain Milk Vetch. Bredon 
Hill, near the Camp.— Nash. Still there, about two fields 
