Roses for English gardens . e variety called Marie Leonide which is stronger growing than the Carolina.—A North American species, not of the first importance, and yet of some value in that it blooms in late summer and centifolia.—The type of the Cabbage or Provence Roses, of the Moss Roses and the small de cinnaviomea.—The double form is the Cinnamon Rose of our older gardens. The flowers are rather few, pink or pale rose, and clynophylla.—A white-flowered trailing Rose of scrambUng habit; scarcely suitable for a garden, but good for a wild dama
Roses for English gardens . e variety called Marie Leonide which is stronger growing than the Carolina.—A North American species, not of the first importance, and yet of some value in that it blooms in late summer and centifolia.—The type of the Cabbage or Provence Roses, of the Moss Roses and the small de cinnaviomea.—The double form is the Cinnamon Rose of our older gardens. The flowers are rather few, pink or pale rose, and clynophylla.—A white-flowered trailing Rose of scrambUng habit; scarcely suitable for a garden, but good for a wild damascena.—(Damask). A good old garden Rose of oriental origin, with several varieties, red, white and Ec(B.—A tender Rose from Abyssinia, with yellow flowers the size of a shilling. It does well occasionally in the south of gallica.—The type of most of the older garden Roses. This and the Damask Rose are no doubt the ancestors of the modern Hybrid Perpetuals. Pretty bushes in many
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1902