MR. ARTHUR BENNETT ON LlL'AllIS LOSS ELI 1 IN NORFOLK. 621 
Since the publication of my paper in 1902, three other stations 
have been ascertained. 
In Hunts. Right side of Holme Lode. Rev. J. Roper in 
‘Fen and Mere,’ p. 59 (1876). 
Cambridge. “ March Fen, Mrs. Elizabeth Reynolds’ herbarium. 
In a letter from the Rev. Reader, Mr. Reader wrote to Mr. 
Jackson, of Leicester: “I think it probable that the Liparis was 
sent by J)r. Lloyd late in the ‘thirties,’ as she has (or had) 
Rtemeria hylrrida, and other South Cambridgeshire plants from 
him, about that time.” 
On this my friend Mr. Fryer, of Chatteris, writes me : ‘‘The 
Firelots at Hook, near March, where Bog Myrtle still survives, and 
the Lastrea Thelypteris, is the only possible spot for Liparis, and 
that is impossible in this present century. Confusion ! I did 
plant some bulbs by the one patch of Myrica dale years ago. 
They disappeared. Did one or more hide themselves in that 
herbarium.” 
Mr. J. Britten, of the British Museum, sends the following 
extract from Sir J. E. Smith’s Correspondence, vol. i. p. 275 
(1821). 
“ You will be glad to hear that Crowe found three specimens of 
Ophrys Lmselii on St. Faith’s bogs this summer; they were 'far 
distant from the spot in which l’itchford found his, and Crowe left 
them untouched ; they were growing in the very wettest part of 
the bog, and actually in the water. Mr. Sole, of Bath, has found 
several on Hinton Moor, near Cambridge, where Ray mentions 
their grooving. Roots have been sent to Curtis and to Dickson, 
and are growing in Curtis’s and the Museum garden.” T. J. 
Woodward. October 11th, 1787. 
There is still another station (long since extinct) i.e. Reche Fen, 
in Cambridgeshire. “In plenty, June 15th, 1836.” Babington. 
‘Journal of Life,’ p. 49 (1897). 
It is very pleasant to record new stations for a species that 
Babington in his ‘Flora of Cambridgeshire’ (1860) remarks on 
“in 1835 and 1836 for the last time,” and in the Appendix puts 
it under ‘ Plants probably now extirpated.’ 
The fact is this species is like many other Orchids, subject to the 
same “ ghost-like ” appearance in abundance, and then scarcely to be 
found for many years. I had the pleasure of a visit from two 
