72 GARDENS OF ENGLAND 



(H.P.), rose ; Mrs. W. J. Grant (H.T.), pink ; 

 Muriel Grahame (T.), cream ; Paul's Carmine Pillar; 

 Prince CamUle de Rohan (H.P.), an intensely dark 

 crimson colour, and deliciously sweet ; Reine Marie 

 Henriette (H.T.), a climbing rose of a cherry-red 

 colour, flowers in autumn; Reine Olga de Wurtem- 

 burg (H.T.), the most notable of the full red roses, 

 and a few flowers appear in autumn, but its chief 

 display is in summer ; R^ve d'Or (N.), yellow, very 

 suitable for a pergola, but should have the warmest, 

 most sheltered pillar, as it is tender; Rosa multi- 

 flora, a climber of strong growth, and bearing a 

 profusion of white flower clusters ; Rosa Mundi, 

 not the true York and Lancaster rose, but similar 

 to it, the flowers conspicuously striped ; Rosa rubi- 

 foUa, of value for the warm purple-red foliage, very 

 beautiful on the rock garden ; Rosa simca anemone, 

 a lovely flower, single, and rose in colour, the 

 leaves quite glossy, it should be placed against 

 a fence or rough oak stems ; Souvenir de Catherine 

 Guillot, orange and bufi'; Stanwell Perpetual, a 

 Scotch rose, of blush colouring, flowers both early 

 and late, and may be placed against a low fence ; 

 Suzanne Marie Rodocanachi (H.P.), warm rose ; 

 the Garland, faintest blush, an old garden favourite ; 

 Turner's Crimson Rambler, one of the most popular 



