754 ARBORETUM AND FRU'TICETUM. PART III. 
w@ 14. R. FRaxinivo‘itiA Bork. The Ash-leaved Rose. 
eit Bork. Holz., 501.; Ker Bot. Reg., t. 458. ; Don’s Mill., 
. p. 566. 
Synonymes. R. virginiana Mill. Dict., No. 10.; #. blanda« Sol. MSS., 
Jacq. Fragm., 70. t.105.; R. corymbdsa Bose Dict. d’Agri. ex Desf. 
Cat. Hort. Par., p. 272.2; R. alpina 8 Att. Hort. Kew., ed. 2. vol. 3. 
p. 265.; #. alpina le‘vis Red. Ros.,1. p. 57.; Lawr. Ros., t. 75. 
Engravings. Ker Bot. Reg., t. 458.; Jacq. Fragm., 70. t. 105.; Red. 
Ros., 1. t. 19.; Lawr. Ros., t.75.; and our fig, 480, 
Spec. Char., §c. Tall, unarmed. Branches straight, 
glaucescent. Leaflets opaque, undulated, and gla- 
brous, (Dons Mill., ii. p. 566.) Branches dark ™ 
purple, with a pale blue bloom. Flowers small, @@& 
red, in few-flowered cymes. Fruit naked, small, “ 
round or ovate, of a dull pale red. A native of ~ -. 
Newfoundland, and on the north-west coast of *~ 
America; growing to the height of from 4 ft. to 6 ft., 
and flowering in May and June. There are plants’ 
of this very distinct species at Messrs. Loddiges’s, 
% 15. R.cinNAMO‘MEA Bes/, The Cinnamon-scented Rose. 
Identification. Bes). Hort. Eyst. Vern. Ord., 6. p. 5.; Lin. Sp., 703. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 566. 
pai ence. R. foecundissima Munch. Hausv., 5. p. 279., Fl. Dan., t. 1214.; R. majalis Herm. 
iss., 8. 
Engravings. Lindl. Ros. t.5.; Red. Ros., t. 37, and t.51,; Fl. Dan., t 1214; and our fig. 481. 
Spec. Char., §c. Tall, cinereous. Branches straight. 
Prickles stipular, straightish. Stipules dilated, undu- 
lated. Leaflets oblong, obtuse, wrinkled, tomentose 
beneath. (Don’s Mill., ii. p. 566.) Flowers solitary, 
or 2—3 together, pale or bright red. Fruit round, 
naked, and crimson. The double-flowered variety is 
most common in gardens. A native of most parts of 
Europe. Growing to the height of 5 ft. or 6 ft., and 
flowering in May and June. A very desirable sort, on 
account of its fragrance, which resembles that of cin- 
namon. There is a semidouble variety ; and the single 
state is supposed to be identical with &, majalis below. 
% 16. R. masa‘tis Retz. The May Rose. 
Identification. Retz. Obs. Bot., 3. p. 33. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 566. 
Synonymes. R.mitica Fl. Dan., 688.; H. spinosissima Gorter. Ingr., 78.; HR. collincola Ehrh. 
Beitr., 2. p.70.; A. cinnamdmea Eng. Bot., 2388, 
Engravings. Ft. Dan., t, 688. ; Eng. Bot., t. 2388, 
Spec. Char., &c. Dwarf, grey. Branches straight, coloured. Prickles scattered, nearly equal. 
Stipules linear. Leaflets oblong, flat, glaucous, and tomentose beneath. (Don’s Mril., ii, p. 566.) 
Flowers usually solitary, pale red. Fruit orange red, spherical, and naked. Native of Sweden 
and Lapland ; and of Britain, near Pontefract, in Yorkshire: growing to the height of from 3 ft. 
to 4 ft., and flowering in May and June. This is supposed by some to be the single state of 2. cin- 
namomea, 




% 17. R. Dicxsonz4‘Na Lindl. Dickson’s Rose. 
Identification. Lindl. Hort. Trans., 7. p, 224., Syn. Brit. Fl., ed. 2. p.99.; Don’s Mill., 2, p. 566. © 
Spec. Char., &c. Branches flexuous, setigerous, armed with a few slender, scattered prickles. 
Leaflets folded together, unequal, with coarse double serratures. Stipules, petioles, and sepals 
compound. Styles stretched out, glabrous. (Don’s Miil., ii. p. 566.) Flowers white, Native of 
Ireland ; growing to the height of from 5 ft. to 6 ft., and flowering in June and July, 
& 18. R. rau’rica Bieb. The Taurian Rose. 
Identification. Bieb. Fl. Taur., 1. p. 394.; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 566. 
Spec. Char., &c. Tall, cinereous. Prickles scattered, weak. Branches straight, unarmed towards 
the apex, Leaflets oblong, wrinkled, villous beneath. Sepals compound. Styles stretched out, 
glabrous. (Don’s Miil., ii. p. 566.) Habit of 2. cinnamdmea. Flowers red. Native of Tauria, in 
bushy places. Introduced in 1817; growing to the height of from 5 ft. to 6ft., and flowering in 
June and July. 
& 19. R. panu‘rica Pall. The Dahurian Rose. 
Identification. Pall. Fl. Ros., p.61.; Lindl. Ros,, p. 32.; Don’s Mill,, 2. p. 566. 
Spec. Char., §c. Tall, much branched. Branches slender, coloured. Prickles stipular, spreading, a 
little recurved. Stipules linear. Leaflets oblong, wrinkled, tomentose beneath, deeply serrated. 
(Don's Mill., ii. p. 566.) Flowers red. Fruit ovate, red, Native of Dahuria and Mongol Tartary, 
in birch woods, Introduced in 1824; growing to the height of from 4 ft. to 6 ft,, and flowering in 
May and June. 
