John Keble's Parishes: A History of Hursley and Otterbourne - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel John Keble's Parishes: A History of Hursley and Otterbourne Part 22 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
NIPPLEWORT (Lapsana communis).--Too frequent weed.
DANDELION (Leontodon Taraxac.u.m).--How can its praise for glorious brilliant flowers and stems fit for chains be pa.s.sed by, or for the "clocks" that furnish auguries!
(L. autumnalis).--Is this a separate species, or the dandelion blowing in autumn?
GO-TO-BED AT NOON (Tragopogon pratensis).--Beautiful when open early in the day, beautiful when the long calyx is closed, and most beautiful with its handsome winged pappus--King's Lane, Otterbourne Churchyard.
WILD LETTUCE (Lactuca muralis).--On heaps of flints.
MOUSEAR (Thrincia hirta).--Sulphur-coloured, small, and held to be an excellent remedy for whooping-cough.
OX-TONGUE (Helminthia echioides).--The rough leaf is well named.
HAWKBIT (Hieracium autumnale).
(Apargia hispida).--In cornfields.
SHEEP'S-BIT (Jasione montana).--Cranbury Common.
SOW THISTLE (Sonchus arvensis).
(S. pal.u.s.tris).
WHORTLEBERRY (Vaccinium Myrtillus).--Ampfield Wood.
CROSS-LEAVED HEATH (Erica Tetralix) Otterbourne Hill, the glory of early autumn.
BELL HEATHER (E. cinerea).
LING (Calluna vulgaris) BIRD'S NEST (Monotropa Hypopitys).--South Lynch Wood.
ASH (Fraxinus excelsior).
PRIVET (Ligustrum vulgare).--Lane leading to the Itchen.
GENTIAN TRIBE
THE PERIWINKLE (Vinca minor).--Curiously irregular in blossoming.
One spring the ground is covered with blue stars, another only with evergreen trails. Its only habitat here is Lincoln's Copse.
YELLOWWORT (Chlora perfoliata).--Ampfield Wood.
CENTAURY (Erythraea Centaurea).--Cranbury.
GENTIAN (Gentiana Pneunomanthe).--Baddesley bog, Cranbury.
(G. Amarella).--Pitt Down.
BOGBEAN (Menyanthes trifolium).--This lovely flower abides in the wet banks of the Itchen.
BINDWEED (Convolvulus sepium).--Pure and white.
(C. minor).--In shades of pink. Called lilies by the country-folk.
DODDER (Cuscuta Epithymum).--Red threads forming a beaded network over the furze.
(C. Trifolii).--Coa.r.s.er fibres, smaller b.a.l.l.s of blossom, in some years strangling the clover.
WOODY NIGHTSHADE (Solanum Dulcamara).--Purple flowers, red berries, beautiful everywhere.
(S. nigrum).--White-flowered, black-berried. At Cranbury, and occasionally elsewhere.
DEADLY NIGHTSHADE (Atropa belladonna).--Used to be near the front door at Hursley Park.
HENBANE (Hyoscyamus niger).--Formerly on the top of Compton Hill, and at the angle of the lane leading to Bunstead.
BORAGE TRIBE
MULLEIN (Verbasc.u.m nigrum). The handsome spikes (V. Thapsus) everywhere.
(V. Blattaria).--Formerly in hedge of cottage at Silkstede.
GROMWELL (Lithospermum officinale).--Beside Winchester Road on way to Twyford.
FORGET-ME-NOT (Myosotis pal.u.s.tris).--Itchen meadows.
MOUSE-EAR, SCORPION GRa.s.s (M. versicolor).--Stubblefields.
(M. sylvatica).--Ampfield.
(M. arvensis).--Everywhere.
COMFREY (Symphytum officinale).--Itchen banks.
HOUND'S TONGUE (Cynoglossum officinale).--Merdon Hill, but it has disappeared from Otterbourne.
PRIMROSE (Primula vulgaris).--Has any one observed the tiny blossoms of seedlings of the first year? Now and then there are stalked heads like oxlips, white or red varieties.
COWSLIP (P. veris).--Covering some few fields, and delightful for cowslip b.a.l.l.s. Sweetest of scents.
YELLOW LOOSESTRIFE (Lysimachia vulgaris).--A beautiful shrub by the water-side.
MONEYWORT (L. Nummularia).--The Creeping-Jenny of rock-work, etc.
YELLOW PIMPERNEL (L. nemorum).--Covering the ground in woods with its delicate pentagon stars.
PIMPERNEL (Anagallis arvensis).--A beautiful blue variety once came up in the kitchen-garden at Otterbourne House, and prevailed for several years.
(A. tenella).--In the bogs towards Cuckoo Bushes.
l.a.b.i.aTAE
WATER FIGWORT - (Scrophularia Balbisii). Both common and not beautiful.
(S. nodosa)