. rd the ends; being, like those ofmost other kinds of elm. unequal at the base,and doubly dentated, and having a strongly-marked midrib, with other lateralribs, equally prominent, proceeding from it, on each side. They unfold atNaples, in Italy, by the first of .February; at Paris, in March: in England bythe middle of April; and at New York early in May. They fall at Paris, and atNew York, in the beginning of November, and three or four weeks later in Eng-land; but in Naples they often remain upon the trees until the end of the yea


. rd the ends; being, like those ofmost other kinds of elm. unequal at the base,and doubly dentated, and having a strongly-marked midrib, with other lateralribs, equally prominent, proceeding from it, on each side. They unfold atNaples, in Italy, by the first of .February; at Paris, in March: in England bythe middle of April; and at New York early in May. They fall at Paris, and atNew York, in the beginning of November, and three or four weeks later in Eng-land; but in Naples they often remain upon the trees until the end of the flowers, which put forth just before the leaves, vary in colour from a dull-purple to a dark-red; and are succeeded by oblong, deeply-cloven samaroe. con-taining each a seed, that ripens in a month after the appearance of the leaves. Varieties. The varieties of this species are very numerous, both in Britainand on the continent; and most of them have been selected by nurserymen fromtheir seed-beds. As remarked at the commencement of this genus, from the.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, bookyear1851, initial, initialt