389 
unequal in length. Many are relatively short and straight, 
others long and Hexuous. Bucknall {Brit. Euphr. p. 16) says, 
“glandular hairs very numerous on leaves, bracts and calyx,” but 
it is well to remember that this species may be eglandular. On 
a sheet sent me by Dr. Druce in 1918 from the original station 
five plants out of nine are quite eglandular, the other four being 
copiously supplied with unequal glandular hairs. The bracts of 
these Yelverton plants are more or less rotund, and in some cases 
even slightly broader than long. All possess short ovate teeth. — 
W. H. Pearsall. Surely “ dark blue ” is hardly the colour of the 
markings of E. Vigursii, of which I have seen plenty in Cornwall. 
— H. S. Thompson. 
E. Kerneri Wettst. [Ref. 1153]. Buckland Hills, Surrey, Oct. 
3, 1925. — E. C. Wallace. E. Kerneri Wettst., with extremely small 
leaves and numerous filiform branches. The stems and branches 
give evidence of having been repeatedly bitten off by grazing 
animals. — W. H. Pearsall. 
Euphrasia . Lane through Boundless Copse, near Hind- 
head, Surrey, Aug. 15, 1926. — I. A. Williams. E. Kerneri Wettst. 
My sheet contains only two plants, both updrawn, tall and 
slender, with long filiform branches from the middle of the stem 
upwards. Both show the very long and narrow salisburgensis- 
like cauline leaves which often characterise this species. Those 
which subtend the larger branches are deflexed — as is frequently 
the case — a character by no means confined to E. nemorosa. — 
W. Id. Pearsall. 
Euphrasia . Grassy roadside by High Woods, Black- 
more, Essex, July 11, 1926. All the plants were small, small 
flowered, and hairy. Is this E. curta (Wettst.) ?— I. A. Williams. 
Very young E. Rostkoviana — specimens very mouldy. — W. H. 
Pearsall. 
Euphrasia . Chinnor Hill, Oxfordshire, Sept. 11, 
1926. — I. A. Williams. E. gracilis. — W. H. Pearsall. 
Euphrasia . Downs near Patcham, Sussex, Aug. 24, 
1926. — J. L. O’Loughlin. “An ordinary form of E , nemorosa.” 
H. W. Pugslcy in lilt. 
Bartsia viscosa L. Grande Mare, Guernsey, June 15, 1926. 
J. E. Lousley. 
Rhinanthus major Ehrh. 1 (a) platypterus Fr. Sandhills between 
Deal and Sandwich, E. Kent, v.c. 15, June, 1925. [Ref. 62]. 
— J. E. Lousley. This appears somewhat intermediate between 
