CHAP. XLII. ROSA CEE. RU‘BUS. 745 
ina panicle, Corolla white. Petals tapered at the base.(Dec. Prod., ii. p.563.) A native of North 
America; said to have been introduced in 1823. % 
* 2. 27. R, cuneiro‘Lius Ph, The wedge-shaped-leafleted Bramble. 
Identification. Ph. Fl. Amer. Sept., 1. p. 347.; Dec. Prod., 2. p. 563. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 537. 
Synonyme. R. parvifdlius Walt, Fl. Carol., 149., Tratt. Ros., 3. p. 49. 
Spec. Char., &c. Umperfectly evergreen. Branches, petioles, and peduncles tomentose. Prickles re- 
curved, scattered. Leaflets cuneate-ovate, in the terminal portion toothed, unequally plicate, and 
tomentose beneath. Flowers upon divaricate nearly naked pedicels, and disposed in terminal 
panicles. (Dec. Prod., ii. p.563.) According to Pursh, this is “a straggling briar, with a grey 
aspect ; the berries hard and dry, and the flowers white.” It is found in sandy fields and woods in 
New Jersey and Carolina, and was in cultivation in Britain in 1811. 
~ 28. R.ui’spipus L. The hispid-stemmed Bramble. 
Identification. Lin. Sp., 706. ; Dec. Prod., 2. p. 564. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 539. 
Synonymes. R. trivialis Michx. Fl. Bor. Amer., p. 296.; R. procambens 4.62 x 
Miihi.; R. flagellaris Willd., according to Spreng. Syst., 2. p. 530. = 
Engravings. Wayne Abbild., t. 71. ; and our jig. 462. 
Spec. Char., &§c. Stem procumbent, round, very hispid, bearing scattered 
bristles and recurved prickles. Leaflets 3—5, wedge-shaped at the base, 
unequally toothed, pretty glabrous above. Flowers solitary, upon longish 
peduncles. Petals obovate. Carpels black. (Dec. Prod., ii. p. 564.) A 
native of Canada, with procumbent stems, flowering in August, and 
said to have been in cultivation in Britain since 1759. 
? « 29. R. Lanuetno‘sus Steven, The woolly Bramble. 
' Identification. Stey. Obs. ined. in H, Willd.; Dec. Prod., ii. p. 564. ; 
Don’s Mill., 2. p. 538. 
Spec. Char., &c. ‘The flower-bearing stem 1 ft. high. Petioles and pedun- 
cles tomentose. Prickles straight, few. Leaflets 3, ovate, with a heart- 
shaped base and acuminate extremity, sharply toothed with mucronate teeth, villose on both 
surfaces. Panicles terminal, many-flowered. Sepals upright, villose without, within whitely tomen- 
tose, shortly awned. Bracteas awl-shaped. (Dec. Prod., ii. p. 564.) A native of Caucasus and 
Siberia, with prostrate stems; said to have been introduced in 1820, 
« 30. R. cANADE’NsIS L. The Canadian Bramble. 
Identijication. Lin. Sp., 707., exclusive of the synonyme of Mill. Icon. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 538, 
Spec. Char., §c. Stem purple, almost glabrous. Leaflets 3—5, lanceolate, sharply serrate, glabrous 
on both surfaces. Stipules linear, a little prickly. (Dec. Prod., ii. p. 564.) A native of North 
America, in rocky woody places from Canada to Virginia; with prostrate stems and white flowers ; 
said to have been introduced in 1811. 

§ iii. Leaves lobed, not pinnate or digitate. 
& 31. R. opora‘rus L. The sweet-scented Bramble. 
Identification. Lin. Sp., 707.; Dec. Prod., 2. p. 566.; Don’s Mill, 2. p. 539. 
Synonymes. R. occidentalis Hort., but not of Lin.; the Virginian Raspberry, the flowering Rasp- 
berry. 
Engravings. Mill. Ic., t. 223.; Bot. Mag., t.323.; and our jig. 463, 
Sect. Char., §c. Stem upright. Petioles, peduncles, and 
calyxes bearing glanded hairs. Disks of leaves 5-lobed, 
unequally toothed. Inflorescence subcorymbose. Flowers 
large, showy, red. Sepals ovate, longly acuminate, shorter 
than the petals. Carpels numerous, ovate, velvety. Style 
funnel-shaped. Fruit red. (Dec. Prod., ii. p. 566.) This 
species is allied by its fruit to R. idz‘us. It is a native 
of North America, in woods; and has been in cultivation 
in Britain since 1739. It grows to the height of 4 ft. or 
6 ft.; and produces its showy purplish red flowers, in 
abundance, from June to September. These are not 
succeeded by fruit in this country; but Pursh informs 
us that, in a wild state, the fruit is yellow, and of a very fine flavour, 
and a large size. “ Cornutus, who first figured and described this plant, 
gave it the name of odoratus, on account of the fragrance of its foliage.” 
(Bot. Mag., t. 323.) It is abundant in the woods of Canada, and on the 
Alleghany Mountains. 
% 32. R. nutKA‘NUS Moc. The Nootka Sound Bramble. 
Identification, Mocino Pl. Nutk.; Dec. Prod., 2. p. 566.; Bot. Reg., t. 1368. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 540. 
Synonyme. AR. odoratus Hort., but not of Lin. 
Engravings. Mocino PL Nutk.; Bot. Reg., t. 1368.; and our fig. 464. 
Spec, Char., §c. Stem glutinous. Branches round, glabrous, rufous. Leaves 
d-lobed, unequally toothed. Inflorescence subcorymbose. Flowers about 

