PL ex. cal. 
585 
60. DRYADEiE. 357. Fragaria. 
astringent; fruit fragrant, juicy, universally esteemed, par- 
ticularly praised as of use in consumption, gravelly com- 
plaints, and incrustations on the teeth. 
0. muricata. Flower greenish ; receptacle hard ; akenia 
ending in a, point. 
Fragaria fructu hispido, Rail Syn. 254,2; Ger. em. 998, 2. 
y, alba. Fruit white. 
2. Fragaria elatior. Tall strawberry. 
Calyx in fruit reflected; hairs of the peduncle and pe- 
tioles very spreading. 
Fragaria vesca pratensis, Lin. S. P, 7 08. 
Fragaria elatior, Willd. S. P. 1091. 
Fragaria magna, Thuill. Paris. 
Fragaria moschata, Duchesne Monogr. 
Fragaria dioica, Ibidem. 
Hautbois. 
Woods, also cultivated; perennial ; June to October. 
Plant often dioicous; fruit large; odour like musk, in 
high esteem. 
VI. 858. RUBUS. Pliny. Bramble , 
Calyx flat at bottom ; petals 5 ; stamens many ; ovaries ca- 
pitate, on a manifestly protuberant receptacle; styles nearly 
terminal ; akenia rough, covered with a fleshy sarcocarp, 
on a fleshy receptacle. 
a. Chamsemorus. Stem herbaceous , unarmed , mostly simple, 
1. Ruhus nubis. Cloud bramble. 
Stem unarmed, simple, 1-flowered; leaves simple, lobed; 
calyx-lobes ovate. 
Chamaemorus, Raii Syn. 200, 1 ; Ger. em. 1273,4; Park. 1014. 
Vaccinium nubis, Ger. em. 1420. 
Rubus ChamEemorus, Lin. S. P. 708. 
Cloud-berry. Knot-berry. Knouglit-berry. 
Alpine bogs; perennial; June. 
Root creeping ; leaves heartshape, 5-lobed, bald ; flower 
white; fruit dark-red; akenia many. — Fruit acid, anti- 
scorbutic, eaten raw or in tarts. 
2. Rubus arcticus. Arctic bramble. 
Stem unarmed, simple, I -flowered ; leaves ternate, bald. 
Rubus arcticus, Lin. S. P. 708. 
Alpine rocks ; perennial ; May and June. 
