THE PEARS OF NEW YORK 549 



Doyenne; pale yellow, covered with noinute dots on the shaded side and with a tinge of 

 warm orange on the side opposed to the sun; flesh neither melting nor juicy, only sweet; 

 an inferior pear; soon becomes soft; Nov. 

 Sotschnaja. i. la. Hart. Soc. Rpt. 6i. 1880. 



A northern European variety reported by J. L. Budd as imported by him and on 

 trial at the Iowa State College. Shows marked traces of the Chinese forms of the pear 

 in shape, serration, thickness and size of leaf. The wood is gritty and thom-like and 

 unites very imperfectly with the apple. 

 Soueraigne. i. Parkinson Par. Ter. 592. 1629. 



" The Soueraigne peare, that which I have seene and taste, and so termed unto me, 

 was a small brownish yellow peare, but of a most dainty taste; but some doe take a kind 

 of Bon Chretien, called the Elizabeth peare, to be the Soueraigne; how truly let others 

 judge." 

 Soutmann. i. "Dochna-hX Fuhr. Obstkunde 2:1^,0. 1856. 



Holland, 182 1. Fruit medium, globular-oblong, light green turning to yellowish- 

 green, without any blush, small brown dots; flesh white, butter^', melting, juicy, and with 

 a sweet aromatic flavor of cinnamon; very good dessert fruit; Dec. 

 Souvenir de I'Abbe Lefebvre. i. Guide Prat. 100. 1895. 



Obtained by M. Sannier, Rouen, Fr. Tree of moderate vigor, fertile and adapts 

 itself to all forms of growth. Fruit mediimi in size; flesh very fine, perfumed and excellent; 

 Nov. and Dec. 

 Souvenir de du Breuil Pere. i. Pom. France 4:No. 159, PI. 159. 1867. 



Poire du Breuil Pere. 2. Rev: Hort. 202. 1889. 



Obtained from a bed of seeds of Louise Bonne de Jersey made by A. du Breuil, Rouen, 

 Fr., in 1840. Fruit medium or rather large, sub-spherical, more often incHned by the 

 oblique truncation of its wide top; skin very fine, yellow at maturity, much mottled and 

 dotted with bright russet all over, the russet becoming purple on the side next the sun; 

 flesh white, melting, very juicy, saccharine, pleasantly perfumed and sprightly; excellent; 

 Nov. to Jan. 

 Souvenir Deschamps. i. Rev. Hort. 182. 1891. 2. Card. Chron. 3rd Ser. 9:57. 1S91. 



Described in 1891 as a newly introduced seedling raised in the State School of Horti- 

 cultiu-e, Ghent, Bel. Fruit large, elongated, like Calebasse in form, sometimes spindle- 

 form and straight, slightly constricted about the middle, greenish-yellow, marked with 

 brown spots; flesh yellowish, delicate, melting, juicy, good; Sept. and Oct. 

 Souvenir Desire Gilain. i. Guide Prat. 108. 1876. 



Stated in a Bulletin of the Society Van Mons to have been a gain of M. Gregoire, 

 Jodoigne, Bel. Fruit medium, ovate-pyriform, symmetrical in outline, having its greatest 

 diameter well below the centre; skin rather firm, pale green, sown with dots of darker green, 

 turning pale yellow when ripe, rather golden on the side next the svm and touched with 

 a tinge of red; flesh white, fine, breaking, juicy, saccharine, vinous, with a flavor difficult 

 to describe; Aug. 

 Souvenir d'Esperen de Berckmans. i. Mas Pom. Gen. 3:151, flg. 172. 1878. 



Obtained by M. Berckmans at his establishment in this country and should not be 



