CHAP. XLI1. nOSACEJE. C'E'RASUS. 693 



by Loiseleur in the Nouveau Du Hamel. We shall slightly notice the groups 

 included in the Nouveau Du Hamel, under each species ; we shall afterwards 

 give a list kindly furnished to us by Mr. Thompson of the London Horti- 

 cultural Society's Garden, of the kinds of both species which he thinks most 

 deserving of culture as ornamental trees ; and our description, history, &c, will 

 comprehend both species, and the races and varieties belonging to them. 

 The arrangement of the varieties, and general culture of the cherry in the 

 kitchen-garden and orchard, will be found at length in our Encyclopedia of 

 Gardening ; and, in a more condensed form, in our Suburban Gardener. 



i 1. C. sylve'stris Bauh. and Ray. The wild black-fruited Cherry Tree. 



Identification. Bauh. Hist., 1. 1. 2. p. 220. ; Ray Hist, 1539. ; Pers. Syn. 2. p. 35. 



Synonymes and Garden Names. C. avium Moench Meth., 672., Dec. Ft. Fr., No. 3786., Dec. Prod., 

 2. p. 535., Lois, in N. Du Ham., 5. p. 10., Don's Mill., 2. p. 505. ; C. nigra J»/*7/. Diet., No. 2., not of 

 Ait, Ger. Em., 1505. ; Prunus avium Lin. Sp., 680. ; P. avium var. a, and jB, VVilld. Baum., ed. 2. 

 p. 308. ; P. nigricans, and P. varia Ehr. Beitr., 7. p. 126,127.; Gean, Bigarreau, Corone, Coroon, Small 

 Black, Black Hertfordshire, Black Heart, Black Mazzard, the Merry Tree of the Cheshire peasants, 

 the Merries in Suffolk; Mensier, Merisegrosse noire, Guignier, Bigarreautier, Heaumier, Fr. ; 

 Susse Kirsche, Ger. 



Derivation. This cherry is called Corone, or Coroon, in some parts of England, from corone, a crow, in 

 reference to its blackness. Merry Tree and Merries are evidently corruptions of the word Merisier; 

 and Merisier is said to be derived from the words amere, bitter, and cerise, cherry. Bigarreau is 

 derived frombigarree party-coloured, because the cherries known by this name are generally of two 

 colours, yellow and red ; and Heaumier is from the French word heaume, a helmet, from the 

 shape of the fruit. 



Spec. Char:, fyc. Branches vigorous and divaricate ; the buds from which the 

 fruits are produced, oblong-acute. Flowers in umbel-like groups, sessile, 

 not numerous. Leaves oval-lanceolate, pointed, serrated, somewhat pen- 

 dent, slightly pubescent on the under side, and furnished with two glands at 

 the base. {Dec. Prod., and Nouveau Du Hamel.) The colour of the fruit is 

 a very deep dark red, or black ; the flesh is of the same colour, small in 

 quantity, austere and bitter before it comes to maturity, and insipid when 

 the fruit is perfectly ripe. The nut is oval or ovate, like the fruit, firmly 

 adhering to the flesh, and very large in proportion to the size of the fruit. 

 The juice is mostly coloured; and the skin does not separate from the 

 flesh. A tree, a native of Europe, found in woods and hedges; very dwarf 

 in unfavourable soils and climates, but growing to the height of 40 ft. or 

 50 ft., or upwards, in dry fertile soils. The flowers are produced in April, 

 and the fruit ripens in June or July. Under this species are included, in 

 the Nouveau Du Hamel, the following races or groups : — 



1. Merisiers, or Merries, with black or yellow fruit. 



2. Guigniers, or Geans (C. Juliana Dec), with red or black fruit, early or 

 late, and including the tobacco-leaved guignier, or gean, of 4 to the pound 

 (the C. decumana of Delauny). 



3. Heaumiers, the Helmet-shaped Cherries, (C. Juliana var. heaumidna Dec.) 

 somewhat resembling the bigarreau, but with less firm flesh. 



Variety of this race used for ornamental purposes. 



¥ C- s. durdcina 2 flore pleno Hort., the double-flowered wild black 

 Cherry ; Merisier a Fleurs doubles, or Merisier Renunculier, Fr.; is a 

 very beautiful variety, known, in the garden of the London Horti- 

 cultural Society, as the double French white. The tree there, in 

 1835, was upwards of 20 ft. high, after having been 10 years planted. 



4. Bigarreautier s, the Bigarreau, or hard-fleshed Cherries, (C. duracina Dec.) 

 with white, flesh-coloured, and black fruit, generally heart-shaped. 



¥2.C. vulgaris Mill. The common Cherry Tree. 



Identification. Mill. Diet, No. 1. ; N. Du Ham., 5. p. 18. 



Synonymes and Garden Names. Prhnus Cerasus Lin. Sp., 679. ; C. hort^nsis Pers. Syn. 2. p. 34 ; C. 



caproniana Dec. Fl. Fr., 4. p. 482., Dec. Prod., 2. p. 536., Don's Mill., 2. p. 507. ; P. austera and P. 



acida Ehrh. Beitr., 7. p. 129. and 130. ; Cherry, Kentish or Flemish Cherry, Morello, May Duke; 



Cerise de Montmorency, Cerise de Paris, Cerise a Fruits ronds, Cerisier du Nord, Cerisier, and 



Griottier in some provinces, Fr. ; saure Kirsche, Ger. 

 Derivation. Caproniana is said to be derived from capron,thc hautbois strawberry, probably from this 



cherry possessing so much more flavour than C. sylvtistris. Morello is either from morel (Morche'lla 



escul£nta), the flesh being of the same consistency as the flesh of that fungus ; or, perhaps, 



from the French word morelle, a female negro. May Duke is a corruption of Mtdoc, the province 



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