120 ROSA BRUNONII. 
and calyx; which is therefore deciduous. It is so un- 
like any other plant of the same division, that I know 
not with which it can be confounded except with the 
next species, from which it, however, differs very essen- 
tially. 
R. Grevillii, known also under the name of R. Roz- 
burghii, is a weak variety. 
67. ROSA Brunonii. Tab. 14. 
R. ramulis foliolis lanceolatis calycibusq. tomentosis 
glandulosis, stipulis integris. 
Nomine celeberrimi doctissimique Roberti Brown, Aus- 
tralasie indagatoris indefessi, Botanicorum prin- 
cipis, qui solus inter hodiernos Rosarum species pro- 
posuit novas omnesque recté, insignita. 
Hab. in Nepalia Wallich, Buchanan. (v. s. sp. herb. 
Banks et Lambert.) 
Shrub with the appearance of R. moschata. Old 
branches sparingly hairy, stout, armed with scattered, 
short, strong, hooked prickles; younger ones downy 
and glandular—their prickles falcate. Stipaule linear, 
adherent, subulate and spreading at the end, beneath 
glandular; as are the petioles, which are hairy and 
beset with a few falcate prickles; leaflets 5-7, lanceo- 
late, flat, simply serrate, hairy all over, dull green 
above, paler beneath and glandular; serratures much 
converging. Flowers in bunches; bractee straight, 
lanceolate, hairy, rolled inwards at the edge, glandular 
at the back; peduncles villous, brownish, covered with 
setee and glands which are more densely placed on the 
oblong villous tube of the calyx, but more sparingly on 
the reflexed sepals; these last seem longer than the 
