Flora of Devon and Cornwall, by I. W. N. Keys. 151 
growing with E. montanum, "not uncommon:" Polytech. 1856. 
Square-stalked Willow Herb. 
E. obscurum (Schreb.) — E. virgatum Bab. — Wet places. — J). 
Common [near Plymouth] : Briggs in Journ. Bot. iii. 350. Ilfra- 
combe : Park, in Rav. — C- Not uncommon [about Falmouth] : 
Polytech. 1856. The author (Mr. Bastian) says, — *' This plant 
appears to be a hybrid between E. montanum and E. tetragoniim." 
Scilly islands : Towns, in Journ. Bot. ii. 1 11. 
E.palustre (L.) — E.B. 346 ? — E. ligulatum (Baker) is a hroad- 
leaved form of E.palustre (Bab. Man.) — Bogs and beside streams. — 
J). Frequent. Near Lethitor, Dartmoor: Briggs (I8d2). Robo- 
rough down : id. Bovey Heathfield ; Haldon ; Chudleigh ; Ilsing- 
ton, &c. : Fl, Dev. Near Ilfracombe and Martinhoe common : 
Scriv.inRav. Dartington; Hempston: FZ. Toi, — C- St. John's!: 
Hore. Marshy places [about Falmouth], "not uncommon:" 
Polytech. 1856. Narrow-leaved Marsh Willow Herb. 
(Enothera Linn. Evening Primrose. 
[* (E. biennis {L.) — E.B. 1534. — "Often an outcast from 
gardens" [Bab. Man.)— J). Thicket, Manadon hill,^^ near Ply- 
mouth (doubtless planted). Queen Anne's battery, Plymouth : 
Gould. Woollacombe, North Devon : Rev. J. M. Chanter in Rav. 
Braunton burrows : Rav. in Phytol. vi. n.s. 358. Exmouth (pro- 
bably an outcast) : Par/. MS.] 
" Alien. Introduced from America, and now to some degree established 
on the coasts, sandy wastes, and cultivated ground in this country." — Cyb. 
Brit. i. 375. 
['-1^ (E. odorata (Jacq.) — " An escape from cultivation " (Bab. 
Man.)— J). "Plymouth:" Bab. Man. I am not aware, however, of 
the situation in which this plant is to be found here, unless we 
have mistaken it for (E. biennis.] 
* It was many years since that I collected it here. There were only a few 
plants at that time, and it may have since disappeared. 
z 
