GENERAL INDEX. 



1187 



Damont-Courset, his works on gardening, pace 1121. 



A. D. 1808. 

 Duncan, Andrew, M. D., page 1112. A. D. 1181. 

 Duncombe, John, a British author on gardening, 



page 1107. A. D. 17S9. 

 Duncombe Park, Yorkshire, 7583. 

 Hung, stable, how to manage for hot-beds, 1974. 

 Dung-fork. 1302. 



Uunglass House, East Lothian, 7619. 

 Dunkeld House, in Perthshire, 7636. 

 Dunrobin Castle, Sutherlandshire, 7646. 

 i>unsandle, a seat in Galway, 7672. 

 Dunsay Castle, a seat in Eastmeath, 7661. 

 Dunse Castle, Berwickshire, 7620. 

 Duiwtbourne Abbots, a seat in Gloucestershire, 



1565. 

 Duplessis, F. S., his writings on gardening, page 



1121. a. d. me. 



Duplin Castle, in Perthshire, 7636. 



Dupuy, , his tract on gardening, page 1118. A.D. 



L'i 00. 



Duracina, the Roman term for hard-skinned cher- 

 ries, 5ii. 



Durund, , his works on gardening, page 1119. 



A. D. 1784. 



Duranta, didyn. angios. and verbenaceae, S. tr. 

 Amer. and Vv*. Ind. which grow in loam and 

 peat, and cuttings root freely in sand under a 

 hand-glass. 



Durdos, , his writings on gardening, page 1119. 



A. D. 1783. ' 



Durham, gardens and residences of, 7584. 



Durham Maasey, a seat in Cheshire, '7590. 



Durham Park, Middlesex, 7520. 



Durio zibethinus, the durion, 5981. 



Durival, Clement, his works on gardening, page 

 1119. A. D. 1777. 



Dutch books on gardening, 7695. 



Dwarf fan-palm, chamoarops humilis. 



Dyrham, a seat in Gloucestershire, 7565. 



E.B.— see Eng. Bot. 



Ealing Grove, Middlesex, 7520. 



Eames, Mr., a landscape-gardener, who died the 

 beginning of the present century, 342. 



Earl's Court Villa, Middlesex, 7523. 



Earl's Stoke, Wiltshire, 7596. 



Earth-nut, — see Bunium. 



Earth-pea, lathyrus amphicarpos. 



East Hornden, a seat in Essex, 3038. 



East Indies, gardens of, 461. 



East Lothian, gardens of, 7619. 



Eastbury Hou»e, Essex, 7540. 



Eastcliff Lodge, Kent, 7537. 



Eastmeath, county of, its gardens and residences, 

 7661. 



Easton Lodge, Essex, 7542. 



Eastwick House, Surrey, 7528. 



Ebourgeonnement or disbudding, — see Pruning, 

 and Operations of Gardening. 



Echinaria, trian. dig. and graminea?, a H. an. S. 

 Eur. of common culture. 



Echinophora, sea parsnep, pentan. dig. and umbelli- 

 lereas, H. peren. Eur. which grow in light soil, 

 and are increased by seeds. 



Echinops, globe-thistle, syngen. polyg. segreg. and 

 corymbiferea?, H. peren. and an. Eur. of easy 

 culture. 



Echites, pentan. monog. and apocynea?, S. and G. 

 tr. W. Ind. which grow freely in loam and peat, 

 and cuttings root readily under a hand-glass in 

 sand. 



Echium, viper's bugloss. pentan. monog. and bora- 

 ginea?, G. tr. C. B. S. which grow in loam and 

 peat, and may be raised from cuttings or 

 seeds; and H. bien. and an. Eur. of common cul- 

 ture. 



Eclipta, syngen. polyg. super, and corymbiferea?, 

 a S. and H. an. of common culture. 



Ed. Encyc, the Edinburgh Encyclopaedia, conduct- 

 ed by Dr. Brewster. 



Eden Farm, Kent, 7537. 



Edible fuci, 4349. 



Edible fungi, 4336. 



Edible wild and other neglected plants, 4283; 

 greens and pot-herbs, 42a5 ; roots, 4300; le- 

 gumes, 4309 ; salads, 4311 ; teas, 4317 ; variously 

 applicable, 4320. 



Edifices, anomalous; ice-house, 1723; bee-house, 

 1734 ; Polish hives, 1738 ; common hive, 1739 ; 



4 G 



glass hive, 1740 ; hive of Palteau, 1712 ; Huish's 

 hive, 1743; Howison's hive, 1744; management 

 of bees, 1745; position of the aviary, 1735; choice 

 of bees, 1746 ; materials and "size of hives, 

 1747; feeding of bees, 1748; covering the hives, 

 1750; swarming, 1752; taking the honey, 1755; 

 by_ total deprivation, 1757 ; by suffocation, 



1 lOo. 



