Folio 487, line 3, after Natural 0>‘cler, add Elatinf®, Camb. — Hook. Brit. 
FI. (4th ed.) p. 400. — Lindl. Syn. (2nd ed.) Suppl. p. 321. 
Folio 487, line 4, for 43, read 48 ; and in line 7 of the same folio, erase the 
reference to Hook. Brit. FI. (4th ed.) p. 400, 
The following Plants, belonging to genera of which I have not given a figure* 
have recently been found in situations apparently wild. 
1. Aly'ssum. 
Linn. Cl. and Ord. Tetradynamia, Silicui.osa. — Nat.Ord. Crucifer*. — 
Gen. Char. Calyx equal at the base. Petals emarginate. Stamens all or 
some of them toothed. Silicle roundish, with a convex disk and a refuse apex j 
funicle adhering to the base of the dissepiments. Seeds 2 in each cell, with 
membranous wings. Cotyledons flat, accumbent. 
Agy'ssum Caly'cinum, Willd. Large-calyxed MadiVort.— Spfc. Char* 
Stems diffuse. Leaves strap-spear-shaped, canescent. Calyx permanent. Pods 
oi bicular, somewhat emarginate. downy, 4 times as long as the style. — I, inn. Sp* 
PI. p. 908 — Willd. Sp. PI. v. iii. pt. r. p.464. — Jacq. FI. Austr. t. 338. — An 
annual plant, a native in dry fields both in South and Middle Europe. — Flowering 
from June to August. 
T have a specimen of this plant, gathered by the Bev. Andrew Bi.oxam, in 
1836, between Broad and Chamber Hills, Charnwood Forest, Leicestershire. — • 
In the Botany of Charnwood Forest, published in “ l he History and Antiquities 
of Charnwood Forest,” a very beautiful and extremely interesting work, by 
T. It. Potter, (1842,) it is said to be “ since extinct” there. — We are informed, 
in the 5th edit, of Sir W. J. Hooker’s British Flora, that it has been found since 
in several parts of England and Scotland. — Near Hitchin Common, Herts, 1839 : 
Mr. I. Brown, Mag. Nat. Hist., new series, v. iv. p. 104. 
2. Coroni'lla. 
Linn. Cl. and Ord. Diade/lthia, Dfca'ndria. — Nat. Ord. LfgumI- 
nos®. — Gen. Char. Calyx bell-shaped, short, 5-toothed, the two upper teeth 
approximate, and joined together higher up than the rest. Corolla papilliona- 
ceous; claws of the petals usually longer than the calyx. Keel acute. Stamens 
diadelphous. Legume nearly cylindrical, slender, at length separating into 
oblong, 1 -seeded joints. Seeds egg-shaped or cylindrical. 
Coroni'i.la Va'ria Various-flowered Coronilla. 
Spec. Char. Plant herbaceoas, diffuse, flexuose, smooth. Stipulas distinct, 
spear-shaped. Leaves pinnated ; leaflets from 9 to 13, oblong, elliptic, mucro- 
nate; the lower ones approximating the stem. Umbels 16- to 20-flowered. 
Legumes angular, very long, straight. — Linn. Sp. PI. p. 1048. — Willd. Sp. PI. 
v. iii. pt. n. p.1153. — Curt. Bot. Mag. t. 258. — A perennial plant, native of 
Europe andTauria, in fields and meadows. — Flowering from June to November. 
— This plant lias been found, apparently wild, in Devon, at Burv-head, by Dr. 
Brush in n; and at Linton, by the Kev. Mr. Levett. See Mag. Nat. Hist. 
v. ix. p. 603; and Hook. Brit. FI. 5th ed. p.84. 
3. Eciiinospe'rmum. 
Linn. Cl. and Ord. Penta'ndria, Monogy'nia — Nat. Ord. Borage- 
nt.y, — G en. Char. Calyx inferior, 5-parted. Corolla monopetalous, salver- 
shaped, or funnel-shaped; throat furnished with short scales; limb 5-parted, 
obtuse, spreading. Nuts 4, distinct, 1-celled, triangular, compressed, echinated, 
fixed to the central column, not perforated at the base. 
Eciiinospe^rmum La'ppui.a. Burdock Echinospermum. — Spfc. Char. Stem 
branched at top. Leaves spear-shaped, beset with incumbent bristle-like hairs, 
swelled at their base, ciliated. Calyx at length spreading, exceeding the pedi- 
cels. Corolla small, exceeding the calyx, with an erectly spreading limb. Nuts 
furnished with a double row of hooked prickles along the margins, having the 
disk and sides tubercled.— Lehm. Asper. p. 121.— Myosotis Lappula, Linn. 
Sp. PI. p. 189. 
1 received a specimen of this plant from the Rev. Mr. Hoi.mes, of ITarleston, 
Norfolk, gathered by him near Southwold, Suffolk, in August, 1839. — See 
Corrections & Additions at the end of volume V. 
