52 Transactions of the Horticultural Society. 



finest in tlie flavour of its berries, as well as in their size. It 

 has not yet flowered in the Society's garden." 



a. echinatum. A slender reclining prickly bush, with 

 brownish yellow flowers, and black hairy berries, small, but 

 of a pleasant taste. " A common trailing shrub, on dry 

 shelving rocky places on the mountains, at the Grand Rapids 

 on the Columbia, and on the mountains of Northern Cali- 

 fornia ; never frequenting edges of rills or swampy ground in 

 shady woods among Carices, as R. laciistre does. This species 

 flowered for the first time, last April, in the Society's garden. 



" Several undescribed species, from the same country as 

 those above noticed, are in a growing state in the Society's 

 garden ; but, as no native dried specimens of these exist in this 

 country, they cannot for the present be here noticed. Many 

 other important additions of the genus Rihes yet remain to 

 be introduced to our gardens from America, among which 

 two species of unrivalled beauty adorn the untrodden wilds of 

 Northern California, which we hope, ere many years, to see 

 as common in the gardens of Eno-land as R. sanguineum now 



O _ O _ ft) 



is ; and although as fruits they are precisely alike, being 

 peculiarly disagreeable, the splendour of their blossoms and 

 varied foliage may procure for them a distinguished place in 

 any garden." 



55. History and Description of the Sjiecies of Camellia and Thea, 

 and of the Varieties of the Camellia japonica, that have heen im- 

 ported from China. By Mr. William Beattie Booth, A.L.S. 

 Garden Clerk. Read Aug. 18. and Sept. 1. 1829. 



This article may be considered a miniature of the work 

 now publishing by Chandler and Booth under the title of 

 Camelliese ; and therefore, as we duly notice that work dur- 

 ing its progress, we shall merely give a list of the species and 

 varieties here described. 



1. C. Sasdnqua, Sasanqua, or Ladi/ Banks'' s Camellia. 



2. C. oleifera, Oil-bearing, or Oil Seed-tree Camellia. 



3. C. Kissi, Kissi, or Nepal Camellia. 



4. C. w;alifl6ra, Apple-blossomed Camellia. 



5. C. reticulata, Reticiilated, or Captain Baives^s Camellia. 



6. C. japonica, Japan, o?- <S7«^/c' 7i*«/ Camellia. 



1 . alba plena. Double White Camellia. 



2. fimbriata. Fringed White Camellia. 



3. variegata, Variegated, or Donblc-stripcd Camellia. 



4. rubra plena, Double Red Camellia. 



5. incarnata. Incarnate, or Lady Huvic^s Blush. 



6. onemoneflora. Anemone-flowered, or Waratah Camellia. 



7. crassinervis, Thick-nerved, or Mr. Keufs Camellia. 



8. ??zyrtif61ia. Myrtle-leaved Camellia. 



9. involuta, Ivwohxte-petaled, or Lady Long's Camellia. 



10. variabilis. Various-flowered Camellia. 



11. PomjJonia, Pompone, or Kew Blush Camellia. 



