462 ARBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNICUM. 
what racemose. Flowers fewer and larger than in P. c. vulgaris, and scent- 
less. Lobes of the calyx long, acuminate. Style deeply 4-cleft. It differs 
from P.c. vulgaris, chiefly in its leaves being rounded at the base, and 
in its flowers being fewer, larger, and scentless. (Dec. Prod.) North Ame- 
rica. Horticultural Society’s Garden. 
a 4. P. verruco’sus Schrad. The warted Philadelphus, or Mock Orange. 
Identification. Schrad. Diss. Philad. ; Dec. Prod., 3. Ps pees F Donic Malls 2. p. 807. 
odd. Cat. ed. i 
Synonyme. P. grandifidrus Lindl. Bot. Reg. t. 570., 
Engravings. Bot. Reg., t. 570. ; and our jig. 825. 
Spec. Char., §c. Leaves elliptic-ovate, 
acuminate, denticulate, pubescent with = 
hairs beneath, and bearing beneath, 
upon the midrib and primary veins, 
warts at the base of the hairs. Similar 
warts are, also, on the peduncles, 
pedicels, and calyxes. Inflorescence 
racemose. Lobes of the calyx acumi- 
nate. Style, at the very tip, 4-cleft. 
(Dec. Prod.) Alarge vigorous-grow- 
ing somewhat fastigiate shrub. North 
America, or possibly a garden pro- 
duction. Height 8 ft. to 10 ft. Culti- 
vated in 1800, or before. Flowers 
white; May and June. Fruit brown; A 
ripe in September. 825. ms verrucdsus. 
Young shoots twice the thickness of those of P. coronarius, and having a 
somewhat more fastigiate habit. When in flower, this sort and the two fol- 
lowing make a splendid appearance ; the plants, in fine seasons, being so 
entirely covered with bloom as scarcely to show the leaves. 
a 5. P, (v.) Latiro‘Lius Schrad. The broad-leaved Philadelphus, or Mock 
Orange. 
Identification, Schrad. Diss. Philad. ; Dec. Prod., 3. p. 206.; Don’s Mill., 2. p. 807. 
Synonyme. P. pubéscens Cels. Hort., Lois. 
. Herb. Amat. t. 208. 
Engravings. Lois. Herb. Amat., t. 208. ; and 
our jig. 826. 
Spec. Char. §c. Bark whitish. 
Leaves broad-ovate, acuminate, 
toothed, nerved with about 5 
nerves. and pubescent with hairs 
beneath. Flowers in racemes. 
Lobes of the calyx acuminate. 
Style 4-cleft at the very tip. (Dee 
Prod.) A large rambling shrub, 
but still somewhat fastigiate, and 
crowded with branches. North 
America, or probably a garden pro- 
duction. Height 10 ft. Cultivated 
in 1815, or before. Flowers white ; 
May and June. Fruit brown ; ripe 
in September. 
Distinguishable by its bark being 
whitish ; and by its leaves, especially 
those of the younger branches, being 
more broadly ovate; and by the 
hairs they bear not being based by 
warts. A tolerably distinct variety, splendid when in flower. 
826. P. (v.) latifolius. 