Edifices, decorative, characteristic class ; rocks, 1837 ; 

 ruins, 1839; antiquities, 1840; rarities and cu- 

 riosities, 1841 ; monumental objects, 1842 ; sculp- 

 tures, 1S43 ; vegetable sculptures, 1844 ; inscrip- 

 tions, 1845 ; eye-traps ; 1846. — see Structures 

 used in Gardening. 



Edifices, decorative, convenient class ; prospect- 

 tower, 1806: kiosque, 1807; temples, 1808; 

 porches and porticoes, 1809; alcoves, 1810; Ita- 

 lian arbor, 1812 ; French arbor, 1813 ; caves and 

 caverns, 1814 ; grottoes, 1815 ; roofed-seats, boat- 

 houses, moss-houses, flint-houses, bark-huts, 

 1816; elegant structures, 1819; exposed seats, 

 1820; swings, 1821; constructions for displaying 

 water, 1822 ; waterfalls, 1826 ; cascades, 1827 ; 

 jets and other hydraulic devices, 1629 ; drooping 

 fountains, 1832; sundials, 1834; vanes, 1835. 



Edifices, decorative, useful class, 1769; cottages, 

 Gothic, Grecian, Chinese, Bengal, English, 

 Scotch, Italian, Polish, Russian, Swedish, Da- 

 nish, 1770; primitive huts, 1781 ; bridges, 1782 ; 

 fallen tree, foot-plank, Swiss bridge, 1785; bent 

 plank, 1786 ; of common carpentry, 1788 ; of ma- 



ations, 1800 ; gate with falling bars, 1799; rails, 

 1803. 

 Edifices of gardening, their farther improvement, 



184/. 

 Edifices used in gardening, 1698; economical 

 buildings, 1699 ; head gardener's dwelling-house, 

 1700 ; gardener's office, 1701 ; seed-room, 1702 ; 

 fruit-room, 1703 ; journeyman's lodge, 1707 • 

 sheds, 1709 ; entrance lodges and gates, 1712 • 

 buildings for raising water, 1713; wells and 

 pumps, 1716; conduits, 1717; reservoirs, 1718: 

 tank.-, 1719. 

 Edinburgh botanic garden, 7618. 

 Education of gardeners, importance of, 7719 ; pro- 

 fessional education, 7724; intellectual, 7744; 

 moral, religious, and physical, 7761 ; economical' 

 7777. 

 Edward's Square, London, mode in which it is laid 



out, 7322. 

 Edwardsia, decan. monog. and leguminoseas, F. tr. 

 N. Zeal, which grow in common soil, and are 

 generally raised by seeds, but cuttings will root in 

 sand under a bell-glass. 

 Edwinsford, a seat in Caermarthenshire, 7614. 

 Egger-moth, — see Phalama. 

 Eggleston House, Durham, 7584. 

 Egg-plant, — see Solanum. 

 Egbam Park, Surrey, 7527. 

 Eglinton Castle, a seat in Ayrshire, 7627. 

 Ebreta, pentag. monog. and boraginea?, S. tr. E. 

 and W. Ind. which grow in loam and peat, and 

 cuttings root readily under a hand-glass. 

 Ehrhart, Frederick, "bis works on gardening, page 



1124. A. D. 1782. 

 Ehrhartia hexan. monog. and gramineaa, a G. 



peren. C. B. S. a grass of common culture. 

 Eisenstadt (Iron Town), a seat in Hungarv, 206. 

 Ekebirgia, decan. monog. and meliacea," a G. tr. 

 C. B. S. which grow in loam and peat, and cut- 

 tings without their leaves shortened, root readily 

 in sand under a hand-glass. 

 Eiaeagnus, oleaster, tetran. monog. and elcagnea? 

 S. and G. tr. Amer. and Ind. which grow in loam 

 and peat, and ripened cuttings root freely in a pot 

 of sand under a hand-glass. 

 Elavocarpus, polyan. monog. and guttiferea?, a S. 

 and G. tr. E. Ind. and N. Holl. which may be 

 treated like eleaaagnus. 

 Elaeocharis, spike-rush, trian. monog. and cype- 

 raceaj, H. bien. Eur. Afr. and Austral, marsh 

 grasses, is of easy culture. 

 Ekeodendrum, olive-wood, pentan. monog. and 

 rhamneae, Afr. and Austral, which grow in loam 

 and peat, and ripened cuttings root in sand under 

 a hand-glass. 

 Elais, oily-palm, dicec. hexan. and palmea?, a S. tr. 



a palm of the usual culture. 

 Elate, moncec. hexan. and palmere, a S. tr. E. Ind. 

 a palm of easv culture. 



9 



