Eos PI enr ems E. 
NEW PUBLICATION. 275 
white UY which flowers all night, and at the first rays «d e Apr 
sun begins to wither, her still in full bloom when = left kae t after 
riding in A “sonth-oas terly direction about seven | — ver a andes , ston ny 
road, we 
One of the fi first buildings on entering the town, for I suppose : must call it a 
town in Eu would call it a mere vi e 
only one I had seen in the country, Wheat being grown in ioni of the hills in 
the the neighbourhood, but the flour iege from it proving very dark an 
The subsequent pages describe Dr. Seemann’s return to Leon, and 
his departure from there to Chontales. 
* Passing and ope for a few hours at Pueblo Nuevo, with its Faden. 
actus fences, I put up for the night at Nagarote, where I measured a fam 
ter. m o 
the € of the tree — a circle of 348 feet. A whole regiment of 
soldiers may seek repose in its shade. 
“If this vegetable monster had been a erige of oy part of the — 
would have 
been tence 
poem. In r California. and some the "whole north-west tern coast of 
aa die aati and age. Three hundred 
feet is no Popii on nee t for a tree, and some of the Wellingtonias overtop 
St. Peter's, and almost rival the height "o pinnacle of Cheops, whilst their 
: wth 
a 
vire The 2 Ceara Young tells us that from childhood, nothing in 
nature had a greater attraction for him than trees, and a giant tree, such as 
