Parsons on the Rose
the leaves, the arrangement, number, size, and color of the flowers, seed-vessels, etc. The varieties of roses, however, have so few distinct chara
n Victoria and Louis Philippe, Othello and Wilberforce, with many others. Any half-dozen English or French rose growers may give the name of their favorite Wellington or Napoleo
icient attention to their distinctive characters; these are subsequently changed to other classes, to the utter confusion of those who are really desirous of obtaining some knowledge of the respective varie
g
it there! I can almost imagine Dame Nature laughing in her sleeve, when our philosophers are thus puzzled. Well, so it is, in a measure, with rose
be classed. It may often be difficult to ascertain whether a rose is a Damask, a Provence, or a Hybrid China; but there can be no difficulty in ascertaining whether it is dwarf or climbing, whether it blooms once or more
parate periods of bloom throughout
y, without any temporary cessat
ly once in the season, a
k and Hybrid Perpetuals, and for these we know no term so expressive as
o those included under the second genera
own by their luxuriant growth, and thick, large, lea
g
s which are not tea-scented, and among the Noisettes are those which do not bloom in clusters; they are, moreover, so much alike in
class are known by thei
are distinguished by their very ri
distinguished by their peculi
ead we divide again
brid China, Hybrid Bourbon, White, and Damask Roses, many of which, under the old ar
l of which are ea
lude the Sweet-Brier, Hybrid S
otch
e again divided into all th
ove very single. Transplanting will often temporarily change the character of roses, and they often refuse to develop themselves perfectly under our hot sun, or in a poor soil. A second season is thus often required to test them fairly. We have seen the fine rose, La Reine, semi-double, and worthless at midsummer, while at other seasons, and perhaps in a different location, it is fully equal to its reputation. It is frequently the case, that roses imported from Europe, under glowing descriptions, prove worthless the first season, but fully sustain their character the second. We mention these things here, in order that th
l safe in selecting, without incurring t
OOM DURING TH
TANT
to designate this class of roses, there being no word in our own langua
he other roses in early summer, then cease for a while, then make a fresh season of bloom, and thus through the summer and autumn, differing entirely from the Bourbon an
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ctly hardy, and grow well in any climate without protection. These qualities render them very desirable, and they are fast driving out of cultivation the Garden Roses, which bloom but once, and during the rest of the season cumber the ground. There are, it is true, among the latter, some varieties, like Madame Plantier, Chénédole, Persian Yellow, and others, that
, fragrant, large and
agrant; very free in blooming, and exceedingl
list. Large; brilliant crimson; fine[Pg 33] form, and very fragra
ion and found to be desirable. Large, full, fine sha
ge and full, excellent for
l; lively rose, tinged with lila
. A vigorous grower. Its color is a light pink, no
nd dark crimson; large, fu
One of the largest roses; fine form; pink, shaded
eely in autumn, and producing fragrant flowers of a bright rose
full, of fine form; light
fine cherry red, of the style of
ite; moderate size, fin
color, deeper in the center; lar
nd full flower, the color of which is clear flesh, w
s class. Its color is a bright, changeable crimson, inclining
g
ning to salmon in the bud; large, full, and glo
d with rose; free bloomer; size,
d with rose, changing to pure white
nged with fawn color; bud very fine; dw
bular form; carmine-crimson
shaded with crimson; free grower and bloomer. It
rse of the petals silvery; large, full
erfectly double, is surpassed by others. Its color is a scarlet crimson, with a soft velvety sheen, and a few thousand
ass. It is a good grower, very full bloomer, an
nd finely shaped. Its
owth is vigorous, its bloom is abundant, and its color is
constant blooming qualities. Its color is pale peach, wit
g
alled. Others have now surpassed it. It is, however, still valuable
d double globular flower. Its co
e rosy carmine, its form is full, and it grows well and blooms abundant
carmine; very large, full, of good form;
