Fes. 27.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 135 
f the genus, producing a profusion of large purple ee ee eee ee dese; of fetns, mosses, seaweeds, funguses ors 
, from J ae to S ghee : ds is meals y ete | glee oereant crate; where they pints ow out the difference between evergreen an d deci- 
‘or covering a bower or trellis-work, and i is de’ ticate uous p) it shows how trees to be ‘nown'from 
brella fashion on a lawn, would — & a most _—— ob- Y f plants is remarkably shown in hézhs; and in no superficial and slovenly manner, but in 
ject. a Siberian ereeper, 1s by no | « C mbeline ; 3 and it will b i xact. the wa in 
means unworth wall. Acer Colchicum : i i h ch planta came by their ames ho ow oc Dopaecitr 
}. h 
ps hig the fine purple bloom Which covers its youn 
form the theme or the Maes a 
cesar and Cox’s Defia ahlia were elle by those 
With ang! 
Whilst summer lasts, oe Ghee Fide Te, 
thou shalt not lack 
pe pg nor 
vy rdener Sh rth 
Pe on = passage from ‘ ff Romeo and Satie” ‘noticed 
few weeks 
is case ne can be ‘eke btn that 
n thus 
me, 
Holding thine ear und ; 
(Being loose, unfirm, with digging up of graves,) 
So shall no foot upon} the church-yard tread, 
at es — — 
no, noi 
e leaf of eglantine, whom not to Sater,” 
-sweeten’d not thy breath ; the ruddock would 
With charitable bill (O bill, sore-shami 
Those rich-left heirs, that let their fathers li 
yar ay a monument!) bring thee all this; 
weve d furr’d m s bes = when fi owers are none, 
To haber d 
Who paar 2 ase he Sey on Seat no breast— 
Cinque-sptted like the e: 
e bot a cowslip—! 
And who can prc a wool-comber writing such lines as 
n instead of so me others, and many such i teresting 
eau, are discussed. 
their ele ementary_ organs and their compound organs, and 
male organs and their female o organs » the ovarium and 
Svan em the Pigg “pac the pepo, the pon he mor 
sarcoca 
the fun 
growing and hele oat of ays 5 — 
Soninticb. and much 
— na “are nl “this ne lisinopril 
ook, we may surely congrat tulate our subarban friends 
Sok the ae that i is opened to 
nctions of Arp nae ber 
geographi — 
we want room 
Shakspeare’s perceptio uch too quick to have made 
the mistake savelved in n the “other reading ; and particu- these 
larly i in a play wor ig a with such Hark! hark | the lark at heaven’s gate sings; 
in question le trans a of one line, the Nieanirirasinpernd satire 
4 * =e a + His steeds to water at those springs, 
explanatory comies ve unfirm, are made properly to In chaliced flowers that lies 
follow the description hollow ra and the certainty An Ree -bud | 
of hearing is made a consequence of the boy’s position To ope their golden eyes ; 
instead of resulting from the condition of the earth. Thus bebop eteia: pretty bin, ee 
the whole passage is made consistent, its harmony pre- | 
served, a onnexion he and the in | 
ference eh. mor 6: for as i RDEN MEMORANDA: 
before stood, th f the words was bad, even Camellias in the Open Air,—At Castle Martyr, the seat of the 
had the philosophy been good. 
