66 THE BRITISH ROSES 
(1869), gives his opinion that the degree of pubescence on the 
leaflets is of little value, so that perhaps for the present 2. pseudo- 
rubiginosa Lej. may be permitted to include forms with densely 
in bs Sodbland; if not in England. If Crépin’s s principle that pube- 
scence is of little she seh be accepted, some of our species in 
gland-ciliate. Hedges Thirsk. This bs ‘pail the plant 
t has i 
ba Th unded at ap 
Bary ‘both sides, He See bonsath: aaak not very densely 
so, and some nearly eglandular. Peduncles glandular-hispid, 
about equalling or slightly longer than the ovoid glandular- ar ae 
it. als rather short, erect, connivent, subenti It 
much like mes s own og but the leaflets are dlecidedly 
pele and less glandu 
nonymy with R. edie var. suberecta Woods, quoted 
by Mr. Biker! in Monogr. p. 214, is not now accepted as correct. 
ForEIGN SPECIES OF THE GrRouP R. POMIFERA. 
R. resinosa Sternb. is aeons by Baker, in Monogr. p. 211, a 
of R pom era Her 
iad 
R. Andrzeiovii Stev. This i is thentioned in Boxer s Monogr. 
us forms 
of R. mollis Sm, Rouy considers that i Désiiae's R. estore 
ut is RF. t 
globulosa Rouy, but seeing that the latter variety has its sepals 
persistent only up to the eloration of the fruit, this view omy 
ms because gives persistent sepals to 
S mt he calls Andrzeiowskit, os Ley thinks that our aes 