e it in nearly all respects, save color, which is a pur
ry delicate and beautiful tint of colo
obular; carmine-rose; fragrant; free b
iful in the bud; bright rose; free, especially
orm; deep carmine; very fragrant; remarkab
ght rose; very large and full, form p
edling of Jules Margottin; b
lobular, full, and well formed. An American varie
g
ith full, fine form, and bright che
washed with satin-rose; very large, ful
the largest yet produced; deep rose;
deep crimson, with a violet shade; highly fragrant;
red; fragrant; old, but valued for
sh color, richly shaded with bri
Its color is a velvety deep crimson mar
full, of perfect form; and a true perpetual floweri
se; large, semi-globular; frag
ngle White.-Most charming ro
bright rosy carmi
large, showy, free growing rose;
ort from Baroness Rothschi
TANT
s flowers are large, blush colored, and rather flat. It is an abundant[Pg 37] and constant bl
TANT
re white; buds and flowers produced in cluste
arge and full flower. It is an abundant bloome
bloomer. It is globular, finely
l, and of finely cupped form; flowers freely. One
t opening, but changing to pure white; large
orous grower, double,
and a good grower. Its color i
while not so "mossy" as some others, its ever-blooming character and m
BON
South. In it, however, are varieties like Hermosa, Souvenir de Malmaison, and others, which are scarcely surpassed in any class. The Bourbon Rose has also qualities which make many varieties favorites. These qualities are
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-BOURBO
y, who received it in 1819 from Bréon, director of the Royal gardens in the Isle of Bourb
g
M. Perichon, a planter in the island, found in one of these hedges a young plant, differing very much from the others in its shoots and foliage. This he transplanted into his gar
e Bengal, that we give it a separate place in our garden classification. To the French we owe nearly all the varieties of this class which have been produced from the original se
eing sometimes light blush, and at other
us grower; its col
ant cherry red; lar
; purplish crimson; fragrant; a moderate
, and no rose blooms more abundantly, either forced or in the open ground. Its color is delicate rose.[Pg 40] The
ose, tinged with sil
e rose, almost white; la
riety, slightly tinged with buff. It is cupped, very fragrant, large
on. Few recent roses have been so highly praise
and of very perfect form, very double, with thick, velvety petals; they are of the largest size, often four to five inches in diameter, and their color delicate blu
IN
dance of bloom, it is largely cultivated by bouquet venders. It is cupped, beautifully formed, and of a rich, brilliant crimso
ant bloomer; its color is
d bud, of a light crimson, inclining to blush. It commences blooming among the earliest, and, if the old seed-vessels are picked off
ceding, in everything but the color
e; double, fine in bud, and o
full; free flowering; promising as a
uble; a pretty miniature rose,
large and double, beautifully cupped, and of a brillian
y other class that are superior to it. Its growth is luxuriant, and its superb cupped, wa
ra.-Green
SET
ering roses. It blooms freely through the season, is tolerably hardy, a
, reverse of petals coppery; la
hardiest. Its color is white, wi
g
e. One of the hardiest, and with a large
e pink shading; moderat
a climber, as in rich soils and favorable locations it will make shoots of fifteen feet in a season. When budde
Its color is yellow, deepening at the center to a rich, golden yellow. It is,
from any other rose known, being a bright salmon, almost saffron. It blo
ight lemon. When half opened, the buds are superb. Like Chromatella (and Lamarque, the parent of both), its growth is very luxuriant. River
ine rose, of large, ful
RO
roses. Its flowers are cupped, very
g
ccasional white streak on the inner petal;
p rosy-carmine; lar
ery double, and fragrant. Its color is rose, shaded with
y best of the tea-scented varieties. Its form is c
h very double and perfect flo
rt, with beautiful saffron y
osy flesh color; fine fragrance; moderate grower. Esteemed by th
ows very freely, and gives its globular, pure whi
ary yellow; fine and strik
tinged with pale straw color. A grand
t is sometimes a shy bloomer when young, but is well adapted for forcing
and fine form. Its color is
Pg 44] to pure white; very large and full, openin
f a dark rose color, and
and makes a good climber. Its foliage is luxuriant, and its flowers are large and double;
