280 
THE CHERRY. 
mires a beautiful flowering tree, cannot refuse a place in hia 
garden to this one, so highly ornamental. Its blossoms, which 
appear at the usual season, are produced in the most showy 
profusion ; they are about an inch and a half in diameter, and 
resemble clusters of the most lovely, full double, white roses. 
The tree has the habit and foliage of the Mazzard Cherries, and 
soon forms a large and lofty head. 
Dwarf Double Flowering. 
Double Flowering Kentish. 
Small Double Flowering. 
Cerisier a Fleurs Doubles. Thomp. N. Duh. 
This is a double flowering variety of the sour or Kentish 
cherry, and has the more dwarfish habit and smaller leaves 
and branches of that tree — scarcely forming more than a large 
shrub, on which account it is perhaps more suitable for small 
gardens. The flowers are much like those of the large double 
flowering, but they are not so regular and beautiful in their 
form. 
Chinese Double Flowering. 
Yung To. 
Cerasus serrulata. 
Serrulated Leaved Cherry. 
I 
Arb. Brit. 
This is a very rare variety, recently imported from China, 
with the leaves cut on the edges in that manner known as ser- 
rulate by botanists. Its flowers, which are borne in fascicles, 
are white, slightly tinged with pink, and nearly as double as 
those of the large double flowering. The tree considerably re- 
sembW Jhe sour cherry tree, and appears rather dwarfish in its 
growth. 
Weeping, or Allsaints. Thomp. 
Ever flowering Cherry, j. Ab m 
C. vulgaris, semperplorens. ) 
Cerise de la Toussainte. N. Duh. Nois. 
Guignier a rameaux pendans, ] 
Cerise Tardive, I of the 
Cerisier Pleurant, j French. 
Cerise de St. Martin. J 
St. Martin’s Amarelle, I 
Martin’s W eichsel, I of the 
Monats Amarelle, f Dutch. 
Allerheiligen Kirsche. J 
This charming little tree, with slender, weeping branches* 
clothed with small, almost myrtle-like foliage, is a very pleasing 
ornament, when introduced on a lawn. Its fruit is a small, deep 
