POLTSTICHCM ACUEEATUM. 235 
Kent; near Bramshot, Hants ; at Osterley Park, Lamp- 
ton Lane, and Sion Lane, near Brentford, in Middle¬ 
sex; near Hastings and other places in Sussex; at 
Kingsteignton, in Devon; and near Gurnet Bay, in the 
Isle of Wight. 
In Wales, near Wrexham, in Denbighshire; at Cickle, 
near Beaumaris, and at Lleiniog Castle, Anglesey; and 
near Bangor and Caernarvon. 
In Scotland, about Drumlanrig, in Nithsdale; at 
Peasebridge; and on Cartland Rocks, near Lanark. 
In Ireland, at Colin Glen, Belfast; Hedge banks, 
near Carrickfergus; and near Clonmel. 
Johnson, in his edition of “Gerarde’s Herbal,” is the 
first to mention this Fern as a British plant, and we 
have the unusual occurrence, not only of the name of 
its discoverer, hut of the very day of its discovery. He 
describes it as Filix mas non ramosa pinnulis latis, auri- 
culatis, spinosis (Male Fern not branched, with broad¬ 
eared and prickly leafits); adding, “ This I take to be 
Filix mas aeuleata major Bauhini (Bauhin’s Larger 
Prickly Male Fern); neither have I seen any figure re¬ 
sembling this plant. It groweth abundantly on the 
shadowy moist rocks by Maple-Durham, near Petersfield, 
in Hampshire. John Qoodyer, July 4, 1633.” 
Polystiehum aeuleatum is a free-growing, easily- 
managed, and very desirable Fern for the rockery, 
fernery, and also for pot culture.' It grows remarkably 
well in sandy loam and peat (fibry is the best) in 
equal parts, with an admixture of sand. It requires a 
tolerable depth of mould to grow in, and to be well 
