232 Descriptive Notice of Hendon Rectory, 



in diameter ; in a pot 1 in. wide, and A. excelsa, b\ ft. high, and 3i ft. wide ; 



12 m. deep. The phmt on the lawn, in a pot ISln. wide, and 10 in. deep. 



which IS 10 ft. high, is also in a tub, A. Cunninghams. 



plunged, and the brim covered. Cunninghami« sinensis, 6 ft. high, and 



^. MenziesH, 3 ft. high, and 2i ft. 5 ft. wide; in a pot 13 in. wide, and 



wide; in a pot 13 in. wide by 13 in. 13 in. deep. 



deep. 

 A canadensis. ConifercB, § Qupressince. 



J?, cephalonica, 3tt. 9 in. high, and 5ft. ,. . " 



wide ; in a pot 18 in. wide, and 21 in. ^"ja orientalrs. 



deep : two plants of these dimen- ^' plicata, 6 ft. high, and 3 ft. wide. 



sions, and three others of smaller ^- articulata, 7 ft. high, and 2\ ft. 



size, wide ; in a pot 9 in. wide, and 10 in. 



Picea pectinata. deep. 



P. balsamea. Callitris pyramidalis, 2 ft. high, and 



P. b. Frasen, 2 ft. high, and 20 in. 1 ft. wide ; in a pot 7 in. wide, and 



wide; in a pot 9 in. wide, and 9 in. ^in. deep. 



deep. 6'upressus Tournefortw, 17 in. high, 



P. Pichta, lift, high, and IJft. in di- and 8 in. wide; in a pot 5 in. wide, 



ameter ; in a pot 11 in. wide, and and 5 in. deep. 



11 in. deep. C. lusitanica, 3 ft. high, and 2ft. wide; 



P. Webbitt«a, 3 ft. high, and 3 ft. wide; in a pot 8 in. wide, and 8 in. deep. 



in a pot 18 in. wide, and 16 in. deep. «/uniperus phcenicea, 4 ft. high, and 

 P. grandis, 3 ft. high, and 2 ft. wide ; in 18 in. wide ; in a pot 8 in. wide, and 



a pot 12 in. wide, and 13 in. deep. Sin. deep. 



P. nobilis, IJ ft. high, and 2i ft. wide; J- from Gossainthan, 2 ft. high, and 



in a pot 13 in. wide, and 13 in. deep. 1 ft. wide; in a pot 8 in. wide, and 

 -Larix europae^a. 8 in. deep. 



L. microcarpa. J. australis, 1 ft. 9 in. high, and I J ft. 



Cedrus Libani. wide ; in a pot 6 in. wide, and 6 in. 



C. Beoddra, 3i ft. high, and 4 ft. wide ; deep. 



in a pot 14 in. wide, and 18 in. deep : J- excelsa, 3 ft. high, and 15 in. wide ; 



another, 5 ft. high, and 4 ft. wide. in a pot 9 in. wide, and 10 in. deep. 



Araucaria imbricata, 3i ft. high, and J. bermudiana, 2 ft. 10 in. high, and 



3 ft. wide ; in a pot 16 in. wide, and 15 in. wide ; in a pot 9 in. wide, and 



17 in. deep. 9 in. deep. 



A. brasiliana, 6 ft. high, and 4 ft. in di- J. recurva, 4i ft. high, and 2a ft. 

 ameter; in a pot 18 in. wide, and wide; in a pot 13 in. wide, and 13 in. 



18 in. deep. deep. 



8, 8, 8, Hot-beds for striking and bringing forward pelargoniums and other 

 flowers, for the beds, baskets, vases, &c. 



9, Potting-shed. 



10, Large pits for preserving fuchsias, orange trees, brugmansias, camellias, 

 and other large plants, in tubs, through the winter. 



11, Working-shed, with store-room over, and containing, also, the furnaces for 

 heating the green-houses and the pits. 



Remarks. This residence is not given as one for general 

 imitation; for there are but fewr persons whose taste for botany 

 and gardening is so enthusiastic as that of Mr. WiUiams. 

 It shows, however, what may be done by industry and taste, 

 in the course of not more than four years, on a very small 

 spot of ground, possessing few or no advantages, either natu- 

 ral or artificial. The amateur may see, in the lists which 

 we have given, the names of many of the choicest trees and 

 shrubs which can be procured in the London nurseries ; and 