1s oo Er rae ote 
A} J fe ATETUGTIUM, itcw 
words,’’ says the Editor of this little work, ** will suffice to 
hat he “" * 
The Peron eh was in want of wer 
present his Herbara 
@ Liha required by him, was in- 
his atte: an the subject ; the result has 
een the producsion of the series 
The deposit 
lic. ‘ories of the materials for study d in- 
of systematic nm re rng 
+i 
Earl of Shannon, the Camellia is the topic of conversation with 
all 
_ “The difficulty now, I persons who visit the place. There are 14 large specimens order; and although ‘some Herbaria merit ee rather 
think, cleared up has t who | p out in the open air about 16 years ago, and the: all | than auch’ a character, many botanists, to obtain this de- 
have been perhaps too exclusively literary men. “le would in 1834 from 12 feet to 13 feet high fire arate be oo hha cet | # sirable end, | 
be doing good service if those who oh feathered wim dowels from the bo bottom to the ten ‘They for their private use. reasonable at which the 
vated taste for poetry a fair quantity of science, would | are planted out in three quarter peats and one qu: rich | present series | is oaks will, it it is pee, prevent this 
assist ating some of the numerous obscurities | loam, three feet : Deh with drainage of old bricks, lime rubbish, y ng 
which still exist in omg aa His frequent Feeney to] Bae roneh Save Biber atte te tevece nfo pelea sre ien | the | their collecti Si 
plants pty natural sce ppg ig: a ah ex in front, and mats are stretched from thé poles to the wall, which The ania pela himself the <preerere patronage of 
oa and gardener (0 to is always found f cemctent to protect them from the inclemency of | the — a whom the science is 
thr page eure pity word h aungues- the weather. They generally flower beautifully in April and May. | vated, since everything likely to > eatitribate to neatness 
tonabiy een 5 tonker§ Friar Laurens 8 | dolttvgay begins— hrncetes pole. Cabinet and socuraey may with certain s claim their favour 
grey-eyed morn ome oe oe ie ie fro pring Be jeorah against the gable end of the hive bo pou jo foriiesiy ~oectigted eae the | and approbation. eenranh 
Ap ra tats Mey ied ee feels. late J. Brocklehurs t, Esq., father of Anh present great silk may | the is of the most popular authors of the pre 
From forth day’s pathway, made by Titan’s wheels ; pa age be Pa a, shad, viper d the hows ae roe. sent day by whom Manuals of British 
ee tame rcaig Mer eer iene Abbe high and aa wide the bole is nearly aft. circumiference at the | Written, viz., Smith, » Lindley, and reight. 
Teacet call this cases coe of our base. 8 of fruit ; heed ord in particular | As eac! a has one or more labels assigned to it when- 
With baleful weeds and d flow th red from it the enormous quantity of 64 pecks of _—< e “y ioned differ in their nonien- 
J Precigas-J (for the sort) fine pears. It is said to have been planted after 
og Ag ended nega mother, der her fom; the rebellion im 1745; and there is a tradition that whilst the ne able to sclect that of their favourite 
Rad bess hae ok maileiert of divecs bea wae rebels were in the town, some of their dead were buried ot | fan Book; while the synonyms attached will show the ar- 
We sucking on her natural bosom fads very place where this tree: is gto It gives a arg Be es rangement ado pted by the other three wadliaeanie nd 
Many.for many vitues excellent 2 house, which is now known by the cognomen -tree Hi thus, t 
None but for some and yet all diferent. ie ee Bpey es in the ee "of im ayes ad is frequenty en hi ilities of botanical intercourse.” 
wi smoke, y' pple: ardener ‘6 
The t have been healthful, or of some i 7 Brocklehuret, Esq. We have only to ada, that the plan is extremely well 
such import. Shrubland Park, near Claydon and | executed, to | join with the Editor in advocating the cause 
"There is nothing in the Friar’s character 
ert h 
~ ® waddle ba powerful grace that lies 
In herbs. stones, their true es 5 
But to the earth some special 
Nor aught 
Revolts from true birth, stumblin: ‘on abuse 
The former part of this soliloquy co will hay 
been obse rved, a little scheme of vegetable physiology: 
beta descenioie of external nature which his works 
one is Hed to think that. their wits have 
Saou crenk puthoesiag who Sh eare spent 
a =o early manhood in his father’s trade of woo#- 
ombing, or something of the 
sible that ene oe for the few yea 
could have led oth 
é the agrs in 
either veesiede sor fess than a 
g this iod i 
< 7 
with passag: 
to hale nbeokatels teeming with 
from _ aoe oe _ — -_ tram met ia 
nmi © onl 
se Seeamche 
10th Feb., —The soil 
climate of this county ‘uot, area ‘a yee penta from 
t the 
he coast, is well s for cultivation of half-hardy trees 
and shrubs, the au beng t in eeicial a lig ‘ht sandy loam, on a 
ealcaréous subsoil, and the air drier than noe midland and south 
counties. Perhaps no place =) the county more pea ured 
by nature for this branch his place, situated 
bh a bold eminente, which A eardening th an ‘om, the valley of the 
Orwell, Wwer-gardens 
and about 15 miles from the coast. The flower. 
