36 CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE FLORA OF NORTH CORNWALL. 
ones nearly straight. Branches quite ‘glandless, like the petioles and 
stipules suffused with vinous red. Stipules under a line broad, 
with deltoid free tips, kee, or the faces Haniaaly gland-ciliated, 
Leaves not more than half an inch long 5 oe te densely glandular, 
not at all hairy, either with or without 1—2 minute prickles; leaflets 
not more than five, the end one aaa qua cus "of an inch long at the 
uttermost, rounded at both ends; wai moderately open and deep, 
ompound ; upper r face quite naked, or with a few very 
lanceolate, naked on the faces, densely glandular on the pees 
Calyx-tube ovoid or globose-urceolate, not more than an eighth of 
inch long, at the flowering stage quite naked. Sepals 3—% of an wash 
long, naked on the back; the minor ones i the major ones 
cuspidate, not dilated at the tip, furnished with 1—2 minute linear 
gland-ciliated — the blade itself not gland-ciliated. Expanded 
flower three-quarters of an inch across. Disk broad. Styles free, 
protruded, glabrous. Fruit e pepe venga 
Birigazza, Apennines, July, 1826.—/. Woods. 
io not remember to have seen any named rose among conti- 
nental ieeceene that matches it exactly. In a broad sense it is one 
of the innumerable varieties of R. sepiwm, the common briar of 
exposed places throughout the SI a region, next to which 
Woods — it. Ofnamed forms with which I am acquainted, it 
comes nearest to &. agrestis, Savi (Déséglise Essai, p. 104), of which 
speeane will be found in Billot, Exsice. 2263, and Déséglise, Exsice. 
by its compact habit of growth. carried out into eac 
detail, as i instance, the extremely short peduncles and leaflets 
rounded instead of gradually narrowed at each end. 
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE FLORA OF NORTH CORNWALL. 
By roe Rev. W. M. Him, LL.D. 
Tue following list of plants, nek during the past summer in 
North wee tan: is submitte d fo e information of the reade ers of the 
y 
county which lies north of a line drawn from the Tamar at Bridge- 
rule to Tintagel Head on the coast. When no locality is given, the 
plant is frequent or common 
Clematis Vitalba, L. iiaaee Papaver somniferum, L. 
Ranunculu 
us hederaceus, L. Corydalis lutea, DC. 
- Flammula, L. Fumaria capreolata, L. Bude. 
Bi acris, L. » _ Officinalis, L. Rude e, 
repens, L, Cheiranthus Cheiri, L. 
Caltha palustris, L. Nasturtium officinale, = Br. 
Delphinium Consolits, L. l Barbarea vulgaris, R. 
Papaver Rheas, Cardamine sylvatica, pak. 
i ce ae 