ight satiny rose color; f
when in bud. Its color is rose, tippe
. Its remarkably free blooming qualities make it a
olden yellow ro
-scented rose, globular, and very fra
y formed, and of a
yellow; very beautiful in bud; large
slightly tinted with yellowish whi
e, and free blooming;
hing deeper than Safrano, and mor
-Large, full, fine form; bri
ather fragrant; vigorous, with fine foliage; regarded as th
in form; white, with a faint tinge of yellow; free, a
etals, often suffused with rose; free, and highly e
d and veined with li
grown under glass, it is one of t
f great value; fragrant; free b
ron at center; excellent fragrance; very vigorous grower, and is much used to trai
r; the foliage is very dark and glaucous, and the five to seven leaflets are strongly serrated. This variety, both in this country and in Euro
ct, well formed; bright red; fragran
ty; very large flower; blooming freely;
] form, double; cerise red; rather fragrant; very v
hite, with yellow center
deep fawn color. When open, its form is poor, and its color a much lighter fawn. These fawn-colored ro
rower, with flowers o
bricated flowers, when open, much resemble in form those of Souvenir de Malmaison. Its color is a delicate salmon, shaded with rose, and its general character highly
milar to that variety in form and substance but of a deep
The flowers are large, full, and of great substance, produced in ext
rose, clouded with flesh color,
y.-Coppery rose c
.-A fine yellow, an
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-MARéCH
ble; very fragrant. A most valuable v
g roses of different shades of crimson. No. 1 being the brightest, and No. 3 the dar
cts on a lawn, either singly, or in groups from three to a dozen. Where the height of the pillars can be gently graduated to the highest in the center, the effect will be very fine. Many of the luxuriant growing varieti
LYANTH
in panicled clusters. In the hands of the French cultivators, it has produced what promises to be a distinct and popular class, of which the following are
re white; lasts a long while in perfection; moderately fragrant. Jean Sisley wr
g
almon-pink; highly fragrant; moderate or dwarf;
in clusters of thirty or forty
, only an inch in diameter;
centres; small and full, very beautiful;
s Pays Bas.-Pure white,
S ROSE (Ro
great substance; it is rarely attacked by insects. The rose-colored, or white single flowers, about three inches across, are borne in large clusters, and have a most delightful fragrance. They continue in bloom for a long time, and are succeeded by large fruits (heps) of a bright-red color, which m
l avoid any confusion as to botanical names. Whether a species so very distinct as this will yield itself to the efforts of the hybridizer remains to be seen, but it offers a most tempting subject. Could the vigorous, almost leathery foliage, thorough hardiness and powerful fragrance of this be combined with the handsome form and
as the year 1100, of our era, the court-ladies prepared a favorite perfume from its pet
TNEY
nce like the perfume of an apricot, succeed each other without interruption till the first frosts, while the leaves remain till the very latest. Although as hardy as the hardiest of the China Roses, it would be better in this latitude to give it the same protection as recommended for the C
tiful. It has stood the last three winters uninjured in our grounds, without protection, and is a very beautiful and desirable variety. It is classe
can sometimes be seen, which, however, give a graceful appearance. Its flowers ar
HYLLA
er till frost, and have a striking appearance; they are very double, with a calyx of which the small, bristling sepals give the opening bud the appearance of a small chestnut. The plant is
pped flowers, of a blush and often
K R
is latitude it is quite hardy, and we have a plant of the old White Musk in our grounds, that has braved the severity of more than twenty winters. It has made in one season shoots more than six feet long, and in our Southern States, more than double the growth would probably be
ty, with the peculiar musk fragrance. I
and would make a good pillar rose. It blooms in large clusters of
OOM ONLY ONCE
EN R
on, and that strongly resemble each other in habit and flower. It includes those classes called, by
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.-GARD
