108 THE BRITISH ROSES 
short but broad pinne. Styles hispid. Other specimens, as 
already stated, often have fewer, stouter, more hooked prickles, 
rather longer, less broad leafiets, globose fruit, and more erect 
sepals 
, but not very mixed. 
val, small, not much longer than prickles, glabrous 
above, thinly hairy, and glandular beneath. Stipules smooth or 
glandular on the back. Pedunceles short, glandular-hispid. Fruit 
large, ovoid, crowned by erect, persistent sepals. Styles cannot 
be seen. Hailstone’s No. 54, from Oglethorpe (Northumberland ?), 
has stout barren shoots with very mixed prickles, the large ones 
very stout and hooked, well marked off from the numerous small, 
straight, more or less aciculate ones. Their armature is abnorma 
and more like that of BR. echinocarpa, and is a good object-lesson 
in the danger of collecting stout barren shoots. The flowering- 
stem has the usual long, slender, straight, unequal prickles. 
Leaflets small, oval, rounded at both ends, in a few of them 
narrowed below, clothing as in the Shoreham example. Peduncles 
Rosa JENENSIS 
M. Schulze in Mittelung. Geogr. Gesell. Thuring. zu Jena, iii. 
p. 79 (1884). 
‘‘ Manner of growth, prickles, petioles, stipules, bracts, leaflets, 
length of peduncles, styles, and by its whole habit very near 
comosa Chr., but on closer inspection essentially distinct. The 
calyx-tube are quite glabrous and eglandular, the 
ore the fruit ripe 
This very rare form, though known in several places in Central 
Europe, does ee to exist in pecimen 
seen is M 
