128 Flora of Devon and Cornwall, by I. W. N. Keys. 
F. lathyroUes (L.)—E.B. 30.— Dry gravelly and sandy places. — 
D. Road between St. Mary-church and Shaldon; banks of the 
Erme, near Ivybridge; North Bovey ; Ilsington: Fl.Dev. Anstice 
cove; Tiverton: Rav. — C- Pendennis, " rather plentiful :" Pohjtech. 
]856. Spring Vetch. 
Mr. H. C. Watson says {Cyh. Brit. i. 318) " much confusion has occurred 
between the localities for this species and V. angustifolia ; small examples 
of the latter being frequently mistaken for the present species." And in 
G.B.S. lie places his mark " o" against it for the Peninsula (Devon, Corn- 
wall, and Somerset). I have never seen specimens from either county. 
Lathyrus Linn. Vetchling. 
L. Aphaca (L.)—E.B. 1167. — Sandy and gravelly fields, rare. 
Found principally in the South of England, and rather a colonist 
than a native. — J). Between Knackersknowle and Tamerton 
Foliott : Briggs. Peak and Salcombe cliffs : Fl. Sid. Cliffs near 
Sidmouth (D. Turner and Sowerby ) ; Holwell tor, near Ilsington 
(Miss Filmore): Fl.Dev. Chittlehampton : N.B,G. — Unreported 
for Cornwall. Yellow Vetchling, 
L. Nissolia (L.) — E.B. 112. — Bushy grassy places, rare. — J). 
Catdown quarries!,* Plymouth: Read, [ISQO.) Whitleigh, Tamer- 
ton : Mr. Stewart (June, 18G6). About three miles from Teign- 
mouth, on the Newton road: Jord, in Phytol. 1843, p. 828. 
About Teignmouth; Exmouth, " abundant :" Fl. Dev. Sidmouth ; 
Ellacombe, near Torquay : Rav. — C* Trewinn, Gerran (H. S. 
Herb.): Mr. W. Lohh. Crimson Vetchling, or Grass Vetch. 
In Cyb. Brit. Devon is given as the south limit of this plant. The author 
of that work, who had the use of Miss Warren's list, must have been aware 
* Mr. T. E. A. Briggs also found this plant in June, 18G0, at Catdo-uni ; but 
in his MS. list, lie says, " it was probably introduced in some way or other, 
and does not seem to be even naturalized there ; for I have since sought for 
it in vain at its old station." — The wiiter himself has never collected it at 
this station ; but the plant was known to grow there by our botanical 
predecessors, — the specimen in P. I. Herb, being from this habitat, gathered 
by the Eev. W. S. Hore. It would seem to appear at intervals. 
