350 



ARBORETUM ET FllUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. 



Some which had attained a large size at Kew, and other places in the neigh 

 bourhood of London, were killed by the winter of 1837-8. 



g_ 62, R. microca'rpa Lindl. The small-fruited Rose. 



Identification. Lindl. Kos. Mon., 130. t. IB. ; Dec. Prod., 2. p. 601. 



Sijnonyme. R. cym6sa Tratt. Ros. 1. p. 87. 



Engravings. Lindl. Rosar. Monog., t. 18. ; and our^. G31. 



Spec. Qhar., Sfc. Prickles scattered, recurved. Leaf- 

 lets 3 5, lanceolate, shining, the two surfaces 

 different in colour. Petioles pilose. Stipules 

 bristle-shaped or awl-shaped, sca^cely attached to 

 the petiole, deciduous. Flowers disposed in di- 

 chotomous corymbs. Peduncles and calyxes gla- 

 brous. Styles scarcely protruded higher than the 

 plane of the spreading of.the flower. Fruit globose, 

 pea-shaped, scarlet, shining. Allied to R. Banks/. 

 (Dec. Prod.) A rambling sub-evergreen shrub. 

 China, in the province of Canton. Height 8 ft. to 

 10 ft. Introd. 1822. Flowers white, numerous," small; May to September. 



631. R. microc&rpa. 



Identification. 

 Engravings. Lindl. Ros 



J 63. R. hy'strix Lindl. The Porcupine Rose. 



Lindl. Ros Monog., p. 129. ; Don's Mill., 2. p. 594. 

 Monog., 1. 17. ; and out fig. 632. 



Spec. Char., Sfc. Prickles on branches unequal, 

 crowded, larger ones falcate, small ones straight. 

 Stipules very narrow, united half way, the free part 

 deciduous. Leaflets three, smooth, ovate, shining, 

 simply serrated, with a few prickles on the middle 

 nerve. Sepals nearly entire ; permanent. Fruit 

 bristly. (Do7i^s Mill.) A rambling shrub, with 

 flagelliform branches. China and Japan. Flowefs 

 large, solitary. Fruit oblong purple. 



Other Species and Varieties of 'Rosa. In the cata- 

 logue of Messrs. Loddiges, 147 species are registered, g'^. ij.hystrix. 

 of all of which, with one or two exceptions, there are living plants. The 

 garden varieties in the same collection amount to about 1500. There is 

 indeed no end to the garden varieties, new ones being every year raised 

 from seed, and old varieties every year disappearing. New species are also 

 occasionally introduced, and several have been lately raised in the Hort. 

 Soc. (rarden from Himalayan seeds. For species we recommend the cul- 

 tivator to iiave recourse to the collection of Messrs. Loddiges, and for garden 

 varieties to the most fashionable nurserymen of the time. In Rivers's Abridged 

 List of Roses, J840, he recommends, as a selection for small gardens : Pro- 

 vence roses, 7; moss roses, 8; hybrid Provence roses, 7 ; hybrid China roses, 

 20; French roses, 16; iiosa alba, 9 ; damask roses, 6; Scotch roses, 8; 

 sweet briars, .5 ; Austrian briars, 2; Ayrshire roses, 6 ; i?6sa multiflora, 3 ; 

 evergreen roses, 7 ; Boursault roses, 4 ; Banksian roses, 2 ; hybrid cHmbing 

 roses, 4; perpetual roses, 12; Bourbon roses, 7; China roses, 13 ; tea-scented 

 roses, 11 ; miniature roses, 5 ; Noisette roses, 12; musk roses, 3 ; Macartney 

 roses, 3 ; 7?6sa microphylla, 3. In all, 185 sorts ; which would form a very 

 efficient rosarium. 



Soil and Situation adapted for Roses. 



The common wild roses will grow in very poor soil, provided it be dry; 

 but all the cultivated sorts require a soil naturally light and free, and more or 

 less enriched. The situation should be open and airy, exposed to the east, 

 or, in warm situations, to the north, rather than to the soflfli ; because the 

 intensity of the sun's rays accelerates too rapidly the expansion of the flowers, 

 and also diminishes the colour and fragrance of the petals. A rose-garden, 



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