tioned Rivers as the most skillful and correct of rose-growers; and yet, in classing Lady Fitzgerald and Madame Hardy among the Damasks, he says that neither of them are pure Damask; and the Duke of Cambridge, which at first he thought a Hybrid China, he now places as a Damask; other similar instances are frequent. Many roses, moreover, are classed as hybrids which are not truly such. We are quite inclined to think that a large number of the varieties supposed to hav
he will find it less embarrassing to make a selec
cribe here only a few distinct varieties, with c
he Remontants, and being certain to bloom only once in the season,
its very luxuriant growth makes it a good pillar rose. Its flower is cupped, large, double, and fragrant, and its co
,[Pg 55] and vigorous habit of growth, with lar
symmetrical, and finely cupped. Its color a delicate, wax-like
al in this class, being of a pale lemon or straw color. I
he most desirable of this class. Its flowers are of a dark crimson, and its young
has a large cupped flower,
finely shaped flower. Its color is pu
ne of the very best of the white summer roses. Its foliage is so marked in its richness and beauty that any one can
ne of the darke
. Its form is compact, and its color a very light blush, nearly whi
distinct, and compact flower. Its color
g
S R
ul mossy covering of its calyx. This mossy appearance has been deemed by some a mere lusus natur?, and by others the work of an insect similar to that which produces the bédéguar, or rose-gall. The former opinion, however, prevails; and this freak of nature cultivators have succeeded in fixing and perpetuating in a gr
sy-pink, free bloomin
as a good form, bright red c
Flowers of a dar
olor is pale flesh, changing to pure white, a
lly cultivated in gardens. It grows well, blooms freely, is well
that rose; but when in bud, it is more properly a Moss, although its calyx is not covered with a fine moss, but has more of a crested appearance. In a rich soil this fringe-like crest most beautifully clasps and surmounts
t crimson, tin
deeper in the center, lar
rge and handsome flower, wi
n and purple shaded,
ght red, large an
ered with small double crimson flowers, beautifully mossed. It is of
iage. The buds are large and well mossed, and it is beau
of vigorous growth. Its flo
is has large and full flow
is was described among
habit. Its flowers are small, w
a good pillar rose. Its regularly formed flowers, of a bright pink or rose, are produced in clusters, and open w
ed flowers are of a deep crimson purple, marbled and spotted with red. Although not quite double when fully open, they are very beautifu
described among the Remo
-Pure white, l
le
e, beautiful, large an
be given them in the autumn, to be washed down about their roots by the winter rains. They do not generally require or bear so much pruning as other roses, but their bloom may sometimes be prolonged by shortening part of the shoots close, and only the tips of the r
g
CH R
ng perfectly hardy, they are desirable for beds or borders, in which, with proper arrangement of colors, they show beautifully, sometimes two weeks before other roses open, producing flowers
y pretty and brilliant dar
nd distinct variety, o
of luxuriant growth. Its flowers are pure
R RO
Brier. The Sweet-Brier is found in various parts of this country and in Europe, and is distinguished by the peculiar delightful fragrance of its lea
sing together[Pg 60] these and the Austrian Briers, respecting which there is much confusion. The true Austrian Rose is a native of the South of Europe, and is a clearly distinct rose; but some have been called Austrian which have scarcely any of the characters of the or
se, very double and fragrant, of a
climate. The inside of the flower is of a coppery-red, and the outside in
h, almost adapted for a pillar. Its form is cupp
the warm, dry climate of Florence and Genoa. The plant grows with luxuriance and produces plenty of flower-buds, which, with proper culture, would probably open in our warm climate, which is very similar to that of Florence and Genoa. Its small foliage and slender, thorny wood, place it fair
g
