ele 
tawny grey, edge paler, 1°5-2°5 cm. Gills sinuate, almost free 
tawny-ochre or brownish. Stem slender, pale, then reddish or 
coloured like the pileus, 4-5cm. Spores globose, with numerous 
rather long, slender, cylindrical papillae, 10-124. Cystidia not 
numerous, subcylindrical or slightly fusiform 45-55 x liam 
On the ground in woods and shady places. Britain (Wothorpe) 
Inocybe Bucknalli Mass. l.c., p. 473. 
Pileus campanulato-convex, fibrillose, with a few squamules 
near the disc, brownish, 1-2cm. Gills adnexed, thick, rather 
distant, rusty-brown, edge minutely fimbriate. Stem equal or 
slightly thickened at the base, slender, fibrillose, brownish, 2- 
cm. Spores irregularly oblong, one end obliquely apiculate, 
rather coarsely nodulose, 15-17 x 8-9 pm. Cystidia absent. 
Basidia clavate, exceptionally large, 70-80 x 16-18p, 4-spored, 
On the ground under bushes. — Britain (Leigh Down, Bristol 
Cedric Bucknall). 
Inocybe cervicolor Quel., Fl. Myc. p. 107; Ag. cervicolor Pers, 
Icon. Pict. Rar. Fung. t. 8, f. 4 (1803-1806), Mass, Ic, 
P. 479. 
Pileus campanulate, pale brown or fawn-colour, covered with 
brown, recurved fibrils, 3-5 cm. Gills emarginate, ventricose, 
distant, pale then rusty brown, margin whitish, denticulate. 
Stem elongated, firm, whitish, fibrillose, with brown recurved 
filaments throughout its length, 6-9 cm. Spores elongate, pip- 
shaped, smooth, 11-13 x 6-6'5. Cystidia cylindric-fusoid, numer- 
ous, 40-50x 12-184. Flesh white, tinged purplish when cut. 
Smell strong, unpleasant. Among grass in woods. Britain. 
Inocybe Godeyz Gillet, Champ. Fr, Hym.,, p. 517 (1874); Sacc, 
syll. v. p. 778; Ag. no.) Triniz Pat., Tab., Anal. n.345 ; and 
Ag. Ino.) Trini var. rubescens, n. 344; I. rubescens Gill, 
Rev. Myc. v., p. 31 (1883); and Champ. Fr. Hym. with 
plate, and described in the general index (1897); Sacc, 
Syll. v., p. 786; Ino. Triniz Bres. (non Weinm), Fung. 
Tnid., IL, p. 14, t. 120; Ino. repanda Quél (non Bull.), Flor. 
Myc, p. 101 (1888); Ivo. hiulca Kalch., p. 33, t. 20, f. 2; 
eice Sylva 774 Wass, bec p. 481, and see pl. 8 hereof. 
Pileus campanulate, obtusely umbonate, silky-fibrillose, rimose, 
whitish at first, then more or less suffused with a rosy tinge, 
which is usually accompanied by an ochraceous tinge, margin 
splitting, 3-5 cm. Gills narrowed behind and adnexed, almost 
free, somewhat crowded, whitish then dusky cinnamon, usually 
with an olive tinge, edge white, minutely flocculose. Stem 
equal, slightly bulbous, colour of the pileus, apex white-pruinose, 
