8 KEY TO BRITISH RUBI. 
the axillary branches distant, long, chiefly racemose; all the 
creer and ped. grey-felted and hairy, with abundant sunken glands, 
asional stalked gland about equalling the hair, and rarely a 
ataied: sipped acicle or two; the prickles mostly few, slender, 
declini Sep. rather — pointed, = yrey, lousely reflexed in fr. 
Pet. sie os. obovate cesses ceeding the styles. Woods 
(Heref. and neighbouring countie Del 
Strongly recalling R. muer ona but with much hairier st. and 
pan., and totally different armatur 
bed Briggsit Blox, fi. prison B: J. Muell.? Journ. Bot. 
spi , 176 
lis. gibbous and lobed be low. Lite, finely but rather more doubl 
serrate, rounder and more acuminate; term. long-stalked, roundish 
ovate, acuminate, with deeply cordate base; lateral very similar. Pan. 
more branched and — ane above, with oe lts. like those 
of the st. Sep. mostly ng in fr. Henfield, Suss.; Bickleigh 
Vale, Dev. Latterly psa by sin Briggs as possibly only a 
very strongly marked abnormal fo 
e. R. Bagnalli Blox. Journ. Rot, 1878, pp. 175, 176.—-Very like 
var. b., but with somewhat slenderer and more declining subulate 
prickles, a good many 5-nate-pedate l. with all the Its. remarkubly 
similar, adr and less hairy; and a narrower pan., Which is less 
leafy above and has rather ae erect-patent, cake flowered 
branches. is several places in War 
These singular vars. seem (as Mr. Baker suggested in Journ. 
Bot. 1886, p. 75) to connect this group with R. dwmetorum W. &N. 
oup 9. Casm (= coryuironm Focke). — St. creeping 
climbing from a low arch, glaucous, roundish or Piet pide 
large slags Flowering early and lat 
xcept some of the plants tbs t go to make up the 
Scuregete 2 dumetorum (a link between the other Cxsm and the 
two p sett groups), this is a very natural group of closely 
reckoned with feiss V dandnlone brambles, as apparently suggested by 
Mr. W. now Lord de oy) in his paper in eg Bot. 1870 
arren 
or are better separated from each other and div ed between the 
KogBLERIANI and Cm 
“ 
- Warren’s lines) appears to me on 
st convenient. 
Ch iefly found in hedges and waste places and on walls Espe- 
elally shendgiet on clay and chalk soils, where, with R. rusticanus, 
* 