all shoots, and only leaving the biggest, cutting off the tops of them also, as far as they are small. Then in the spring, when the buds for leaves come forth, rub off the smallest of them, leaving only some few of the biggest, which, by reason of the strength of the stock, affordeth more nourishment than any other, and the agreeable nature of the single yellow rose, from whence it is immediately nourished, the shoots will be strong and able to bear out the flowers, if they be not too many, which may be prevented by nipping off the smallest buds for flowers. The tree should stand something shadowed, and not too much in the heat of the sun, and in a standard by itself, rather than under a wall." That which follows is from a book called Systema Horticultur?, dated 1
ican origin, and is perhaps the best ha
that rose. It grows freely, blooms abundantly, and its small double flowers possess a richness of color unequalled by any other rose. No garden should be without it. It
rant foliage, and large double flowers of a bright ros
ot bear much pruning, and require mere
IRE R
w in soil where others would scarcely vegetate. Hence they are valuable for covering naked sand-banks, or bare spots of earth, and their roots would be of ma
g
uch situations, and among them were planted some half dozen plants of the Double Ayrshire Rose, raised in this neighborhood about ten years ago. These roses now most comp
r twelve feet high, the branches quickly reach the ground, and protecting the stem from t
hire Roses. Its color is white, often edged with pink, and
rous climber, with a pretty flower
IAN R
eir corymbs of pure white or deep yellow flowers. We recollect seeing, at the Botanic Garden at Naples, a very large plant of the Banksian Rose, the main stem being six inches in diameter, and branching off into a dozen others, fifty feet or more long. In the Sout
Banks. It is a beautiful little rose about half an inch in diameter, blooming abund
rs; these are produced in great abundance, and give a pleasant per
ers of much larger size than the preceding varieties. Its want of the
ty, with yellow flowers of larger size
ly the heavier branches cut out, leaving those which are full flower-bearing twigs, which should not be shorten
AULT
oth bark renders them desirable for stocks to bud upon, and a fine rose of this class, covering a trellis and budd
g
its pendulous clusters of la
large, double,
REEN
. When thus planted, the large weeds should be pulled up until the plant fairly covers the ground, when no more attention will be needed. They are well adapted for training up columns, and we know of few things more beautiful than a temple formed of numerous columns, with Evergreen Roses growing luxuriantly upon them and festooned gracefully between. Nothing, indeed, can be more gracefully beautiful than festoons, wherever they can be made. They constitute the chief beauty of the vi
of the class; when properly cultivated,[Pg 66] it produces an abundanc
s abundant and glossy dark-green foliage contrast
lass. Its flowers are perfectly shape
or its tendency to bloom in the autumn. Its flowers are very large, double, fragrant, and globular, and their color is a blush or c
CLIMBIN
ch do not belong to any
rose color. The very rapid growth of this rose makes it excellent for covering old buildings. We recollect being shown, at the Bartram garden of Ph
rdy, and with strong, Bourbon-like foliage. It blooms in large c
on flowers, a color which is n
ivers. Its flowers are produced in large clusters, are v
t, creamy-white flowers, changing to blush after expansion. When in full bloom, the
FLORA
somewhat tender in this climate. We have known them to endure safely several win
rofusion. A large plant will not unfrequently show more than a thousand flowers, all bloom
may be grown as a bush with proper pruning. It is hardier than others
arger flowers and handsomer foliage than any of the other Multiflora Roses, and blooms in immense cluste
may be grown as a bush. Its clusters are large, and the flowers change a
g
RAIRI
y nature, braving equally well the frosts of Canada or the heat of Louisiana. The leaves are large, rather rough, and of a rich dark-green. They grow with unexampled rapidity, exceeding in this respect any of the climbing roses, and would cover old bui
ct shape. They are of a deep rose color, with a white stripe in the centre of each petal. This rose is truly superb, and, for our cold winters and hot sun, an unequalled climber. It
icacy and beauty of its flower and its tendency to bloom in the autumn. It produces abundant cluster
adame Laffay. It is said to combine the vigorous growth of the one with the rich color and deli
uble, of a de
ge white flowers, and al
gton.-A rosy li
s in this class, but the precedi