Roses, Their History, Development and CultivationLongmans, Green, and Company, 1908 - 336 páginas |
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Página 9
... Monographia " ) A. Prickles . - B . Pubescence . - C . Stipules . - D . Bracts . - E . Calyx.- F. Petals . - G . Stamens . - H . Footstalk . - I . Leaf , seven - foliate . these shoots the next year's crop of flowers is to.
... Monographia " ) A. Prickles . - B . Pubescence . - C . Stipules . - D . Bracts . - E . Calyx.- F. Petals . - G . Stamens . - H . Footstalk . - I . Leaf , seven - foliate . these shoots the next year's crop of flowers is to.
Página 14
... petals entirely . The petals ( b ) , likewise five in number , serve as the inner covering of the reproductive organs until these are fully developed . Then the petals unfold and expand . In popular estimation the petals are the ...
... petals entirely . The petals ( b ) , likewise five in number , serve as the inner covering of the reproductive organs until these are fully developed . Then the petals unfold and expand . In popular estimation the petals are the ...
Página 15
... petals . The stamens ( c ) , to which we have already alluded , consist of stalks or filaments and a head or anthers con- taining a yellow powder named pollen . The pistils ( d ) are hollow tubes numbering between fifteen and twenty ...
... petals . The stamens ( c ) , to which we have already alluded , consist of stalks or filaments and a head or anthers con- taining a yellow powder named pollen . The pistils ( d ) are hollow tubes numbering between fifteen and twenty ...
Página 25
... from the form of the petals , which are involute . Discovered by Dr. Walker on the Scottish Highlands ; also found on banks and in hedges of the Orkneys , and in Ire- land . In growth it makes a compact reddish - BRITISH WILD ROSES 25.
... from the form of the petals , which are involute . Discovered by Dr. Walker on the Scottish Highlands ; also found on banks and in hedges of the Orkneys , and in Ire- land . In growth it makes a compact reddish - BRITISH WILD ROSES 25.
Página 29
... petals drop , the long shoots arch over , borne down by the weight of the oblong scarlet fruit , which in many cases is hardly ripe before it is devoured by birds . Carried away by the fowls of the air , the BRITISH WILD ROSES 29.
... petals drop , the long shoots arch over , borne down by the weight of the oblong scarlet fruit , which in many cases is hardly ripe before it is devoured by birds . Carried away by the fowls of the air , the BRITISH WILD ROSES 29.
Palavras e frases frequentes
alpina autumn Banksia bark beauty blooms Blush Bourbon brier bunch bush canina clay colour corymb crop of flowers cultivation damascena Damask Dickson & Sons Dijon dwarf early earth exhibition exhibitor farmyard dung feet fertilisation flowers foliage frost fruit gallica Générale Jacqueminot graft green ground growers growing grown growth habit hard hardy hedge Hybrid Perpetual Hybrid Teas hybridisation inches indica inserted leaf leaves maiden Maman Cochet Manetti manure medium mildew Moschata Moss Moss Rose multiflora Noisette parent perfume petals phosphoric acid pink plant pollen prickles Provence pruning roots ROSA Rosa Centifolia ROSA DAMASCENA rosarian rose garden rows scion season secateurs seed seedling sepals shrubs single soil sparingly species spinosissima spring stage stamens standard stem suckers summer summer-flowering surface sweet-brier Tea-scented Rose thin trench tubes varieties vigorous pillar.-Pillar Vigorous.-Garden wild roses wood yellow young
Passagens conhecidas
Página 3 - You violets that first appear, By your pure purple mantles known Like the proud virgins of the year, As if the spring were all your own; What are you when the rose is blown ? So, when my mistress shall be seen In form and beauty of her mind, By virtue first, then choice, a Queen, Tell me, if she were not design'd Th' eclipse and glory of her kind.
Página 6 - Let him that is a true-born gentleman, And stands upon the honour of his birth, If he suppose that I have pleaded truth, From off this brier pluck a white rose with me. Som. Let him that is no coward nor no flatterer, But dare maintain the party of the truth, Pluck a red rose from off this thorn with me.
Página 236 - ... the stigma is in most cases safe from their contact. It will be some days — probably a week or more, if the weather be not sunny — ere the stigma is in a fit condition for fertilisation.
Página 237 - ... too robust a growth, or having too large or too coarse foliage in a plant without these drawbacks, I need not suggest to select, in another species of the same family, a plant of an opposite character and properties — say of dwarf, compact growth, handsome foliage, and free flowering habit ; and if such can be obtained, work with it, making the latter the seed-bearer. Or, if it be desirable to impart the fragrance of a less handsome kind to another more handsome, I would make the cross upon...
Página 113 - ... dry weather. They cake, and present only a small surface to the air ; and the vegetation on them is generally burnt up almost as readily as on sands. The soils that are most efficient in supplying the plant with water by atmospheric absorption are those in which there is a due mixture of sand, finely divided clay, and carbonate of lime, with some animal or vegetable matter ; and which are so loose and light as to be freely permeable to the atmosphere.
Página 90 - Benoist, in the isle, in planting one of these hedges, found amongst his young plants one very different from the others in its shoots and foliage. This induced him to plant it in his garden. It flowered the following year; and, as he anticipated, proved to be of quite a new race, and differing much from the above two roses, which, at the time, were the only sorts known in the island...
Página 236 - ... the separation of these parts, the bursting of the pollen, the maturity of the stigma, and all which a little experience will detect, indicate the proper time for the operation, sunny or cloudy weather always affecting the duration of the period during which it may be successfully performed. As to the proper time and season best adapted for such experiments, a treatise might be written ; but here a few remarks must suffice. As for the season of the year, from early spring to midsummer I would...
Página 234 - ... the operator be possessed of indomitable patience, watchfulness, and perseverance. Having determined on the subjects on which he is to operate, if the plants are in the open ground, he will have them put into pots, and removed under glass, so as to escape the accidents of variable temperature — of wind, rain, and dust, and, above all, of insects. A greenhouse fully exposed to the sun is best adapted for the purpose, at least as regards hardy and proper greenhouse plants. Having got them housed,...
Página 237 - If it is desired to reproduce the larger, finer formed, or higher colored bloom of a plant having a tall, straggling, or too robust a growth, or having too large or too coarse foliage in a plant without these drawbacks, I need not suggest to select, in another species of the same family, a plant of an opposite character and properties — say of dwarf, compact growth, handsome foliage, and free flowering habit ; and if such can be obtained, work with it, making the latter the seed-bearer. Or, if...