Massee . — A Monograph of the genus Inocybe , Kars ten. 501 
‘ The stem is hard, solid, cylindrical, often bended or waved, the thickness of 
a duck’s quill, and about four inches high ; it is closely covered with small downy or 
feathery tufts of a perfect mouse-colour ; there is no curtain. 
‘ The gills are in three series, deep, and terminate in a claw at the base, which 
just touches the top of the stem ; they are numerous, soft, flexible, white, and of a dry, 
light substance. 
‘ The pileus is hemispherical, an inch and a half in diameter, of a perfect mouse- 
colour, and like the stem, thickly covered with little tufts of a downy matter, which 
grow from its surface, and are of the same colour with it ; there is a beautiful fringe 
of the same down all round the margin. The substance is thin, light, dry, and 
flexible ; it withers in decay.’ 
micropyramis, Sacc., Syll. xi, p. 50 (foot-note) ; Ag. ( Heb .) micropyramis , Berk. 
This is a Naucoria , and will stand as N. micropyrama (Berk.). 
subroindica, Bann. and Peck, 44 Rep. State Mus., p. 70; rubroindica, Sacc., 
Syll. xi, p. 52. 
Only described from a sketch. No mention of spores, and no published figure. 
tricholoma, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 790; Ag. tricholoma , Alb. and Schw., Consp., 
p. 188. 
This has been correctly referred to Flammula by Karsten, on the label to * Karst., 
Fung. Fenn., exs. 412.’ 
violaceafusca, Sacc., Syll. ix, p. 96 ; Ag. (I no .) violacea/uscus, Cke. and Massee, 
Grev., xvii, p. 52 ; Cke., 111 ., pi. 1174. 
This proves to be a Cotdinarius , and will thus become C. ( Dermo .) violacea/uscus, 
Cke. and Massee. 
phaeocephala, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 774 ; Ag. phaeocephalus, Bull., Champ. Fr., tab. 
555, fig. 1 ; Ag. (Ino.) phaeocephalus , Flies, Hym. Eur., p. 231 ; Cke., Hdbk., ed. ii, 
p. 155; Cke., 111 ., pi. 396. 
I can find no justification for the retention of this species in Inocybe. It was 
first placed there by Fries, who never saw what he considered to be that species, but 
drew up his diagnosis from Bulliard’s figure, adding a rider to the effect that its 
position is doubtful. Cooke’s description with a ‘smooth pileus' and ‘ bright ferru- 
ginous spores ’ certainly does not suggest Inocybe. 
schista, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 774; Ag. (Ino.) schistus , Cke. and Sm., in Cke., 
Hdbk., ed. ii, p. 154 ; Cke., 111 ., pi. 504. 
P. campanulate, broadly subumbonate, cracking longitudinally, rather fibrillose, 
bay-brown, 5-8 cm. ; flesh thin, equal, dingy like that of the s. ; g. adnate with 
a decurrent tooth, rather ventricose, broad, tawny-rufous at maturity, edge pale, 
serrulate ; s. solid, equal, twisted, paler than p., 6-8 cm. 
Among short grass. Britain. 
A species founded entirely on a sketch, which may or may not have been 
accurately done in the first instance. 
tomentella, Sacc., Syll. v, p. 783 ; Quel., FI. Myc., p. 106 ; Ag. (Ino.) tomen- 
tellus , Fries, Epicr., p. 176 ; Ag. tomentosus , Jungh., Linn,, 1830, p. 403, tab. v, f. 7; 
(not Bull, nor Bolton). 
This does not belong to the genus Inocybe . It may be an Hebeloma. Fries, who 
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