( ioS ) 



cefiion ; and by many, much admired 

 for its peculiar bkteridi relifh : But 

 the Coroun being the largeft, and 

 fineft fruit, is fuperior for general cul- 

 ture. 



The two fpecies of Cherry-trees 

 differ in growth and magnitude : The 

 common or garden Cherry, grows only 

 about fifteen or twenty feet high, and 

 the fecond forty or fifty, with a more 

 erect and lofty head -, adorned each 

 with fpear-fhaped leaves, and nume- 

 rous clufters of white, four-leaved flow,- 

 ers, in April and May, fucceeded by 

 the Cherries ripening, in the different 

 varieties, from May till Auguft, or 

 September. 



Their mode of bearing is both on 



the 



