XXVIL ROSA‘CEH: CRATE GUS, 879 
Don’s Mill. ii. p.601.; C. Olivéria Lodd. Cat. ; C. orientalis Lodd. 
' Cat., Bot. Reg. t. 1953. (fig. 719. in p. 400.; the plate in Arb. Brit., 
Ist edit., vol.vi. ; and our fig. 667.); has the leaves small and hoary, 
and the fruit also small and black. “A very distinct variety. Hort. Soc. 
= C. 0. 19 atirea Hort., C. flava Hort. (fig. 723. in p.401.), has the 
leaves like C. O. obtusata, and the fruit roundish, and of a golden 
yellow. This is a very distinct variety, and ought never to be omitted 
in collections. 
¥ C. 0. 20 aurantiaca Booth is said to have orange-coloured fruit ; but 
there are only small plants of it in the London gardens. Mr. Wil- 
son found, in Ayrshire, a variety with greenish orange fruit. ( Hook.) 
¥ C.O. 21 leucocérpa, a variety with white haws, is said to have been 
discovered in a hedge near Bampton, in Oxfordshire; but we have 
never seen it. 
F. Varieties differing in having the Fruit woolly. 
¥ C, O, 22 eriocdrpa Lindl. C. erioc&rpa Lodd. Cat. (jig. 720. in p. 400. ; 
the plate in Arb. Brit., 1st edit., vol. vi.; and our Jig. 668.), is a robust 
665. C. 0. eriocdrpa. 
i wing variety, with large leaves, and strong thick shoots ; 
ae Shite batk, and few horns. It is very prolific in flowers, 
and the fruit which succeeds them is woolly in its young state, but 
not large. If ever the hawthorn should be cultivated for its timber, 
to supply the wood-engravers as a substitute for box, this variety 
and C. OQ. melanocarpa will deserve the preference. Hort. Soc. 
G. Varieties differing in the Form of the Leaves, 
3 obtusata Dec. Prod.; Méspilus Oxyac4ntha integrifolia 
5 Paitr * sohed. 219.; C. oxyacanthdides Thuill. Fl. Par, 245., Bot. 
Reg. t.1128., Dec. Fl. Fr. iv. p. 433. ; C. Oxyacintha Fi. Dan, t. 
335.; the French hawthorn. (jig. 714. in p. 399.; the plate in Arb. 
Brit., 1st edit., vol. vi.; and our Jig. 669.) — Leaves rather rhomb- 
shaped at the base, obovate, undivided, or with three obtuse lobes, 
