174 ENGLISH BOTANY. 
plant figured in English Botany is stated by Mr. Borrer to be from 
Henfield, Sussex. 
England. Shrub. Summer. 
Remarkable from its very broad, shortly cuspidate, plicate 
leaflets sparingly felted below, and from the very numerous prickles 
on the rachis, petioles, partial petioles and midribs of the leaves. 
Of this plant I have only seen dried specimens. 
Grabowski’s Bramble. 
Sus-Srecres XIV.—Rubus Colemanni. Bloz. 
Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. v. p. 101. 
R. fusco-ater 3 Colemanni, ab. olim. 
Barren stem arching, angular, sub-glabrous ; prickles numerous, 
rather strong, slightly deflexed, from a large much-compressed 
base. Leaves of the barren stem quinate; leaflets rather thin, 
convex, sub-glabrous and opaque above, green beneath, with 
scattered hairs most abundant on the veins; finely and irregularly 
dentate; terminal leaflet roundish, cordate at the base, shortly 
acuminate. Flowers in an elongate leafy panicle with short 
ascending branches, the upper ones corymbose, the lower ones 
sometimes sub-racemose; rachis and peduncles with short hairs, 
vland-tipped sete, and numerous very unequal slender straight 
slightly-deflexed prickles. 
Hedges near Coventry, Warwickshire; and Packington, Leices- 
tershire. 
England. Shrub. Summer. 
Of this plant I have seen only dried specimens. Its position 
appears to be doubtful, but Professor Babington considers it to be 
most allied to R. Grabowskii. 
Coleman’s Brainble. 
Sus-Srecies XV.—Rubus Salteri. Bab. 
Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. v. p- 101. 
Barren stem arching-prostrate, slightly angular, sub-glabrous; _ 
prickles numerous, slender, spreading, or slightly deflexed, froma — 
comparatively small compressed base. Leaves of the barren stem 
quinate; leaflets thin, glabrous and green on both sides, with a 
few scattered hairs on the veins and margins both above and 
beneath, acutely doubly dentate-serrate ; terminal leaflet oval, 
