Ch^p. X- FLOWERS. 391 



(p. 4) full v expects it to become the parent-type of a new family. 

 The tendency to vary is so strong in some kinds, as in the Village 

 Maid (Eivers, p. 16), that when grown in different soils it varies so 

 much in colour that it has been thought to form several distinct 

 kinds. Altogether the number of kinds is very great : thus M. 

 Desportes, in his Catalogue for 1829, enumerates 2562 as cultivated 

 in France ; but no doubt a large proportion of these are merely 

 nominal. 



It would be useless to specify the mauy points of difference 

 between the various kinds, but some constitutional peculiarities 

 may be mentioned. Several French roses (Rivers, p. 12) will not 

 succeed in England ; and an excellent horticulturist 179 remarks, 

 that " Even in the same garden you will find that a rose that will 

 do nothing under a south wall will do well under a north one. 

 That is the case with Paul Joseph here. It grows strongly and 

 blooms beautifully close to a north wall. For three years seven 

 plants have done nothing under a south wall." Many roses can be 

 forced, " many are totally unfit for forcing, among which is General 

 Jacqueminot." 180 From the effects of crossing and variation 

 Mr. Eivers enthusiastically anticipates (p. 87) that the day will 

 come when all our roses, oven moss-roses, will have evergreen 

 foliage, brilliant and fragrant flowers, and the habit of blooming 

 from June till November. " A distant view this seems, but per- 

 severance in gardening will } ei achieve wonders," as assuredly it 

 has akeady achieved wonders. 



It may be worth while brief!} to give the well-known history of 

 one class of roses. In 1793 some w. ; ld Scotch roses (B. spinosissima) 

 were transplanted into a garden ; l8i Mid one of these bore flowers 

 slightly tinged with red, from which a plant was raised with semi- 

 monstrous flowers, also tinged with red; seedlings from this flower 

 were semi-double, and by continued selection, in about nine or ten 

 years, eight sub-varieties were raised. In the course of less than 

 twenty years these double Scotch roses had so much increased in 

 number and kind, that twenty- six well-marked varieties, classed in 

 eight sections, were described by Mr. Sabine. In 1841 182 it is said 

 that three hundred varieties could be procured in the nursery- 

 gardens near Glasgow ; and these are described as blush, crimson, 

 purple, red, marbled, two-coloured, white, and yellow, and as 

 differing much in the size and shape of the flower. 



Fansy or Heartsease {Viola tricolor, .&c). — The history of this 

 flower seems to be pretty well known ; it was grown in Evelyns 

 gardtn in 1687; but the varieties were not attended to till 1810-1812, 

 when Lady Monke, together with Mr. I.ee, the well-known roirsery- 



179 The Rev. W. F. Radclyffo, in "i Mi . Sabine, in ■ Tran?ac*. Hot 

 '• Journal of Horticulture/ March 14, Soc.,' \ol. iv. p. 285. 



1865, p. 207. '8* « Ar Lncvclop. o* Plants, by J 



180 'Gardener's Chronicle,' 1861. p. C. Loudon. IK 41, p ±i'o. 

 *6. 



