. Arboretum et fruticetum Britannicum; or, The trees and shrubs of Britain, native and foreign, hardy and half-hardy, pictorially and botanically delineated, and scientifically and popularly described; with their propagation, culture, management, and uses in the arts, in useful and ornamental plantations, and in landscape-gardening; preceded by a historical and geographical outline of the trees and shrubs of temperate climates throughout the world . S. ziAPHNoi^DEs Villars. The Daphne-like Willow. Identification. Vill. Dauph., 3. p. 765., t. 50. f. 7., t. 5. f 2. as quoted by Host; Koch Comm.,
. Arboretum et fruticetum Britannicum; or, The trees and shrubs of Britain, native and foreign, hardy and half-hardy, pictorially and botanically delineated, and scientifically and popularly described; with their propagation, culture, management, and uses in the arts, in useful and ornamental plantations, and in landscape-gardening; preceded by a historical and geographical outline of the trees and shrubs of temperate climates throughout the world . S. ziAPHNoi^DEs Villars. The Daphne-like Willow. Identification. Vill. Dauph., 3. p. 765., t. 50. f. 7., t. 5. f 2. as quoted by Host; Koch Comm., p. S. praecox Hoppe in Sturm D. Fl.,\. 25., Willd. Sp. PL, 4. p. 670., exclusively of the syn. of Host, Smith in Reess Cycle, No. 40., Forbes in Sal. Wob., No. 26. ; S. bigemmis Hoffm. Germ., 2. p. 260., Sal.: t. 32.; S. cinferea Host Sal. Austr., 1. p. 8. t. 26, 27. Mr. Borrer, in a letter, has remarked that Smith has erroneously cited, in his Flora Brit., S. daphnoides Villars as a synonyme of S. cinerea Smith ; and that this has led Koch to cite S. cindrea Smith as a synonyme of S, rfaphnoldes Sexes. Both sexes are figured in Sal. Wob., and both are described and figured in Host Sal. Vill. Dauph.,.3, t. 50. f 7 ?or3. t. 5. f. 2.; Hoffm. Sal., t. 32. ; Sal. WoK, No. 26. ; Host Sal. Aust., 1. t. 26, 27. ; mrfig. 1295.; and fig. 26. in p. 1608. CHAP. cm. £l-^=^ SALICA CEM. Sa\iX. 1295 14<95. 1496 ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. PART III. Spec. Char., Sfc. Leaves broadly lanceolate, and pointed, with glandular ser-ratures, smooth, glaucous beneath. Catkins appearing before the sessile, ovate, smooth. Style elongated. {Sal. Wob., p. 51.) Anative of Switzerland and the south of France; flowering at Woburn inFebruary. Introduced in 1820. It is a rapid-growing tree, with darkgreyish branches, slightly covered with a powder, or bloom, similar to thatof S. acutifolia; the branches ascending obliquely. The tree at Woburn,though o
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, booksubjectplants, bookyear1854