326 ARBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. 
in pairs. (Don’s Mill.) A low weak shrub. North Ame- 
rica, on the declivities of hills, in the states of New York 
and Carolina. Height 2 ft. Introduced in 1724. Flowers 
pale blush; June to August. Fruit red; ripe in October. 
Variety. 
uw R.p. 2 flore pléno Red. Ros. 2. p. 73., and our jig. 
559. — Flowers double, pale blush, cileipanded 
A neat little rose, but not in very general cul- 4) p. carvino 
tivation. hare pleno. 
@ 10. R. FRAXINIFO‘LIA Bork, The Ash-leaved Rose. 
Identification. Bérk. Holz., 301. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 566. 
Synonymes. R. virginiana Mill. Dict. No. 10.3; £.blanda @ Sol. MSS. Jacq. Fragm. 70. t. 105. ; 
R. corymbdsa Bosc Dic. d’ Agr. ex Desf. Cat. Hort. Par. p. 272.? 5 
R. alpina @ Att. Hort. Kew. ed. 2, vol. 3. p. 265.; 2. alpina lee‘vis 
Red. Ros. 1p 57., Lawr. Ros. t. 75. 
Engravings. Bot. Reg., t. 458.; Lawr. Ros., t. 75.5 and our jig. 560 
Spec. Char., §c. Tall, unarmed. Branches straight, 
glaucescent. Leaflets opaque, undulated, and gla- 
brous. (Don’s Mill.) Branches dark purple, with 
a pale blue bloom. Flowers small, red,.in few- 
flowered cymes. Fruit naked, small, round or ovate, 
of a dull pale red. A glabrous shrub. Native 
of Newfoundland, and on the north-west coast of 
America. Height 4 ft. to 6 ft. Introduced ?, Flow- 
ers red; May and June. Fruit dull pale red ; ripe 
in September. 
Other North-American Species.—R. Woddsi Lindl., 
R. carolina Lin., R. Lindléy: Spreng., are described 
in our first edition; and the first two are in Messrs. 560. R. fraxinifolia, 
Loddiges’s collection. 
B. Species Natives of Nepal. 
sw 11. R. macropuy’Lua Lindl. The long-leaved Rose. 
Identification. Lindl. Ros. Monog., p. 35. ; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 566. 
Engravings. Lindl. Ros. Monog,, t. 6.; and our jig. 56). 
Spec. Char., gc. Unarmed. Leaves very long; leaf 
lets 5—11, lanceolate. Petioles with a few glands, 
which, as well as the leaflets, are woolly beneath. 
Sepals narrow, longer than the petals, which are 
apiculated. (Don’s Mill.) A smooth shrub. Gos- 
sainthan. Height 5ft. to 6ft. Introduced in 1830. 
Flowers red, on villous peduncles, and furnished 
with a few unequal setw, as well as the fruit. 
Dr. Lindley observes of this rose, that its leaves 
are the largest he has ever seen; that it cannot be 
confounded with any thing else; and that it may be 
considered the link between Cinnamémez and Pimpi- ¥ 
nellifoliz. Horticultural Society’s Garden. 661. R. macrophylla. 
C. Species Natives of Continental Europe. 
@ 12. R. ciInNaAMo’MEA Besl. The Cinnamon-scented Rose. 
Identification. Besl. Hort. Eyst. Vern. Ord., 6. p. 5.; Lin. Sp., 703. Don’s Mill., 2. p. 566. 
Synonymes. R. foecundissima Munch. Hausv. 5. p. 279., Fl. Dan. t.1214.; R. majalis Herm 
Diss. 8. 
Engravines. Lindl. Ros., t. 5.; Fl. Dan., t. 1214.; and our Jig. 562. 
Spec. Char., 5c. Tall, cinereous. Branches straight. Prickles stipular, 
straightish. Stipules dilated, undulated. Leaflets oblong, obtuse, wrinkled, 
tomentose beneath. (Don’s Mill.) Flowers solitary, or 2—3 together, 
