Chap. 561. “Englifb Herbs. 
953 
and. order of its growing is near eft unto the Com- 
mon Damask Role, as well for its Body or Stem , 
as for its Branches , Leaves and Flowers. The 
difference confifting chief y in this that the Flower 
(being of the fame magnitude and multiplicity or 
doublencfs with that of the Damask Role) has the 
one half of it, fometmes of a pale whitifh color • 
and the other half of it, of a paler Damask color 
than the ordinary. This happens thus, many times 
and fame times alfo the Flower has fever al ft r ipe s 
and marks in it, as one Leaf white, or flriped with 
white and the other half blufh , or firiped with 
blufh -, Jometimes alfo , the whole Flower is Jiriped, 
or fpotted over', and at other times, it has few or no 
Jlripes or marks at a/l, as Nature is pie a fed to varie 
it. But this is obfervable, that the longer it abides 
blown open in the Sun, the paler, and the fewer 
Stripes, Marks, or Spots, it will have -, it has the 
Smell of a Damask Role, but weaker. 
XV. The tenth, or the Cry ft a 1 Role. This is 
very like to the la ft defer i bed, both for Stalk, Branch , 
and Lea). The Flower hereof is not much different 
from it, being no great, large or double Role ; but 
of a mean fize , jiriped and marked with a deeper 
blufh or red, upon the pale colored Leaf -, fo that it 
f corns in the marking and beauty thereof, to be a* 
plcafint and beautiful as the Cryftal Gilliftower. 
This even as the former does, foon fades and paffes 
away , not yielding any great number of Flowers 
any Tear. 
'XVI. The eleventh, or Dwarf Red Rofe, or 
Gilliftower Rofe. This always grows loiv and 
f mailt, other wife in mofi ref pells it is like unto the 
Common red Rofe, and with few or no Trickles 
upon it : The Flowers or Rofes are double , thick, 
J mall , and clofe, and not fo much fpread open as 
the Ordinary Red, but fomewhat like unto the firfi 
Double white Rofe, before defer ibed. Tet in fome 
Gardens they blow more open, and are as even at 
the tops of the Leaves as if they had been dipt off 
with a pair of Sciffars , and are not of fo full a red 
color as the Red Province Rofe, but of as weak 
and poor a Smell as the Common red Rofe, or ra- 
ther weaker. 
XVII The twelfth , or Frankford Rofe. The 
young Shoots of this Rofe are covered with a 
pale purphjh Bark , fet with a good number of 
fmall Trickles like Hairs , and the elder have but 
very few Thorns. The Rofe has' a very great Bud 
or Button under it, greater than in any other Rofe, 
and is thick and double as a Red Rofe, but fo very 
much fwelling in the Bud, that many of them break 
before they can be fully blown, and then they are of a 
pale Red Rofe color, viz. between a Red and a Da- 
mask ; with a very thick, broad, and hard Unibone or 
Tointel, andfhort yellow Threads or Thrums in the 
middle -, the Husk of the Flower has long ends, which 
are called the Beards of the Rofe, which in all others , 
are jagged in fome of them, but in this has no Jaggs 
at all. The Smell thereof is near eft to that of the 
Red Rofe. 
XVIII. The thirteenth, w Hungarian Rofe. This 
has green Shoots which are fet with many Trickles-, 
and feldom grows higher than the Common red 
Rofe; the Stem or Stock being much about that big- 
nefs. The Rofe is as thick, great, and double , as 
the Common red Rofe, and of the fame fafhion, of 
a paler red color , and being nearly look'd upon, is 
finely fpotted with faint Spots , as it were fpread 
over the red-, the Smell of which is fomething 
ftronger than the Smell of the Red Rofe of the 
beft Kind. 
XIX. The fourteenth, or Single Velvet Rofe. 
The old Stock or St am of the Velvet Rofe is 
covered with a dark colored Bark , and the young 
Shoots with a fad green, with very few or almoft 
no Trickles upon them. The Leaves are of a f ai- 
der grecg color, than in mo ft forts of Rofes, and 
very often feven on a Stalk, many of the red having 
but Jive. The Rofe is /ingle, and when blown, is 
a broad fpread Flower, confifting of five 0/ fix 
broad Leaves , with many yellow Threads in the 
middle. 
XX. The fifteenth, or Double Velvet Rofe. 
The Stock , Bark and Leaves of this are like thofe 
of the Single Kind. The Flower or Role is double, 
and has two rowes of Leaves-, the one large , which 
are outermoft, the other f mailer within, of a very 
deep red crimfon color, like unto Crimlbu Velvet, 
with many yellow Threads alfo in the middle -, and 
yet for all the double row of Leaves, thefe Roles 
feem but like fingle Flowers. 
XXI. There ' is another Double Velvet Rofe, 
much more double than the Lift, confifting oftentimes 
of 1 6 Leaves or more in a Rofe, and moft of them 
of an equal bignefs , of the color of the Jird Single 
Velvet Role, at SeQ. 19. above, or fomething 
brisker but all of them a weaker Smell than the 
Common red Role. 
XXII. The f ixteenlh , or Rofe without Thorns 
or Prickles fingle. This has fever al green fmooth 
Shoots rifing up from its Root, without any Thorns or 
Trickles at all upon them, neither whift they are 
young, nor whi/eft they are old. The Leaves are 
not fully fo large as thofe of the Red Rofe. The 
Rofes are not much bigger than thofe of the Double 
common Rofe ; they are not fully fingle , but Jhort , 
and of a pale red . ofe color , with divers pale 
colored Veins, thro ’ every Leaf of the Flower, 
which has caufed it to be called alfo. The Marbled 
Rofe. It has but little Smeil, not full out fo ft rong 
as that of the Red Rofe. 
Rofe Bujh without Brickies. 
XXIII. The feventeenth, or Double Rofe With- 
out Thorns. Tl?is in its Shoots , Stocks, Branches, 
Leaves and Buds, as alfo in its form and manner 
of growing, is altogether like the former -, and dif- 
fers from it only in its Flower. For in th/s, the 
Role (which is a little larger alfo than the Double 
Cinamon Rofe) has its Leaves thick fet together , 
and is very full of them , fhort alfo , and of the 
fame pale red Role color, with pale colored Veins 
running through every Leaf thereof ; the duplicity 
of the Rofe making the chief difference from the 
former . 
6 F 
XXIV. The 
