96 
2/. ROSACE/E. 
12. Fragaria Xmn. 
1. F. vesca (L.); cal. of the fruit spreading or reflexed, hairs 
on the peduncles sju’cading those of the pedicels adpressed np- 
wards silky. — E. B. 1524. E. B. S. 2/42. — Hairs on the pediecl 
of the first tl. sjireadiug, those on the under side of the 1. ad- 
pressed. Carp, smooth, glabrous. “ Pet. about as long as broad, 
white throughout, with 2 slight notches at the end ; claw in(h- 
stinct.” Knight. [Phytol. i. 650.) — Woods and thickets. P. V. 
VI. Wood Strawberry. 
t2. F. elatior (Ehrh.) ; cal. of the fruit sjireading or reflexed, 
hairs on the peduncles and pedicels spreading and somewhat de- 
jlexed. — F. 5. 2197. F. moschata Lindl. — FI. imperfectly dioe- 
cious. “ Pet. ^ broader than long, white, entire ; claw distinct, 
bright yellow.” Knight. A larger and more hairy plant than 
the last. — Woods in the south, rare. P. VI. — IX. Hautboy 
Strawberry. 
1,3. Rubus Linn.'^ 
A. Stems woody. 
* Stems erect ; leaves pinnate. 
1. R. Idceus (L.); st. nearly erect round glabrous ])ruinose, 
prickles setaceous straight, 1. 5-nate-pinnate or ternate, fl. axillary 
terminal corymbose pendulous, fr. woollj'. — E. B. 2442. R. G. 
47 . — St. 4 — 6 feet high ; prickles small, setaceous, straight, pur- 
ple. L. white beneath ; terminal leaflet stalked. Fl. red, or 
white when the prickles are pale. — /3. trifoliatus ; 1. ternate, ter- 
minal leafl. stalked, st. polished. — y. Leesii ; 1. ternate, leafl. all 
sessile overlapping. — Woods and hiUy places, y. Ilford Bridges, 
Devon. Sh. VI. Raspberry. 
** Stems mostly suberect ; leaves digitate or subpinnate ; pani- 
cle lax. 
2. R. suberecf.us (Anders.) ; st. suberect angular, prickles few 
small straight subulate, 1. 5 — 7-nate, leafl. flexible cordate-ovate 
acuminate, lower pair subsessile, leafl. of flowering shoot all nar- 
rowed beloiv, ])anicle nearly simple, cal. reflexed from the (deep 
red) fruit. — E. B. 2572. — St. 3-^ feet high ; prickles suddenly 
enlarged at the base. L. green on both sides ; on the fl. -shoot 
ternate. Panicle usually unarmed. — trifoliatus ; 1. all ternate, 
“ fr. bright red.” — Boggy woods and heaths. Sh. VII. VIII. 
* In the descriptions by stem is meant the larren stem, and the shape 
of the leaflets is always taken from a terminal full-grown leaflet from 
that stem . — A more detailed account of the British species will he found 
in A Synopsis of British Ruhi . — By R. G. the plates in Weihe and 
Nees’s Rubi Germanici are intended. 
