340 
MR. A. BENNETT ON LIPARIS LCESELII. 
Norwich Castle on its pre-historic mound is one of the irre- 
placeable treasures of County and City alike. The Castle 
was, I believe, used by the County (as well as by the City) as 
an heraldic device until recently replaced by the present 
ridiculous combination which makes up a shield, the meaning 
of which I have found no one to understand. Nothing 
should have been done either by cutting away the mound 
to endanger the buildings on its summit — (there are already 
ugly cracks in the castellated wall near the present Shirehall) 
— or by erecting fresh buildings to hinder the view of the 
Castle from below or that of the City and the country round 
from the top of the mound. I venture to predict that the 
present County authorities will in the future be as generally 
condemned for the erection of these buildings, as are now 
their predecessors for the money they worse than threw away 
on the re-facing of the Keep. 
II. 
LIPARIS LCESELII, RICH., AN EXTENSION 
OF RANGE. 
By A. Bennett, F.L.S. 
Read 30 ill October, 1906. 
The claim of East Anglia to possess the only habitats in 
Britain for the above species is no longer tenable. 
Much to the surprise of students of the distribution of our 
Flora, the Rev. H. J. Riddelsdell recorded* his finding of 
the plant (“ many hundreds of specimens ”) in Glamorgan, 
but withholding the locality. 
* ‘Journal of Botany,’ 274, 1905. 
