SPLENIC APOPLEXY. 
531 
tities. This list and the successive ones, though not pre¬ 
tending to be complete, is near enough for all practical 
purposes. 
Plants in Field 18, Sock Farm . 
Botanical Name. 
Trivial Name. 
Proportionals. 
Ranunculus bulbosus 
Bulbous butter-cup 
10 
,, acris 
Upright 
5 
Carduus arvensis 
Creeping thistle 
8 
Potentilla anserina 
Silver weed 
12 
Tri folium 
Clovers 
1 
Cynosurus cristatus 
Crested dogstail 
20 
Aira csespitosa 
Tussac grass 
5 
Poa tri vial is 
Rough-stalked meadow grass 
5 
Hordeum pr tense 
Meadow barley 
1 
Festuca prat/, nse 
Meadow fescue 7 
scarcely re- 
Solium perenne 
Rye grass ) 
presented. 
Carices 
Sedges, var. 
6 
Junci 
Rushes, var. 
3 
Herbs of a good kind barely represented. 
In this field we have bad herbage in the ascendant. All the 
plants, including the mass of the grasses, show a mixed con¬ 
dition of poor land both wet and dry. Anything like good 
species of grasses are only just indicated, there being an 
occasional sprinkling of such, and little more than this of 
the clovers. 
The next three meadows, namely: 
1st, No. 23 and 24 .—“ Higher Carey’s Mead/’ now in hay ; 
is better than No. 18. 
2nd, No. 28.— fC Middle Carey’s Mead,” a low meadow 
flooded in winter; mown for twenty-five years; this 
year in pasture. 
3rd, No. 29 .—“ Lower Carey’s Mead,” much drier than 
No. 28 ; now in pasture. 
These three meadows are not tart, or, if so, it is only to a 
slight degree in the upper one. They differ much in quality, 
the last being much the best, arising partly from its being in 
a sounder state. 
