ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 
Page Line 
1. 14. For XXIII. read XXII. 
4. 11 from bottom. After common T. insert, Virgin's Bower, or 
Old Mail's Beard 
6. 0. After Wood A. insert , or Wind-flower 
9. 8 from bottom. For . read 0. 
12. 30. After stinking H. insert , Setter-wort, or Bear’s-fluot 
13. 18. Fur 2/.. read ©. 
17. 17. After red P. insert , or Corn-rose 
18. 10. For ©. read © or $. 
19. 20. For globose obtuse, read subglobose or obovate obtuse or 
truncate, 
13 from bottom. Add : — We did not receive our copy of 
Vol. IV. No. 16 of the Journal of the Proceedings of 
the Linn. Society, until after this sheet was printed. 
We there find, at p. 157, that Mr. Babington proposes 
to follow M. Jordan and some other continental wri- 
ters in separating this species into five. These are 
all included under our Fumaria capreolata, but may be 
distinguished as varieties as follows: — a. fruit obtuse, 
longer than broad, contracted near the base and there 
narrower than the summit of the recurved or spread- 
ing pedicels. F. pallidiflora Jord. — /3. fruit truncate, 
broader than long, contracted into a stalk-like base, 
and there scarcely so broad as the summit of the 
spreading pedicel. F. Bonei Jord. — y. fruit very 
obtuse, its base conspicuously broader than the sum- 
mit of the spreading pedicel. F. confusa Jord. 
F. agraria Mitt. — 5. fruit obovate very obtuse, its base 
broadly obconical, a little narrower than the summit 
of the erecto-patent pedicel. F. muralis Sond. — [e. 
fruit obovate obtuse longer than broad, its base obconi- 
cal and as broad as the pedicel, pedicels reflexed in 
flower and fruit. F. capreolata L. F. speciosa Jord.~] 
— This last has not occurred in Britain. The points 
of distinction between the above, even although con- 
stant, do not appear of specific importance, or to 
imply any organic difference. 
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