16 
THE flora of WARWICKSHIRE 
(E. silaifolia, Biel). Sulplmrwort-leaved Drojncort. 
Native : In ditches. Very rare. August. 
I. 'peucedanifolia.) In a gorsy field by Small Heath House, near 
Birmingham; With., ed. 7, ii., 384. 
II. ((E. peucedani folia.) Not rare. Great Alne, Grafton, Bidford, 
Burt., i., 150; near the footroad to Bishopton Spa, near 
Stratford-on-Avon, Cheshire, Herb. Perry. 
(E. crocata, Linn. Hemlock Water Bropwort. 
Native: On banks by rivers and streams. Bare. July. 
I. Witton, abundantly on the banks of the Tame; Gravelly Hill; 
Castle Bromwich ; Water Orton. 
(E. Phellandrium, Lam. Fine-leaved Water Dropioort. 
Native: In rivers, ditches, and pools. Bare. July. 
II. (Phellandrium aquaticum.) In an old gravelpit full of water at 
Eden Way, Part, i., 156 ; the Avon at Bugby Mill; and other 
places, Blox, N. B. G.; near Stratford-on-Avon, Cheshire, 
Herb. Per.; Compton Verney, i/. B.; river in Brownsover 
Fields, at Little Lawford Mill, R. S. R., 1877; Chesterton 
Mill Pool. 
CE. iiuviatilis, Coleman. Floating Water Dropioort. 
Native: In rivers. Bare. July. 
II. Emscote, Birdingbury, Y. and B.; In the river beside the footpath 
to Brownsover, R. S. R., 1878 ; in the Learn, near Leaming¬ 
ton! and Offchurch, H. B.; Harborough Magna, Rev. A. Blox. 
.ETHUSA. 
.E. cynapium, Linn. Common FooVs Parsley. 
Native: In fields, on waysides, waste heaps, &c. Common. June 
to October. Area general. 
F(ENICULUM. 
F. vulgare, Gaertn. Common Fennel. 
Casual: On railway banks. Bare. June. 
II. Abundant on the railway banks between Warwick and Emscote, 
H. B. 
So far as my knowledge serves this is the only station for this 
plant in the county. Mr. Bromwich informs me that it is 
well established here. 
(To be continued.) 
The Hun : its Planets and their Satellites. By the Bev. E. Ledger, M.A. 
432 pp., 94 woodcuts, 8 plates. Price 10s. 6d. Published by E. 
Stanford. 
In this well-printed and excellently illustrated book, the Gresham 
lecturer gives a very clear account of the members of the solar system, 
and of the laws by which they are controlled. The author appears to 
have sought most diligently for information, and has successfully 
incorporated in this book the most recent results of the study of 
astronomy. He treats chiefly of the physical side of the subject, and 