with a south-west ex- 
of neatnes: $ of a arrangement, and to give the following as a 
RANUNCULACEZ Juss. Potvan, Potyeyn. |} 
* esensrob ie Psa De Can 
woh d ye s ren: apie «iver Banks 
stately timber, the growth. of m: At one side of 
er. ‘den t inates along avenue a sehacwn at Spanish eS = SAPE 
esnut trees, supposed to be of five centuries ne eg ‘ . 
of them are yet growing lux tly, and producing ‘OD: Tem. =f | Cot. 
in favourab: asons ; thé soilis very light sandy loam, from 10 a 
to 15 inche: , Ona bed of solid chalk. On the brow of a othing is a more sure 
hill in the muperiats pelenbouthaps of she haa oad Sinene | an ill-regulated ion of 
of this tree, whic rom 25 ft. to 4 r m the groun: eH Peer 
nd may be ranked amongst the imens of the kind in | 227 other thing ; and we thank cyooly of this little i 
the kingdom. On this hill the depth ofsoil is no more than 6in. ; { work for having at least given everybody the es aee 
some of the: eS are nOW 5 ‘ing to Raph sows oe y 
blanched limbs, overtoppizig the foliage, w ips them wii * 
the solema grandeur of antiquity. Tue oaks on ss light soil choose to do 80. 
ave attained trunks, a proportionate 
height, and the chests he pees to outlive thi The Proceedings of the Horticultural Society of Londen; 
| Bie Rie com m dec: in the erheait aftr i grows ae eee $40. Wo. TX. 
size. The common oth makes fine specimens on thi t 
soil—a fact which one could hardly believe. The'spruce fir, too, Tuts part of the P roceedings is chiefly occupied ead 
soon grows to a great height: and good. timbek, £5 and then dies 0 & arnt cag 
atthetop. We intend soon to ne the peng igphins ponticum } June of last year, y 
extensively, as oe bate plantations ‘or Ornament and | that on the 13th of June n e visitors ‘ 
for the use of y, my predecessor, has left | tk phe ciate ’ rho 
mie a legacy of 10,000 plaits of Rhododendron ponticum to be passed . ugh ee the: 
Lquite agree with him that much time is saved by mi g extraordinary nu of eleven the d five é ; 
Peles gS at home for the first two or three years, in pre- | and ninety-four, to whom about ethers: 
feren sowing the si where they are to for good, might be added der air gs: 
bie ae, a par rary is as and abroad tity enough to see, 
habitually, 
Shakspeare must have done 
Jocund 
Stand tipt : th peepee ee 
When Romeo and Juliet question the hour, they debate | 
hether th g they hear is that of ; 
The nightingale, 
That nightly sings on yon pomegranate-tree; 
or of 
The lark, whose notes do beat 
vaulty heaven so high above our heads. 
Banquo, de escribing ee on says,— 
en Deine maar es 
ote 
Smalls wooingiy here 
bid ates approve 
oe that’ the héaven’s breath 
frieze, buttress, 
no jatty, 
others, not only ts, but 
= for the bottom of vine and other -tree borders.—D. Ben- 
ton, Gardener to Sir W. Middleton, Bart. - 
ith. 
Tuts work is written for the papont, sal enlightening the 
of i ae 
and m 
onochlamy- 
Revieos. - 
The Suburban Horticulturist. By J.C. Loudon. Part I. } 
80. Sm . 
Gtayra an 
_sut fa eg occur abundantly 
i and seenr he. reflection of the 
aie pe aes od ai i edition = <n scorching 
up to th 
rs 
The bso 
