714 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
—— 
EN? 
WORKS 7 WRITTEN OR 
&e., AND PU BLISHED ON HIS OWN ACCOUNT. 
DITED BY J. C. LOUDON, F.L.S., 
RBORETUM ET FRUTICETUM BRITANNI- 
r, the Trees and Shr 
ubs of Britain, native 
nay; pictorially and botanically deli. 
and 
neated, and scientifically a and co. epee eoret ith their 
propagation, Culture, Management, and L ar Cie in 
useful and ornament: ntations, and Landscap e-Gardening ; 
dias 
dener’s Magazine. 
illustrated a above 2500 Engravings 
uarto Lee Price #10, cloth pat 
and Co e parti coloured a 
and Sons. 
S$ AND ARRANGEMENT. 
~ Work La int shrbe Se nviniotie — 
be home Introduction of Trees and Shrubs 
Vol. I. an 
¥. 
ead Meee Trees of from ten to twelve years’ 
panied by botanical specim 
of mature 
boretum Britannicum ”’ for the first time, 
ork a au ae wit wager ail previous publications on 
This di of the work occupies Vols. V, 
EE 
four volumes of “The Arboretum” 
with upwards of 2,500 Ne wee, chiefly of iotibitokt's 
- Spagn 
ustrated 
Ratios 
wings of the leaves, of 
: Longman 
coloured copies, Ridgway 
into 
the Trees and Shrubs 
g the trees 
growt! 
within ten en of oe all drawn to the same ae 
imens 
the 
VE, 
tural size. the ipchas of several genera; portraits 
Kk: shrubs (such as Johnson’s Willow, the 
Cypress of Soma, &c.); nearly fifty remarkable Oaks, above t 
Q 
at $ pes, exhibiting the effect of particular 
kinds of trees, when employed by the scape-gardener, in 
combination with other trees, or with buildings; ground plans, 
showing shasetla of laying out and planting arboretums, fruti- 
cetums, noes rosariums, &c.; diagrams, showing trel- 
and other ures for training ‘climbing shrubs, the mode 
of forming yadnss f gore! Te rubs, of m: g¢ baskets, &c., 
of willow-rods, oh eens 5 rote ir aye, e = 
Sawing up ‘ ; practised in Norway, in 
short, the work | ac claws the subject of 
trees shrubs of Britain. a 
Bayswater, near London, 
Nov. 1841. 
OPENIONS OF. THE PUBLIC PRESS. 
should hardly do justice to our anes, did we not in 
vi 
shrubs, whether unignee 
Bri 
are recom: 
not confined 
but include bcs and Hetuety ol cites kinds, 
ublications, and did we por et to 
ded. not 
scriptive bad Aagorsen pcre which can tend to illustrate the his- 
include the m 
* A most valuable mass of information, 
Se Ah caret teat crieinsl. +°__ Dr. —, x Bot. Reg. 
‘This book is one of solid value, worthy 
landed gentleman, 
trees and shrubs; and when it is considered that 
compel, but 
a place in the li- 
il as = every student of 
‘itn i 
rieultu ral science. us 
ulate Mr. ving finished’ ercu- 
which few men, except himself, would have had 
be sti he perseverance to com- 
t i lete in its kind, and 
it must become a standard book ioe ons alk waljects com- 
cted with trees.”—Quarteriy ne 
as the 
Buiter ‘of — Reese Mamaine, and as potty peck of 
ther work, which must cost him far a te weet 
his former publications. mere fact of his having asda it 
to a successful terminati noi le testimony of 
terest which must prevail on the subject of ing ; for 
no one, with Mr. Loudon’s experience, would have ed in an 
: so ee and expensive, unless he fermrgsiona@ 
ving soumething: Uke aux adleyeaiis iytaen 
se. which must ae 
n thousand pounds. 
poe of four eA al of letter- press, "interspersed with ps Te 
ur volumes | 
ry person inter- 
e important subject of planting: habe sous hn an amateur 
or gar pacity, to pos: onsult.””—- Edinburgh 
- p.: 
ett good pooks on gardening, but, with t bn 
A ere 's ‘Sylv: ce? now F enenruaeeds few or none ©. 
story of the trees and shrubs of chin 
Brit andl pai has publication of these 
important, interesting ov 
jen my ie “hate — volumes, comiibated to the literatu 
k not surpassed by any within the range of our 
sonstiog. "To ase professional forester, the improver and embel- 
isher of estates or pleasure-grounds, Mr. udon’s work will 
all occasions useful and accurate information, for there 
o 
eS do 
coal phe ont 77 
Oct. 1938, p. 435. 
