ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS. 
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f. 5193. H. Anglicum Bertol. H. Androsm- 
lnum Sin. in E.B. t. 1225. 
Hedges and shrubby places in sheltered situations 
near the sea, in the south-west of England, west of 
Scotland, and Ireland. Cliff above Falmouth harbour ; 
Helston near Falmouth. Hills behind Greenock; Crinan 
Canal, Argyleshire; Culross, Perthshire; Arran; Scot- 
land. Galway ; Uonard Lodge, Co. Down; Ireland, b . 
8, 9. — Scarcely naturalized in any of these localities. 
In favourable situations the lower part of the stem is 
quite woody, and sometimes two inches thick; it is 
more tender than II. hircinum, and is probably a native 
of the Azores. Its large beautiful glossy foliage and 
copious lemon-yellow blossoms make it deserving of a 
place in our green-houses; it is so easily injured by 
frost that it has now almost disappeared from botanical 
gardens. The peduncles are never 2-winged on recent 
specimens, although they sometimes appear so after 
being dried. The figure in E.B. represents the sepals 
too acute, and the stamens too few and only in three 
bundles. H. grandifolium of Choisy is perhaps 
different. The allied H. hircinum L. is now natura- 
lized in some places in the south and west of Ireland. 
80. 13 from bottom. For . read If. 
SI. 8. After St. J. insert , or St. Peter' s-wort 
92. 24. After common .S', insert , or Prichwood 
93. 25. After Alder B. insert , or Black-alder 
96. 24. After Dyer’s G. insert , or Woad-waxen 
108. 10 from bottom After sweet M. insert , or Wild Liquorice 
115 18. After this line add : 
4 a . L. * tuherosus L. ( Earthnut Pea) ; peduncles 
3 — 6-flowered longer than the leaflets, legumes 
compressed with longitudinal elongate reticula- 
tions, seeds smooth, tendrils with 2 oblong-ellip- 
tical mucronulate leaflets, stipules semisagittate 
narrow acuminate, calyx-teeth triangular acu- 
minate, lower ones as long as the tube, upper ones 
slightly shorter, stem diffuse acutely 4-angled 
without wings. Curt. Bot. Mag. t. 111. 
Borders of fields. Fyfield near Ongar, Essex, ex- 
tending at intervals for several miles. If. G— 8. We 
understand that there is a specimen in Petiver’s 
herbarium, from near Lincoln, where it may have 
been cultivated. For our information about the 
Essex plant, and specimens, we are indebted to Mr. 
G. S. Gibson, of Saffron- Walden; it has been ob- 
served by an old farmer growing in the same fields for 
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