LXVIII. SALICA CE#!: SA‘LIX. 789 
heart-shaped, longer than the broad footstalks. 
Catkins very woolly. Ovary lanceolate, glabrous, 
on a short stalk. (Smith.) A tall shrub, or small 
spreading tree. Lapland, Sweden, and in Britain 
but rare. Height 5 ft. to 10 ft. Flowers yellow; 
April and May. 
Varieties. f 
2% S.A. 2 serruldta, S. hastata Willd. Sp. Pl. § 
iv. p. 664.— Leaves broadly ovate, heart- | 
shaped at the base. X 
& S.h. 3 malifolia, S. malifolia Smith Eng. Bot. & 
t. 1617. (Fora leaf, see our fig. 36. in 
p- 739.) — Leaves elliptic oblong, toothed, 
wavy, thin and crackling, very glabrous. 
2? a» Sik. 4 arbiscula, S. arbiscula Wahl. Fl. 
Dan. t. 1055., Forbes in Sail. 1488. S. hastata. 
Wob. No. 138., where there are 
a figure and description of the female plant (see our 
hy Jig. 1489., also fig. 138. in p. 818.); 8. arbascula 6 
Inn. Fl. Suec. p. 848.; S. arbascula y Lin. Sp. Pl. 
p. 1545., Fl. Lapp. t. 8. f. m.— Leaves lanceolate, 
serrated with distant, small, and appressed teeth, or 
1489. S. h. ar- . 
biscula, almost entire. 
= 164, S.uana‘va DL. The woolly-/aved Willow. 
Identification. Lin. Sp. Pl., 1446.; Eng. Fl., 4. p. 205.; Hook. Br. Fl., ed. 2. 
The Sexes. Both sexes are described and figured in Eng. Bot. Suppl., t. 2624.: both sexes of S. 
chrysanthos F7. Dan. are figured in Sal, Wob. 
Engravings. Lin. Fl. Lapp., ed. 2., t. 8. f. x., t. 7. f. 7.3; Eng. Bot. Suppl., t. 2624. ; our fig. 1490. : 
and fig. 71. No. 2. in p. 805. 
Spec. Char., §c. Leaves roundish ovate, pointed, entire ; shaggy on both 
surfaces ; glaucous on the under one. Ovary sessile, oblong, glabrous. 
Styles four times as long as the blunt divided stigmas. Catkins clothed with 
long, yellow, silky hairs. Ovary nearly sessile, lanceolate, 
longer than the style. Stigmas .undivided. (Hook.) A 
low shrub. Scotland, on the Clova Mountains. Height 
3 ft. to 4 ft. Flowers yellow; May. (\y 
The splendid golden catkins at the ends of the young A¥ 
shoots light up, as it were, the whole bush, and are accom- 
\ 
panied by the young foliage, sparkling with gold and silver. ‘ 
muy 
It yields, also, more honey than any other salix. Grafted 
standard high, it would make a delightful little spring- 
flowering tree for suburban gardens. 
N 
1490. S. lanata. 
Group xxiv. Miscellénee A. 
Kinds of Salix described in Sal. Wob., and not included in any of the preceding 
Groups. 
lallalle! 
* 165. S. zeyprr‘aca L. (Sal. Wob., No. 146. ; and our jig. 146. in p.818.) 
is described in our first edition. 
a 166. S.aLprna Forbes (Sal. Wob., No. 149.; and our fig. 149. in p. 
818.) is described in our first edition. 
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