The great.mass of info axes Den po trees and shrubs 
collected together in these volum he numerous and beau- 
pene ge wood engravings, pom er this work one of great 
only to the botanist and practical cultivator, but the 
er. ae ir. gy at not only treats of 
ation, &c., of trees an 
; the hich grow ase: 
ich y are attacked; the birds which va a feed, or which 
maketheir nests in them ; the — pret respec hem ; and 
their legend: e ‘iations.’? — Li iter Gazette, 
“So useful a book w upon trees and shrubs is not to be found in. 
rad eens ; andit is not too eee to say, that it mente _ 
of the library of ery country gentlem: 
yr aR 
“« The ‘ Arboretum Britanni onan ? 
it has been a successful o a it contains pale amass ot 
pan rmation on the subject of ee S was never before ——- 
gether, and as must Firmen ea indispensable to every country 
gentleman and landed propri — Times. 
far the most ctmaoete. seal on the interesting subject of 
a gigantic undertaking, 
appeared i r lan —— ** Quarterly Journal gricultuy: 
No “XL, for March 1838 7 —= re 
** Not or a ~—e who a e looki t for a house, but 
are settle co alrenitey, tie it cabal: = spi will find Sones 
All who 
a ams information. delight ina de: 
ee koa aectahie: S) MORO 
oe The whole eee contain ns so much s mse, com. 
Zz ex perience, t pre it tt will be invala. 
able to every one who wishes to enjoy all the comforts of which 
a suburban residence is susceptible, with a due regard 
my; and it d be carefully perused by e 
resides in a house having a garden. We regard it, he whole 
the most original, and as calculated to be the most extensively 
useful, of al oudon’: s, and we ha 0 doubt it. wil] 
effect ‘hi e in the appearance of the gard and 
grounds of ou pe urbai ther small villas, as Mr. on’s 
*Encyclopedia ‘ottage Architecture’ has in various parts of 
the seni effected me rs an earance of the labourers’ cottages,” 
Octo! jaa Ny Berar in One Volume 8vo, with upwards of 
5 50 En ngravings, Price #1 10s., and i 6s, coloured, 
DENING; 
Being the whole works e Gar $e ing and Landscape 
Architecture of the! late eater pnatice Esq. ,; with Biographi. 
cal Not and Notes by J. C, Loudon iat af, 
melas works consist of Tw 'wo folio d Two quarto 
Wolemes; A ilastrates with numerous Plates, wiich, when pub- 
lished, cost upwards of 25/.; but, by reducing the Plates, and 
Lapeer hy in a small type, the whole is aes ‘ot into an octavo volume, 
price 30s. The pra alue rs r- Repton’s writings to the 
Landscape Gardene! all 
“A highly acoegnaina work, et the pen of the tasteful Mr. 
Repton, enriched with practical notes by Mr. Loudon.”--United 
| Service Gaz magiee 
** Repton’s works--the works of one of = t and most 
experi ced landscape gardeners Engl: a rhea a 
high price at which they were originally pork nohy have been 
i ible to the practical gardene: 4 even ae the 
amateur Lat = fetes means. They ar 
Mr. Loudon, within th of both.’?—Scotsman. 
AND REGISTER 0. AL AN 
In Monthly Numbers, with nume ings, price ls. 6d. 
each, forming One 8vo Volume annually. The First Series is out 
of print; but the Second Series, forming Five Volumes, from 
1834 to 1839 inclusive, iNustrated by nearly 2,000 Engravings, 
ere #5 5s. 6d., may be had of the Publishers. Any bare 
mets published aiaed uently to 1833, may be purchased se} 
aie 
quotation ara has hitherto appeared in this, or, as tae as we 
la 
dicapenic m of planter. ou € 
pee ceetih bev * ery has been written worthy of et aren up to 
the present time, on the subject of arboriculture.”— Quarterly 
Journal oF Aericsitune: 
£ pas is a work of the most laborious assiduity and per: 
teadiness, te i could only be ssceorplished in eae 2 
so much php mis and si 
ge oul 
active aman as Mr. Loudo: por 
tendal i in Linnea, vol. xiii., p. ine 
“When we gave a notice of this book in the third year of our 
tainly expected saan good, but we could 
iodical, * we cer 
not have believed that it w a to produce so plete a 
3; and now parr le is brought toa close, and lies 
re us in ei yh ‘e cannot 
ity little space. .... < 
treated his subject in a manner at once systematic and pease 
uitivat i i 
iptions, its SHRONY BES ite 
a! wat it 
numerous an utiful engravings, 
and bea gs, and for the aes mnizal his- 
tory which it —— of each seen eye Al le Can- 
dolle in Bib. Univ le de Geneve, 
Works itten or ite by J. C. Lo non, P. “pe hee: cn pub- 
BBS id on his own 
he unt. 
edition, ected, wi! WatK above 180 of ti e Plates graved. 
in One thick 8 oc Abin ieee ind ey iit 100° Paes Ze 
letterpress, and uj =, of 2,000 Engr: gs beau tifully 
ented on Woo id. 
THE coat ae of COTTAGE, FARM, an 
da raaee beaateyes sedge ae eed is ITURE; 
ens of Cottages, F Farmeries, Villas, 
Country fons, Public- houses, Seoekiah co &c., including 
the =o rg of ise sea — Furniture; accompanied by Ana- 
and Critical Rem: illustrati Principles o 
ectural pea — Tact, oe ig the Designs for Dwell- 
ings ape ee geese ardening, with reference 
to their a case tiene 
e i single © sseapte hes < ever effected so much good in improving 
the —— ra the = ge appearance of country dwell- 
ings eb. 2, 1839. 
