1". 



PREFACE 



The United Kingdom offers a hospitality to exotic vegetation which finds no parallel 

 in the Northern Temperate region of the globe. Never parched by the heat of a 

 continental summer, the rigour of winter is no less tempered by its insular position. 

 The possession of land still ensures the residence on their properties of a large 

 number of persons of at least moderate affluence. The most modest country house 

 possesses a garden, and not rarely some sort of pleasure ground ; and this usually 

 reaches the dimensions of a park in the case of the larger mansions. While forests 

 for the commercial production of timber such as are found in foreign countries hardly 

 exist, and the methods of their scientific management are little recognised, arbori- 

 culture of some sort may be almost said to be a national passion. In all but purely 

 agricultural districts the free and unrestrained growth of trees enhances, if it does not 

 create, the natural beauty of the landscape. The Roman occupation brought to 

 our shores our fruit-trees and others whose names of Latin derivation bear witness 

 to their foreign origin. One of these, the so-called " English Elm," dominates the 

 landscape of Southern England. Yet, while it perfects its seed on the Continent, 

 it rarely does so in this country, and it holds its own by root suckers, the tenacity 

 of which is all but ineradicable. 



Down to the reign of Henry the Eighth the native forests supplied the timber 

 necessary for construction. It was not till their area became restricted that planting 

 was commenced to maintain the supply. And if this has never developed into a 

 scientific system as it has done abroad, the reason may be found in the abandonment 

 of wood as fuel for coal, and the facilities for external supply of over-sea water- 

 carriage which attach to a maritime country. 



From an early time with the growth of continental intercourse, the contents of 



foreign gardens had gradually been transferred to those of the wealthy at home. 



The taste, however, for cultivating foreign trees and shrubs simply for their 



interest, and apart from any useful purpose they might serve, is not more recent 



than the seventeenth century. The pioneer in this branch of English arboriculture 



was Henry Compton, Bishop of London, who planted in the garden of Fulham 



Palace "a greater variety of curious exotic plants and trees than had at that time 



been collected in any garden in England." Hitherto the European continent had 



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