ICOSANDIIIA-POLYGYNIA. Rosa. 377 



R. pinipinellifolia. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 10. 1062. A. Herb. Linn. 

 Sp. PL 703. U'lUd. V. 2. 1067. Sabine Tr. of Hort. Soc. v. 4. 

 282. 



R. n. 1106. Hall. Hist. V. 2. 40. 



R. campestris spinosissima, flore albo odoro. Bauh. Pin, 483. 



R. campestris odorato flore. Clus. Hist. v. I. \ \6.f,f. 



R. campestris odora. Clns. Pann. 1 1 1./. 1 14./. best, 



R. dunensis, species nona. Dod. Pempi. 187./. 



R. pumila spinosissima, foliis pimpinellae glabris, flore albo. 

 Bauh. Hist. v. 2. 40./. Raii Stjn. 455. 



R. pimpinellge folio. Ger. £/«. 1270./. bad, as wanting prickles. 



R. sylvestris pomifera. Loh. Ic. v. 2. 211./ Dalech. Hist. 127./ 

 the same. 



/3. R. Ciphiana, seu R. pimpinellsg foliis minor nostras, flore ele- 

 gant^r variegato. Sibb. Scot. p. 2. 46. t. 2.^ 



R. pimpinellifolia. Jacq. Fragm. 7\. t. 107./. 1. 



R. Pimpinella minor Scotica, floribus ex albo et carneo eleganter 

 variegatis. Pink. Almag. 322. Dill, in Raii Sijn. 455. 



y pusilla. Woods Tr. of L. Soc. v. 12. 179. Flower-stalks very 

 short. Fruit large, depressed. 



On sandy heaths, banks and hillocks, especially towards the sea. 



/3. First noticed by Sir Robert Sibbald, on his own estate in Scot- 

 land, and since frequently cultivated in gardens. 



y. In Ireland. Mr. Sabine. 



Shrub. July. 



Of the same stature as the last, but the prickles on the stem are 

 much more abundant, and very unequal, straight, though often 

 deflexed, oblong at the base. A few bristles are interspersed, 

 diflerint^'from the prickles in their smaller size and glandular 

 tips onfy. Leaflets usually 7, sometimes 9, smooth, opaque, 

 almost orbicular, with broad simple serratures, which are 

 largest towards the abrupt extremity, and very rarely here and 

 the're notched, or double, especially in luxuriant plants, whose 

 leaflets are larger and more elliptical. Common footstalks more 

 or less beset with small glandular bristles ; sometimes prickly. 

 Stipulas linear-wedge-shaped, fringed with glands 3 then- ponits 

 dilated widely spreading, leafy, acute, often cut or lobed ; the 

 upper ones never, as far as I have seen, assummg the appear- 

 ance of bracteas. Flower-stalks solitary, varying in length, 

 swelling upwards, angular when dried, quite smooth and 

 naked, according to my observation ; but some of Mr. Boner's 

 Sussex specimens have bristly flower-stalks, like Mr. Woods's 

 spinosissima s. Tube of the calyx very smooth, g obose, often 

 abrupt or flat at the top ; segments of the limb almost invari- 

 ably simple, spreading ; smooth at the back ; acute or slightly 

 leafy, at the point ; converging more or less as the fruit ripens. 

 Petals cream-coloured, yellow at the base, delicately fragrant ; 

 in /3 striped, or copiously blotched, with red. truH generally a 