— Feb. 7 
n One Volume, pos' -» price 
WATERTON’ - ESSAYS ON NATURAL EBTUEE 
bio; ry of 
valuable in or farmers at Cate unt 
ontains respecting vids ‘the e male 
Taabesio. snails, slugs and wo: Gard. 
a 
In Monthly N a bers, Svo, price Is., to be completed in Twelve 
umbers, Miustrated. by numerous Engravings on Wood, 
THE Shetland ap acorn ae LTURIST ; 
an Attempt to teach e Culture 
nd ‘Management ot f the Tiger, Fruit, Kitchen, and Forcing Gar- 
ry, Pleasure-ground, and orname ental Planta- 
e had no previous knowledge 0: or practice in 
of gardening. 
by W. Siva, 113, Fleet-street. 
'TPHE CON — lig A WATER BOILERS invented 
by J. Ro , Esq., may be obtained is boar size of JOHN 
SHEWEN, lronmonger, "Ke., Sevenoalss, Ken 
~w having 
offer it as most effici economical: it may be seen at 
Messrs. Chandler & Sons’ Nursery, Vauxhall; Messrs. i 
™M 
Hackney ; Messrs. Henderson’s, eapple. e-place ; Mr. Knight's, 
King’s-road, Chelsea; Messrs. —— reg ae. eg and at 
the Gardens of the Horticultural Soc of Lond 
UTLER’S CHEMICAL seri INK, requiring 
no neg jean ona apn Chemist t, os oo 
marl 
which are ieepated wi 
cannot stand the test of repeated wash 
have ‘*‘ BUTLER’S,” and to observe the address. 
'OMOLOG Y 
O BE DISPOSED OF, THREE MAHOGANY 
CABINETS, of fifteen drawers each, of Britis tish Le 
finest preservation, late the property of Mr, Thom: z: 
ceased. ear be seen at No. 27, Globe-road, Mile End, © 
Rose-plac 
* One g prin meee: bat the whole book 
limited diffusion of a love of comfort, and even e; pointe 7 
Penny Magazine. 
“It is written in a remarkably clear, though concise, manner, 
ee = the mysteries and technicalities of domestic Sam 
ach 1 as to render. them perfectly co! 
hensbie to the peters wnrated reader.” —New Monthly agus. 
ent ie last $6 Astras 1 of Cottage Archit aerial * 
in domestic architect 
Complete in Five Volumes 8yo, with numerous Engravings on 
- Wood. Price #6 6s. ie 
THE ARCHITECTURAL MAGAZINE; 
Being a collection of ies reat on Architecture, Building, 
“We strongly re ecaues the pee Magazine” as 
presnant with eter and apg a to the architect and 
the general reader. ae ota tage rs 
nace J aly 78. 
RTUS | LigNosus ‘LONDINENSIS; 
he Ligni “Sm dy and half. -hardy, 
Lan tas Sin their native 
of culture, and the prices of 
rymen and gardeners generally the ‘Lignosus Lon- 
be found an extremely useful book.”—Filericultural 
Magazine, rol. fl -y P- 139. 
Published on “Anes 1, 1838, in One Volume 8yo, price 20s., 
THE SUBURBAN GARDENER AND VILLA 
MPAN 
dence, or of a 
situation on anieht 
Bese en agen affairs. Numerous 
a ee ea ei ao ‘sieteonedioes 
e fine cim: 
Bag ite Combretum, Brachysema, 
Splendid Geraniums —‘ Al 
bes zeiatie, ae. grat that new and sple mdi Rose a 
ead ore esof Plants offered) 
to the public. pooaec desirous of coe ce i Carns 4 
ent 0 
of Meee tad will find this an exc ryt he eat where Catalogues may 
be viewed the morning of sale 
be had. 
A ae BE DISPOSED piel by Private costn® oa 
LEASE of a small compact NURSERY, © of W 
et unexpired, oe Seether are numerous 
Greenhouses, Pits, Sheds, Stabling, &e., situat Ae pe AND, co 
one of the principal CI S in the EST OF EN <epabil 
taining from 60,000 not i abitants ; posse: poner bilities 
for oot aigg le, independent er aie : 
Conn Satisfactory rea: give: 1. LOW: 
ni “csposing of the same. apery for 3 particulars to 
Nurseryman, Clapton ; or to Mr. N utting, 46, Cheaps , London: 
& FLORISTS. 
.O NURSERY cm SEEDSMEN, 
Ls 'o be DISPOSED OF, BA be pe Yy and SEED 
wEsg. with an unexpired : 
acres of land well stocked with stn Brergrets : it. tree Pits well 
‘with es ae Seed- op pe Se aerate veak: — 
Nursery is situated ai ai Brentwood, 1 in Essex, Wt paiek neat 
nication. to railroad, and may be taken with Ts ener 
; F te tract, or valuation. ‘ovle, 
Lcoevmenenaglnll nari sar ae epee % wie peer 
