MK. J. fi. baker's monograph OF BRITISH ROSKS. 21 



here by Deseglise is more pubescent and less conspicuously glan- 

 dular, but the corolla is beautifully gland- ciliated. 



7. R. TOMENTOSA, Smith, Frutex altus, ramis elongatis arcuatis, aculeis 

 sparsis a^qualibus rectis vel subrectis gracilibus, foliolis copiose du- 

 plicato-serratis, plerisque utrinque plus minus griseo-pubescentibus, 

 infra interdum inconspicue glandulosis, floribus 1 vel paucis, pedun- 

 culis mediocribus dense aciculatis, sepalis ascendentibus dorso dense 

 glandulosis subpersistentibus majoribus copiose pinnatis ; fructibus 

 ovato-ureeolatis vel rotundatis, aciculatis vel nudis, neque prseeo- 

 cibus nee serotinis, discis mediocribus instructis. 



R. TOMENTOSA, Smith, FL Brit. ii. p. 539 (1800); Woods, Linn. 

 Trans, xii. p. 197 (excl. var. paucis). Herb, 31-33, 38, 39, 44-48, 

 51-58; Fries, Herb. Norm. ix. 46; Deseg. Mon. p. 98, Toment. 

 p. 28 ; Reut. Cat. edit. 2, p. 68; Gren. Jura, p. 234 ; Dumort. Belg. 

 p. 50; Baker, Review, p. 14, Exsic. 8, 9, 10. 



R. SYLVESTRis FRUCTU MAJORE HispiDO, Ray, edit. 2, p. 296 

 (1696), teste Buddie, Herb. ! 



R. viLLOSA /3, Hiids. FL Angl. edit. 2, p. 219 (1778). 



R. cuspiDATA, M. Bieb. FL Taur. Cauc. i. p. 396 (1808) ; Tratt. 

 Mon. i. p. 121 ; Reich. FL Excurs. ii. p- 616; Deseg. Mon. p, 9&y 

 Toment. p. 8. 



R. Andrzeiouskii, Steven in Besser, Enum. Volhy. p. 19; Tratt. 

 Mon. i. p. 120; Deseg. Mon. p. 124, Toment. p. 35. 



R. HispiDA, Borckh. Forst. ii. p. 1332. 



R. Borckhausenii, Tratt. Mon. p. 114. 



R. PULCHELLA, Woods, Linn. Trans, xii. p. 196, Herb. 36. 



R. TEREBiNTHiNACEA, Besserl, non Deseglise. 



R. Seringeana, Godr. Fl. Lorr. edit. 2, p. 255. 



R. INSIDIOSA, Gren. FL Jura, p. 233. 



An arching shrub 6 or 8, or even 10 feet high, with elongated 

 branches duller than in the last and not so glaucous. Prickles 

 scattered, uniform, the largest 4t-5 lines long, rather stouter down- 

 wards than in mollissima, and sometimes slightly curved. Fully 

 developed leaves 4-5 inches long, the terminal leaflet elliptical 

 or slightly ovate, more or less rounded at the base, l|-2 inches 

 long by about three quarters as broad, often more pointed than 

 m mollissima^ the serratures copiously compound, but generally 

 sharper and not so open, the upper surface thinly grey-downy all 

 over in the typical form, the lower more so, with often, but not 



