452 
MR. A. BENNETT ON EAST ANGLIAN PLANTS. 
SCELERANTHUS PERENNIS, L. 
“ Huckwold, Norfolk, July, 1885.” G. C. Druce, in Rep., 
Bot. Ex. Club, 383, for 1892 (1893). There is no such place 
in Norfolk; Hockwold-cum- Wilton in West Norfolk may be 
meant. 
Suffolk, W., Co., 23. 
Bury. Miller’s Dictionary, 1724. 
Artemisia campestris, L. 
Suffolk, W., Co., 26. 
Lingheath, Brandon, 1909. W. G. Clarke. 
“ Near Barton Mills and Elveden.” T. Willisel, in Dill., 
1670. 
Roadside from Barton Mills to Elveden, Barnham and 
Elvedon. Rev. Hind, in FI. Suffolk, p. 74. 
Norfolk, E. and W., Co., 27 and 28. 
Mr. W. G. Clarke (24, 9, 09) writes that Mr. W. H. Burrell 
went to White Top Common, Blickling, and Abel Heath, and 
most carefully searched these for the Artemisia, without 
finding any trace of it. Mr. Clarke himself traversed the 
Devil’s Dyke at Cranwich for two miles without seeing any 
Artemisia there ; but he remarks — “ It may grow in that 
part of the Dyke further north and still in the Parish of 
Cranwich.” He also writes re the “ one mile on the road to 
Norwich” locality “The roadside plantation has grown up, 
the bank has been partially levelled and is often covered 
with road scrapings, and there is no part which is not 
exposed to the dropping of the trees.” 
In the Transactions, VIII. (1909), 826, Mr. J. Edwards 
writes — “ I found this latter plant ( A . campestris) as a road- 
side weed just outside the Town of Thetford, in August, 
1888.” This is three years later than Mr. Glasspoole’s record. 
