188 ENGLISH BOTANY. 
This appears to have little affinity with the other Kohleriani, 
though the armature of the stem agrees best with them. 
Lejeune’s Bramble. 
Sus-Group II.—BELLARDIANI. Bad. 
Leaves mostly ternate, prickles chiefly confined to the angles of 
the stem, which has very numerous aciculi and gland-tipped sete. 
Sus-Srecies XXXII.—Rubus pyramidalis. Bab. 
Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. v. p. 107. 
Barren stem almost prostrate, roundish, sparingly hairy ; 
prickles numerous, short, strong, deflexed, from a rather elongate 
compressed base; aciculi and gland-tipped sete rather numerous, 
short, and nearly equal. Leaves of the barren stem mostly ternate 
or more rarely pedate-quinate ; “leaflets convex” (Bab.), coria- 
ceous, opaque, sub-glabrous above, sparingly pilose on the veins 
beneath, finely and irregularly denticulate-serrate ; terminal leaflet 
oval-obovate, truncate or sub-cordate at the base, cuspidate. 
Flowers in a pyramidal panicle, leafless and racemose above, with 
the branches short, spreading-ascending and simple, the lower 
ones elongate racemose ; rachis straight, rigid, and as well as the 
pedicels densely felted and stiffly-hairy, with very numerous 
unequal gland-tipped sete and aciculi, and a few slender declining 
unequal prickles. Sepals broadly lanceolate, cuspidate, loosely 
-adpressed to the fruit. 
On the borders of woods. Rare. In the counties of Somerset, 
Worcester, Monmouth, and Carnarvon. 
England. Shrub. Summer. 
The only specimens of this form which I have seen are those 
sent me by the Rev. W. W. Newbould from Llanberis. They 
appear to be quite unlike any others of the section, from the stiff 
rachis of the pyramidal panicle. 
Pyramidal-flowered Bramble. 
Sup-Species XXXIII.—Rubus Gintheri. Weihe. 
Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. v. p. 107. 
Barren stem arching-prostrate, round, sparingly hairy ; prickles 
rather few, very unequal, slender, hooked or declining, from a 
rather long, scarcely compressed base; aciculi and gland-tipped 
