HISTORY OF THE COUNTY BOTANY OF WORCESTER. 
95 
* Paris quadrifolia. Iu a copse overshadowing a boggy glen, between 
Worcester and Cruckbarrow Hill. 
* Convallaria majalis. Sbrawley Wood. 
Tulipa sylvestris. On Clerkenleap Marl Cliff. 
Ornithogalum nutans. Field at Clerkenleap. 
0. pyrenaicum. At Cotkeridge. 
* Allium vineale. On Pitchcroft. 
A. oleraceum. In the same habitat as Narcissus Pseudo-narcissus. 
A. ursinum. Near Cruckbarrow Hill. 
* Colchicum autumnale. Abundant in the meadows by the Severn. 
* Eleocharis acicularis. Severn Stoke. 
* Scirpus caespitosus. Bromsgrove Lickey. 
Milium effusum. Wood near Powick Ham, &c. 
Aira flexuosa. Helbury Wood Hill, and wood on the Broadheath 
Road. 
Holcus mollis. Meadows on the western side of Severn. 
* Festuca Calamaria. Shrawley Wood. 
* F. pinnata (Brachypodium pinnatum). Near Perehore. 
* Bromus diandrus. Severn Stoke. 
This is Bromus madritensis, L., and must be a 
repetition of Dr. Stokes's record. See With., 
2nd edit., p. 107. 
B. velutinus. Helbury Hill. 
This is a form of Bromus secalinus, subsequently 
noted by Scott. 
Elymus europaeus. Wood Lyme Grass. Malvern Hills, near the 
Wych. 
This is the grass now known as Hordenm sylvaticum, 
Hudson. 
* Nardus stricta. Malvern Chace. 
The Catalogue is disappointing in one or two particulars. 
No distinction is made between plants observed by Mr. Lees 
himself and those recorded on the authority of other observers. 
It does not contain a single Composite, and several other 
important natural orders are very insufficiently represented. 
The total number of plants recorded is 106, of which 27 
are new records. Rosa tomentosa, R. micrantlia, R. Borreri, 
Pyrus torminalis, Circtea lutetiana, Datura Stramonium, 
Mentha viridis, Lithospermum officinale, Tulipa sylvestris 
are contained in the List of Plants on the Malvern Hills in 
Loudon’s Magazine of Natural History, and are entitled to 
precedence. 
Parietaria officinalis, Milium effusum, Aira flexuosa, 
Holcus mollis, Bromus secalinus are entitled to precedence 
over the records of the same plants in Scott. 
(To be continued.) 
