ICOSANDRIA— POLYGYNIA. Hubus. 401 



woody, biennial, if not perennial, flowering the second year, 

 branched, leafy ; the barren ones smooth, arched, and some- 

 times taking root at the extremity ; the others erect, and 

 slightly downy at the upper part. Prickles numerous on the 

 angles of the stems, sharp and strongly hooked, reddish. 

 Leaves firm and durable, almost evergreen, of 5 ovate-oblong, 

 acute, or pointed, sharply and unequally serrated leujiets ; which 

 are dark green, smooth, or slightly hairy above ; snow-white, 

 finely downy, and strongly veined, with a prickly rib, beneath ; 

 the terminal one largest, with a long partial stalk ; 2 next with 

 much shorter partial stalks, each of which bears a considerably 

 smaller, nearly sessile, leaflet, so that the whole leaf is strictly 

 pedate, the uppermost on the flowering stems only being ter- 

 nate, or even simple. On the same branch are sometimes seen 

 a few leaves that are pale green at the back, and merely hairy, 

 not at all cottony, or white. Footstalks in some degree hairy, 

 all beset with strongly hooked prickles. Stipulas bristle-shaped, 

 hairy, in pairs upon each footstalk near the base. Clusters erect, 

 oblong, rather densely panicled, twice compound, many- 

 flowered 3 their branches and stalks rather angular, vv-hite, and 

 finely downy, without glandular hairs. Bracteas solitary, linear- 

 lanceolate, white or hoary. Ft. erect, handsome. Calyx downy 

 all over, reflexed in the flower, as well as in fruit, destitute of 

 prickles, and of glandular hairs. Petals of a delicate pink, 

 rarely if ever white. The excellent authors of the " Ruhi Ger- 

 manici," on the contrary, find them generally white. Stamens 

 red. Btrry nearly globular, of very numerous, purplish-black, 

 smooth juicy grains, of a sweet but mawkish flavour, ripened 

 late in autumn. 

 Several reputed varieties of this species, almost equally common, 

 have been observed in Britain, diftering in the shape and pu- 

 bescence of their leaflets, not to mention other characters. 

 These have recently been proposed as species, in a very able 

 work, with excellent plates partially coloured, by Dr. A. Weihe 

 and Professor Ch. G. Nees ab Esenbeck, of Bonn, under the title 

 of Rubi Germanici. Some of them were sent me from Shrop- 

 shire by the Rev. E. Williams in 180 1 , and others have been no- 

 ticed, long since, by Mr. E. Forster, Mr. Borrer and Mr. Bicheno, 

 who have all favoured me with specimens accompanied by valuable 

 remarks as usual. Mr. Thomas Furly Forster has also been long 

 attentive to the same subject. Mr. Bicheno recommends a new 

 arrangement of all the species of this genus, which is here nearly 

 adopted. If I do not go quite so far as the writers of the above 

 work, in the received number of species, my reasons will appear 

 in the sequel. I take advantage of the permission they are 

 pleased expressly to grant me, fully relying on their candour. 

 Notwithstanding the colour of the flowers, I cannot suppose our 

 British R.fruticosus to difter from theirs. 



VOL. II. 2d 



