I 
THE FLORA OF WARWICKSHIRE. 189 
II. Above Boll’s Wood on the side of the road to Grafton, Purt., i., 
120; Chesterton; Moreton Morrell, Y. and B.; Wellesbourne 
Hastings ; Lighthorne Bough, Bolton King ; Brandon ; Binton, 
near the church; near Bose Hall, Oversley; plentiful in 
Drayton Bushes. 
C. Trachelium, Linn. Nettle-leaved Bell-Jioioer. 
Native: In woods and thickets, and on banks. Very local. July, 
August. 
I. Between Ansley and Over Whitacre ; railway bank near Water 
Orton ; lanes near Minworth ; near Hoare Park. 
II. Stoneleigh ; Pillerton ; aqueduct near Leamington, Perry, 1817 ; 
Chesterton, Ufton, Y. and B.; Chesterton Wood! Bolton 
King; Lighthorne Bough; bridle road from Billesley to 
Wilmcote ; Oversley Hill (var. alba); banks of the river Alne, 
near Crab Mill. 
C. latifolia, Linn. Broad-leaved Bell-Jloicer. 
Native: In woods, hedges, and banks. Very local. July, August. 
I. Near Packington, Aylesford, B. G., 634 ; Old Chester Boad, near 
Tyburn ; between Ansley and Over Whitacre; osier plantation 
near Solihull; banks of the Blythe, Bighton End. 
II. Banks of the Biver Arrow, the Alne! &c., Part., i., 118; var. 
Jiore albo, Allesley, Bree, Purt., iii., 341; plantations at Coton 
House, by the side of the Lutterworth Boad, Blox , N.B.G.S.; 
river bank between Honington and Tredington, F. Toionsend; 
Combe Woods, 1881. 
[C. rapunculus, Linn. Coventry Bells. Rampion Bell-floioer. 
Denizen : by waysides and in old gardens. Bai’e. July, August. 
II. “ Near Guy’s Cliff, and near Gaveston’s monument on the 
Blacklow Hill,” Perry, 1817 ! Not very uncommon in old 
gardens, &c. ; abundant in the pleasure grounds, Arbury Hall!” 
T. Kirk, Phyt., ii., 970. “ Bare, possibly not indigenous, 
though perfectly established in Warwickshire,” Syme, F. B., 
ed. 3, vi., 15.] 
“ Viola viarianus. Coventry Bells. They grow in woods, mountains, 
and dark valleys, and under hedges among the bushes about 
Coventry, where they are very plentiful abroad in the fields, 
and are there called Coventry Bells.”— Gerard Em., p. 448. 
“ The Coventry Bells doe not grow wilde in any of the parts about 
Coventry, as I am credibly informed by a faithful apothecary 
dwelling there, called Master Brian Bull, but are nursed in 
the gardens'with them as they are in other places.”— Parkinson 
Paradisus Terrestris, 357. 
C. rotundifolia, Linn. Harebell. 
Native : In woods, on banks, heath lands, &c. Very common. 
July to October. Area general. 
C. patula, Linn. Spreading or Field Bell-flower. 
Native : In woods, on banks, field borders, and hedges. Local. 
July, August. 
I. Near Meriden ! and Coleshill! Aylesford ; on the roadside in a 
wet lane called Water Orton, Withering; in a hedge in a 
small village called Wells' Green, about three miles from 
Birmingham, on the high road from Coventry! Cullum, 
B. G., 633-4; near Hoare Park; lane near Balsall Street; 
Slowley Hill; Arley. 
II. On the side of Oversley Hill! Spernall Park, Purt., i., 119; 
Guy’s Cliff, Perry, 1817; Ijorders of Hatton Wood, 
Perry, FI., 19; by Lord Craven’s Wood! Brinklow Boad, 
