( 211 ) 
.In the corn, near the DeviV s- ditch in Camhridgejhire. 
The flowers grow, on the top of the ftalk, in a 
thyrfe, all inclining to one fide. 
11. Lychnis fylveftris alba 9. Clujii^ R. 340, G. 
E. 470. montana vifcofa alba latifoha^ C. 205. fyl- 
'vefiris alba minor ^ five Ocymoides minus alburn^ P. 63 1. 
Wild White Catch fly. On Nottingham c^iftle. Its 
ftalks are fhorter, and have a fat glutinous moifture 
on their upper parts : The flowers fade fooner, and 
their petals are more deeply divided than thofe of 
the Common White Campion. 
12. Lychnis major ncbiiflora Luhrenfis perennis^ 
R. 340. Great Night-flowering Campion of Dover 
cliffs. Found by Mr Newton^ who affirms it to be 
different from the preceding, in never being fo vif~ 
cous, and, fome years, in being hardly dilcerni- 
bly fo. 
13. Lychnis nobliflora^ R. 340, C. 205, P.632. 
Night-flowering Campion. In corn, on the left- 
hand of the road leading from Newmarket to Can- 
*vas hall, in JVood-ditton. The flowers are of a pale 
redifli colour ; they expand in the night, but, as ' 
foon as the fun fhines, they become flaccid, and the 
petals immediately fold together : The tops of the 
ftalks and branches are clammy to the touch. 
14. Lychnis fylveftris vifcofa rubra anguftifolia^ R. 
340, C. 205, P. 636. Mufcipula anguftifolia^ G. 
E. 601. Red German Catchfly. In Edinburgh 
park. The flowers grow almofl: from the middle of 
the ftalk to the top, on long branches : The leaves 
are oblong, narrow, and fharp-pointed. 
15. Lychnis vifcofa jiore mifcofo^ R. 340, C. 206. 
Sefamoides Salamanticum magnum^ G. 396. Mufci- 
pula Salamantica major^ P. 636. Spanifh Catchfly. 
In and about the gravel pits, on the north-fide of 
Newmarket town ; alfo by the way- fide s all along 
from Barton mills to Lhetford^ in Norfolk. The 
flails rife^ a foot, or hall' a yard high j and, when 
culti- 
