BOTANICAL CLASSIFICATION. 231 



double flowers, of a most delicious fragrance, strongly resembling the scent of the 

 finest green tea. There are numerous subvarieties. 



66. B. SKMPERFLO^RENS Cur/. The ever-flowering China Rose. 



Identification. Curt. Bot. Mag., t. 284 ; Smith Exot. Bot. 2, p. 91 ; Jaeq. Schonbr., 

 3, p. 2Si ; Don's Mill., 2, p. 582. 



Si/noiiymes. R. diversifolia Vent. Cels., t. 35; /?. bengalensis Pers. Ench., 2, p. 50; 

 R. indica Red. Ros., 1, p. 49, t. 13, p. 123, t. 46, and 2, p. 37, t. 16. 



Spec. Char., (^c. Branches dark green, armed with scattered, compressed, 

 hooked prickles, and a very few glands. Leaflets 3 — 5, ovate-lanceolate, crenate- 

 serrated, shining above, but glaucous and slightly setigerous beneath. Sepals 

 compound, narrow. Fruit .spherical. Native of China. Flowers solitary, single, 

 or .semi-doulale, deep crimson. There are some very splendid varieties of this 

 species, M'ilh semi-double crimson flowers, in our gardens; and the French appear 

 to have some others still more beautiful, which have not yet been imported. A 

 shrub, growing from 8 ft. to 10 ft. in height, and flowering throughout the year. 

 For this beautiful rose we are indebted to Gilbert Slater, Low-Layton, Essex, a 

 gentleman to whose memory a genus has not yet been devoted, though he was the 

 means of introducing several of our finest plants. 



67. R. Lawrencea^na Swt. Lawrence's China Rose. 



Identification. Sweet Hort. Suburb; Lindl. Ros., p. 110; Dons Mill., 2, p. 582. 



Synoni/mes. R. semperflurens minima Sims Bot. Mag., t. 1762 ; R. indica var. o acu- 

 minata Red. Ros., 1, p. 53 ; R. Indica LawrencecJ^a Red. Ros., 2, p. 38. 



Spec. Char., df'c. Dwarf. Prickles large, stout, nearly straight. Leaflets ovate, 

 acute, finely serrated. Petals acuminated. Native of China. Flowers small, single 

 or semi-double, pale blush. A shrub, 1 ft. in height, which flowers throughout the year. 

 The beautiful little plants called fairy roses are nearly all varieties of R. Lawrenceuna ; 

 and they are well worthy of culture, from their extreme dwarfness (often flowering when 

 not more than six inches high), and the beautiful color of their miniature rose-buds, the 

 petals of which appear of a much darker hue than'those of the expanded flower. 



IX. SY'STYIiJE Lindl. 



Derivation. From sun, together, and stulos, a style ; in reference to the styles being 

 connected. 



Sect. Char. Styles cohering together into an elongated column. 

 Stipules adnate. The habit of this section is nearly the same as that 

 of the last division. The leaves are frequently permanent. 



68. R. sy'styla Bat. The connate-style Rose. 



Identification. Bat. Fl. Main, et Loir. Suppl., 31 ; Don's Mill., 2, p. 582. 



Synonymes. R. collina Smith in Eng. Bot., t. 1895; R. stylosa Desv. Joum. Bot., 

 2, p. 317 ; R. brevlstyla Dec. Fl. Fr. Suppl, p. 537 ; R. bibracteata Dec, Ic; R. sy'styla 

 a ovata Lindl. Ros., p. 111. 



Spec. Char., <^'c. Shoots assurgent. Prickles strong, hooked. Peduncles glandular. 

 Sepals pinnate, deciduous. Styles smooth. Floral receptacle conical. Native of 

 France and England, in hedges and thickets ; common in Sussex; at Walthamstow, 

 Q,uendon, and Clapton, near London ; at Durmington Castle. Berkshire ; near Penshurst, 

 Kent; and Hornsey, Middlesex; hills in the south of Scodand. Flowers fragrant, 

 pink or almost white. Fruit ovate-oblons. A shrub, growing from 8 ft. to 12" ft. in 

 height, and flowering from May to July. There are several varieties, but they do not 

 differ materially in appearance from the species. 



69. R. arve'nsis Huds. The Field Rose. 



Identification. Huds. Fl. Angl., ed. 1, p. 192, according to Lindl. Ros., Mon ; Lin. 

 JIant., p. 245 ; Dec. Prod., 2, p. 596. 



Synonymes. R. svlvestris Hem. Diss., p. 10; R. scandens Masnrh Weiss. PI., p. 

 118; R. herperhodon E'lrh. Beilr., 2, p. 69 ; R. Halleri Krok. Siles, 2, p. 150 ; R. fiisca 

 Macnch Met!i ., p. 683; R. serpens Ehrh. Arbor., p. 35; R. semncrvirens Rossig. Ros; 

 7?. repens Gmel. Fl. Bad. Als. 2. p. 418, Jucq. Frngm., p. 69, t. 104 ; R. ranipans y?eyn. 

 Mem. Laus. 1, p. 69, t. 5. 



