92 
ROSACEJE. 
I. ternate, leaflets oblong-cuneate with 3 teeth at the end glabrous 
above hairy beneath, filaments glabrous, carpels downv. — E. B. 
2389-— FL w hite.— Werron Hilt, Clova. Mr. G.Don. P. VI.— S. 
12. P. Fragariastrum (Ehrh.) ; st. procumbent, 1. ternate, 
leaflets roundish oborate serrate silky on both sides, carp, glabrous 
except at the scar smooth or wrinkled transversely. — E. B. 1785. 
— Fl. small, white. — Woods and hedge-banks. P. IV. V. Barren 
Strawberry. 
1 I. Comarum Linn. 
1. C. palustre (L.) . The only species, differing from Potentilla, 
to which it perhaps ought to be joined, by its enlarged spongy 
receptacle. — E. B. 172. — St. ascending, 1 foot high, reddish. 
L. pinnate. Leaflets 5 — 7, elliptic-oblong, acute, sharply ser- 
rate. Fl. several, dark purple ; cal. purple within ; pet. .small 
— Marshes and peaty bogs. P. VII. 
12. Fragaria Linn. 
1. F. vesca (L.) ; cal. of the fruit spreading or reflexed, hairs 
on the peduncles spreading those of the pedicels adpressed up- 
wards silky. — E. B. 1524. E. B. S. 2742. — Hairs on the pedicel 
of the first fl. spreading, those on the under side of the 1. ad- 
pressed. — Woods and thickets. P. V. VI. Wood Strawberry. 
t2. F. elatior (Ehrh.) ; cal. of the fruit spreading or reflexed, 
hairs on the peduncles and pedicels spreadiny and somewhat de- 
flexed. — E. B. 2197- F. moschata Lindl. — Fl. imperfectly dioe- 
cious. A larger and more hairy plant than the last. — Woods in 
the south, rare. P. VI. — IX. Hautboy Straicberry. 
13. Rub us Linn. 1 
* Shrubby, erect ; leaves pinnate. 
1. R. Idceus (L.) ; st. nearly erect round prickly, L pinnate 
with 5 or 3 leaflets, fl. in pendulous clusters. — E. B. 2442. W. 
and N. 47. — Prickles very numerous, small, straight, deflexed, 
purple. Leaflets white beneath. Fr. scarlet, or amber-coloured 
and then the prickles are pale. — Woods in hilly places in the 
north. Sh. V. VI. Raspberry. 
** Stems nearly erect, shrubby ; I. digitate or subpinnate. 
2. R. suberectus (Anders.) ; st. nearly erect not rooting angu- 
lar, prickles uniform few small straight, 1. digitate-quinate or 
1 Before commencing this most difficult genus I beg to acknowledge 
my great obligations to the account of it by Mr. Borrer in Hook. Br. 
Fl. ed. 2 and ed. 3, to Leighton's Flora of Shropshire and to the in- 
valuable plates in Weihe and Nees's Ruli Germanici. In the descrip- 
tions by stem is meant the barren stem, and the shape of the leaces is 
always taken from a terminal full-grown leaflet from that stem. 
