214 ENGLISH BOTANY. 
urceolate-ovoid, thickly clothed with gland-tipped aciculi, “or 
nearly naked.” —(Baker.) Sepals deciduous, falling before the 
fruit is ripe, leaf-pointed, generally sparingly pinnate, clothed with 
gland-tipped sete. 
Gathered by Mr. F. M. Webb and Mr. H. S. Fisher, in a hedge 
near Morton, Cheshire; only one bush actually known. From this 
some doubts may be entertained of its being native. 
England ? Shrub. Summer. 
I am indebted to Mr. Baker for a specimen of this plant. It 
agrees in general appearance with R. tomentosa, but the prickles 
resemble those of RK. Borreri, and the leaves are more glandular 
and less thickly pubescent than those of the Villosee group. Mr. 
Baker describes it as a vigorous bush with arching stems, about 
6 feet in height, the flower pink and about the size of R. tomen- 
tosa. The fruit 2 to ~ inch long by 2? broad, with the sepals 
falling before it changes colour. He says that the Cheshire plant 
agrees well with the French plant sent him by M. Déséglise, 
except that the prickles are more robust. 
Jundzil’s Rose. 
French, Rose de Jundzil. 
SPECIES XIIL—ROSA BORRERI. Woods. 
Puate CCCCLXXI. 
Baker, in Nat. 1864, p. 63. Woods, Trans. of Linn. Soc. Vol. IT. p. 210. 
R. dumetorum, Sm. Eng. Bot. No. 2579. 
R. inodora, “ Fries.” Borrer, in E. B. 8. No. 2610, note. 
Prickles numerous, large, curved, uniform, not intermixed with 
aciculi and gland-tipped sete. Leaflets oval or elliptical, sharply 
serrate, with the serratures again very faintly serrated, deep green 
above where they are sparingly hairy when young but glabrous 
when mature, paler more hairy and with a few sticky almost scent- 
less glands beneath. Pedicels short, with large oval bracts, and 
clothed with a few aciculi and gland-tipped aciculi. Styles hairy. 
Fruit urceolate-ovoid, scarlet when ripe. Sepals deciduous, falling 
by the time the fruit is ripe, leaf-pointed, entire, or slightly pin- 
natifid, “varying from almost naked to a good deal glandular 
on the outside.””—(Baker.) 
In hedges and thickets. Apparently not common. Only known 
