289 
1884. We fear it would be too much to ask the Committee and their Editor to 
produce Part VII. much of which will consist of plain letterpress, before the end 
of next year. 
The principal contents of Part V. are the plates and the description of the 
Golden Pippins, the Red Hawthornden, the Queen and Rymer, the Cornish Gilli- 
flower, amongst several dozens of garden and cider apples; and the Colmars, 
Doyennés, Bishop’s Thumb, Napoleon, and two or three Beurrés amongst the 
pears. The Arlingham Squash, Aylton Red, and other perry pears are beautifully 
figured ; and altogether we are satisfied that the subscribers will be thoroughly 
pleased with this addition to the work as they have been with any previous Part. 
It is rather a pity that Mr. With’s analyses are discontinued, if only because the 
omission will cause a flaw in the symmetry of the work when completed. We 
must not omit to emphasize our former praise of the good taste, accuracy, and 
really surprising delicacy of the coloured plates, as prepared for the Pomond by 
Miss A. B. Ellis and Miss E. E. Bull, and chromo-lithographed by Severeyns, of 
Brussels. Nothing could possibly have been better. We take leave to thank the 
Woolhope Club in the warmest terms for this admirable contribution to the 
literature of the garden and orchard. 
