180 Flora of Devon and Cornwall, by I. W. N. Keys. 
Myrrhis Scop. Sweet Cicely. 
M. odorata (Scop.) — E.B. 697. — Pastures in hilly districts.— 
D. Manaton : Warr. in Rav. " A single plant by the Dart, near 
Buckland-in-the-Moor, June 7, 1866:" Briggs in Journ. Bot. 
iv. 289. 
Conium Linn. Hemlock. 
C. maculatum (L.) — E.B. 1191. — Highly poisonous. Hedge- 
banks and waste places. — D. Frequent. Plympton ; near Black- 
stone ; Lidford ; between Hooe and Wembury ; in the churchyard 
at Portlemouth, near Salcombe. St. Budeaux : Briggs. About 
Torquay and Mary church ; Torre-abbey meadow : Tor. Fl. About 
Totnes : Fl. Tot. — C- At Cremyll, and on the road to Maker ; 
Looe ; Penzance ; between St. Germans and Tideford. Between 
Polbathick and Hessenford : Balkw. []SQ1). Waste places [Fal- 
mouth,] "plentiful:" P oly tech. 186 G. Mr. Briggs has more recently 
observed it in the last-mentioned locality. 
Physospermum Casson. 
P. corniihiense (DC.)— Woods and coppices. " Devon and Corn- 
wall, rare " (Bab. Man.) — D. Near New-bridge on the Tamar: 
Hore.^ Waytown, near Barnstaple : Phytol. ii. n.s. 414. — C- Hare- 
wood, near Calstock (1863). Clether wood, on the Tamar : Bank. 
in Nat. iii. 207. " Outskirts of Steppe s wood, one mile and a 
half ..from Bodmin! Gibs, in Phytol. 1846, p. 684. The Rev. 
J. P. Jones found it in 1820 [vide Tour, p. 37) *' growing very 
abundantly two miles North-west of Bodmin, on Hare-down, half 
a mile above Dunmere river." 
* It had been reported, for some time before Mr. J. Banker visited tlie spot, 
that the Kev. W. S. Here's habitat on the Devonshire side of the Tamar 
had been destroyed. Mr. Banlier saw, however, at least one plant there. 
This was in 1853. It would be interesting to hear that it still grew in its 
old station. 
