HISTORY OF THE COUNTY BOTANY OF WORCESTER. 173 
* Geranium phaeum. Well Meadow, below Abberley Village.' 
Ornithopus perpusillus. Abberley Hill. 
Astragalus glycyphyllus. On a marie bank near Gregory’s Mill. 
Geuni rivale. Near a flight of steps leading from the Hope Farm 
to Sapey Church. 
Epilobium tetragonum. Foot of Malvern Hill. 
Chrysosplenium oppositifolium. With C. alternifolium. Near Sapey 
Brook, in many places. 
Sium angustifolium. Ditches near Perry Wood. 
Sison Segetum. On a marie bank near Gregory’s Mill. 
* Apium graveolens. Brook side, Salwarpe. 
* Adoxa Moschatellina. Shady places, Sapey Brook, abundantly. 
Asperula cynanchica. Broadway Hill. 
Carduus acaulis. Dry Pastures, Sapey. 
Erigeron acre. Tops of Walls about the Cathedral. 
* Campanula latifolia. Hedges below Malvern Hill. 
Pyrola rotundifolia. In a wood on the Witley side of Abberley 
Hill. 
Vinca minor. Side of the road to Martley opposite Kemsey Mill. 
Vinca major. Boadside, Little Witley and Clifton Hill. 
Gentiana campestris. Bewdley Forest between Furniss Mill and 
the Eagle’s Nest Inn. 
It is doubtful if this is a Worcester record. Furnace 
Mill is in Salop. 
Verbascum Blattaria. Roadside, Holt. 
* V. minus, flore luteo, foliis acutis. At the end of the Green Lane in 
the Parish of Claines. (Possibly V. virgatum.) 
Mentha rotundifolia. Several places near Sapey Brook. 
Triglochin palustre. Boggy Meadows near Sapey Brook. 
Convallaria majalis. Shrawley Wood. 
Ophrys spiralis. Dry Pastures, Sapey. 
Serapias ensifolia. In a wood on the Witley side of Abberley Hill. 
* Scirpus culmo tereti, nudo, capitulo laterali, conglobato. Single¬ 
headed club rush. Found at Throckmorton in the Parish of 
Fladbury. ( S . romanus.) 
Deducting 7 plants previously noted, giving Dr. Slieward 
credit for Gentiana campestris and Verbascum Blattaria, Iils 
list yields 21 new County records, or, if we include Hypericum 
perforatum, 22. The following caution of Dr. Stokes (Bot. 
Arr., 2nd Edit., p. 229), should be borne in mind respecting 
Verbascum Blattaria :■—“ My specimens from gardens , and having 
never seen it growing wild , I have been sometimes induced to suspect 
my Virgatum to have been taken for the true V. Blattaria .” Mr. 
Towndrow, however, assures me that he has seen V. Blattaria 
at West Malvern, and, he believes, also at Madresfield, so that 
