HISTORY OF THE COUNTY BOTANY OF WORCESTER. 
93 
It. Sherardi. Thicket beyond Battenhall Lane ( a form of the pre¬ 
ceding). 
* R. rubiginosa. Foot of Cruckbarrow Hill. (Grookbarrow Hill.) 
R. micrantha. At Bransford. 
R. Borreri. Perry Wood, &c. A form of R. canina. 
Pyrus torminalis. Clerkenleap, &c. 
* P. domestica. Wire Forest. 
* (Enothera biennis. Side of tlih Teme below Powick Bridge. 
Circaea lutetiana. South part of Perry Wood. 
* Sedum Telephium. Wet meadow, near Bubble Bridge. 
* Cotyledon Umbilicus. Boseberry Rock, Knightwick. 
* Sium latifolium. Side of Henwick Old Weir Pond. 
* S. angustifolium. In a damp copse at Bevereye. 
* (Enanthe Phellandrium. In a pool at Kempsey Grove. 
* Meum Foeniculum (Fosniculum vulgare). Spetcliley. 
* Chaerophyllum sativum. In profusion on the sides of the Tewkes¬ 
bury Road, just beyond the turnpike, where Dr. Stokes noticed 
it in 1775. 
* Myrrhis odorata. Side of the Royal Mount, facing the London 
Road. 
* Viburnum Lantana. In the hedge of a plantation near Berwick’s 
Bridge. 
Lonicera Caprifolium. Copse beyond the Ketch. 
f Galium pusillum. East side of Red Hill. This must be a reference 
to the record by Stokes of Galium scabrum as growing at this 
spot. G. scabrum is a var. of G. Mollugo; G. pusillum, Smith, 
is a limestone plant of the northern counties, not known in 
Worcestershire. 
* Asperula odorata. Woods about Leigh Sinton, &c. 
Valeriana rubra. On the old wall of the western entrance to the 
Cloisters. 
* V. dioica. Meadow above Bubble Bridge on the Laugbern Brook. 
* V. officinalis. Nunnery Wood. 
* Dipsacus pilosus. Banks of the Laughern, and in a bushy place 
near the Severn at Grimley. 
* Scabiosa succisa. Near Diglis Basin, but most numerous by the 
side of the Droitwich Canal. 
f Campanula glomerata. Knightsford Bridge. Must be an error. It 
is not acknoioledged in the Botany of Worcester as a native of 
the Malvern district. 
* C. Rapunculus. Hindlip. 
* C. patula. Borders of Perry and Nunnery Woods. 
* C. bederacea. On Hartlebury Common. A repetition of the record 
by the Rev. T. Butt in Smith's English Flora. 
* Pyrola rotundifolia. Abberley Hill. This must be a repetition of 
Dr. Sheward's record in Nash's Supplement, 1799. 
