1490 



ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. 



PART III, 



Group i. Purpurea: Koch, Borrer. 

 Osier Willows, with one Stamen in a Flower. 



11 



Monfodrae is the name adopted for this group in Rook, Br. Ft., ed. S. ; hut Mr. Borrer considers 

 PurpiJre.v preferable, because it is taken, like the name of each of the other groups in this ar- 

 rangement, from the name of a species included in that group. Purpureas, too, is the name given 

 by Koch to the same group. 



Filament 1, bearing an anther of 4- lobes, and 4 cells; or, in S. rubra, forked, 

 and each branch bearing an anther of 2 lobes and 2 cells. Germcn sessile. 

 Catkins very compact. Trees of low stature, or shrubs with twiggy branches, 

 and leaves that are more or less lanceolate, and serrated, and often broader 

 upwards. Interior part of the bark, in most, yellow and very bitter. 

 (Hook. Br. Fl.) The leaves of nearly all of the kinds of this group turn 

 black in drying. The inner bark of most of the kinds included in this group 

 is extremely bitter, which renders the plants suitable for banks of rivers, 

 and other places which are infested by rats ; as the bitterness prevents 

 these animals from eating it. 



S. purpurea L. The purple Willow. 



, 144*. ; Smith Eng. Bot., t. 1388. ; Eng. Fl., 4. p 

 Fl., ed. 3., p. 417. ; Mackay Fl. Hibern., pt. 1. p 



187. ; Forbes in Sal. 

 243. ; Hayne Abbild., 



Identification. Lin. Sp. PI 

 ^ Won., No. 1.; Hook. Br. 

 ^p. 229. 



The Sexes. Both sexes are figured in Eng. Bot, and are in cultivation in some English collections. 

 Syno nym *. S. purpurea a Koch Co?nm., p. 25. 



Engravings. Eng. Bot, t. 1318. ; Sal. Wob., No. 1. ; Hayne Abbild., t. 169. ; our fig. 1294. ; and 

 Jig. 1. in p. 160.3. 



Sjicc Char., $c. Branches trailing, decumbent. Leaves partly opposite, 

 obovate-lanceolate, serrated, very smooth, narrow at the base. Stamen 1. 

 Stigmas very short, ovate, nearly sessile. (Smith Eng. Fl.) A native of 

 Britain (between Thorpe and Norwich, &c); flowering 

 in March and April. In a wild state, this species forms a 

 shrub, with a stem 3 ft. or 4 ft. high, with long, slender, 

 smooth branches, spreading widely, and, if not supported, 

 trailing on the ground ; very smooth, of a rich and shining 

 purple, with a somewhat glaucous hue. The catkins 

 appear earlier than the foliage ; and often on different 

 branches. In cultivation, in dug grounds kept moist 

 and the plants cut down yearly, this species produces 

 shoots from 3 ft. to 5 ft. long, which are much esteemed 

 for the finer sorts of baskctwork. It is also frequently 

 planted in Norfolk and Suffolk, and in some parts of 

 Essex, for "plaiting into close low fences, for the ex- 

 clusion of hares and rabbits; the bark and leaves being so extremely 

 bitter, that these animals will touch neither; whilst the shoots, being long, 

 tOUgb, and flexible, may be formed into any shape; and a fence of this kind 

 is reckoned little inferior to that of wire." (Eng. Flora, quoted in Sal. Woh. y 

 n, -i.) This species is well adapted for planting in ornamental shrubberies, 

 from the elegant slendcrness of its twigs during winter; the redness of its 

 catkins, the anthers of which are of that colour before they burst, and the 

 fine purplish and glaucous hue of its young shoots and leaves. The latter, 

 i) by the figure of one of the natural size in p. 1003., arc of 

 an elegant, and, if ire may use the expression, artistical shape. Female 

 plants are in the Hackney and (ioldworth arboretums, and at Woburn 

 ■nd FUtwick ; and male and female at Henfield. The male plant, being the 

 mOft beautiful when in flower, ought to be most propagated by nurserymen. 

 Koch, in bll I)> S'ii" ''>"■■ Europak COTnmentaUo, hat* described six; but he includes the 

 • x Mid LambertiJna [Utbt dc crfbed M specie* below) m two of them. He has charac- 



/ . r . • U follOWl : — 



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