1216 
ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM. PART 111. 

4) Z Le 
lowing account of them:—‘ No. 1. (fig.1045.) grows upon a bank, or 
high ground, in a hedgerow, about a quarter of amile beyond Morpeth, 
by the side of the Edinburgh turnpike-road. No. 2., an elegant tree, 
between 55 ft. and 60 ft. high, stands close to the edge of the bank of 
the river Wansbeck, a little beyond the new bridge which leads to the 
Milton Road; and there is another ash tree, of the same description, 
a short distance before reaching the bridge. These three trees are 
the only ones that I know the localities of ; and,.though Ihave been 
told at Morpeth, by several persons, that they thought there were 
»more of the same kind of trees growing in the neighbourhood, yet 
no one knew where, or was even sure of the circumstance. These 
trees have long attracted my attention, from the gracefulness of their 
appearance, and from their dissimilitude to the other ash trees in this 

