* 
SOCIETY 0 
of wes — rue — 
— 
THE GARDENERS’ 
OF LONDON.— 
= in nae 
Ter. Jay 12; 
CHRONICLE. 
235 
in 88 1845, when the disease first broke out, 
which w d, but which we 
April 18, 
—.— ars ame to p piema 
of the Society. 
FOR P 
had at t 
Price on or before Saturday, April 
+h a hihitian 
e OF PLANTS, FLOWERS, AND 
E FRUIT k aar a otak ae iy s ae ROT AT 
, Regent’s Par ednesdays, May 10th, 
poranic Jh Sd okoo teto he Gard 
s 78. 6d, each 
1 BOTANIC oo ney, REGENT’S PARK. 
Fe and Mem 
Apeil 15th, is the last 
packets of 30 Tickers for 
of this Society are reminded 
day upon which the 
the Exursirions for 
he only mat terial 
Thef there is another nam 
n 1 inferior minds with dek 
ing often 
man could dismiss them“ their opinions 
py Ag and ia ʻi sai ild.” But 
sually identified 
philosophical reflection 
were 
ard with 
opinion “ will not 
duets K the old ee now refered to, 
Kepa in his introducing it in 1848 as something 
and su ee it with a an array of 8 
om ot ile experiments of Hares which are familiar 
8 every student of 9 physiology, re 
with some observations of his o n of 
e connection speci 
DAHLIAS, 
begs to remind Da 
hiia 
rowers that he 
d to supply strong plants of the 
with every other variety worthy of notice. h 
ication.—Chalvey, Slough, 
rr ae SEEDLING = y 
are Now sé 
pse BRO 
ing o = plants of 
following a and bee SEEDLING ng ange 
description = which s 
sy AA 
Peer fer January 
ee 
0 which ar 
‘oe 
4 —.— 
| Blanch 
ach. a Painted 1e 
y Circl ` 
re Od 
By 3 6 
D o> 
Oo 
» 
continued to 
— . 
trade on 7 N or for three plants of sen sort, 
— — 3 by post if des 
beg to recomm e followi 
3 OBRANIONS, “ing show vars., 2 
superb new Mesa 
cod showy variet 
* 
% HOLLYHOCKS, 
PICOTEES, 1 
“PINKS, 3 varieties 
ie ae 28 pall l orders Ki E3 
Post-o 
wing SELECT PLANTS, 
ts —.— — . — now sending outs 
N HERE TE, Ja vars 32 
t 7 
% zin, in fine * by name « k 
Serge erer FRANTS, distinct species & vars. 
08. ce i do. 
1 S, 15 "pai Àr chotoe vari varieties 
Pee. soe sony CATALOGUE of 1 Es AN’ 
—— ittance 
nts. 
and * plants pre- y 
T e payable 
0. 
— * 
40 
wn 
* 
j 
) 
SS An 
) 
rads . aa 
S AND biw 
Pca and Horticultural Batattishmens, W Suffolk. 
— 
ron 2 Two ene WEEKS. 
T Gardeners’ Firmie 
SA 4 tee Y, APRIL S 
> calmly upon ve 1 
d. we 
ti 
rS, — 
yas pre 
er still more that he s ould not 
able evidence that 
umped t 
l more extraordinary that 
mber. th 
strengthening the Potato plant it will wel better able 
to resist the aeons an e that w ex- 
a hundred t elieve ms that this 
— 
upwards into t 
evalent, were very 
itle it to exemption from these 
imputati 
E Well,” —we ra ta 3 9 —— we got 
oe far“ the coming h 
We shall now have the principles 
aT, pine Bb in reference t 
Garden e hav 
original thi inker (or no one T could wr 
strain) but with o whos e opinions we shal 
cheerfully give in our dads 
Alas for thos! Ti very next page 
d us down with an unmistakeable bump on 
—a tumble as ra af as of Icarus into 
arrived. 
of Paste ju justly 
to Landscape- 
glassy s The very next page informed us 
2 eh a Ferre. orhad cat into the humble 
For he that shall give the 
e in “ Encyclo 
as a a little Eo 
t such an unexpected illustration of the line 
Parturiunt montes nascetur ridiculus mus.“ 
Still m — on with some curiosity to asce 
if a who commenced so magnificently en 
— pee guilty of at least some original ideas. 
nd we were not disappointed. The selt-appointed 
arbiter of Taste did, ere long, come out in singular 
force. oe eee 
ALI rites thus o the sublime effeet pro- 
duced i 8 # nan the generality oa ind 
this sublimity is founded on awe and some d ree 
of terror. Yet how dierent is the —— 
15 
the rs it roll 
we who, adi the í anara of an 
mee welcomes it pase n the 
men of victory. th sage 
is is beanie lly true. But of course the commentator- 
ighe 
cient superf- 
moment of engage- 
7 
genius soars to a far r mar 
In support 
leaves. 1 this method is ‘ie our Eatin | 
eee aes eeeeere 
ä 22 
ä 2 
Mae wletion n of 5 
. 
ic 
ag ver ke aang 
| owed At least Profe Likzid thinks so. 
last ares that 
19E Wp 
pressed enen, the novelty 
In 
ed perspira- 
l 
says the learned 
anes ee ‘ida in ae 
) atte aded by i mee for altho ays 
e | this year exactly in the manner 
So 
the Juices in the 
has not been 
mee experiments 
n the Garden of the Horticultural Society, in 1847, 
idee or — Potatoes were less diseased than 
ner untopped, yet disease existed in both cases, 
ifference nes nly as 9.56 to 13 per cent. 
r ver, some peculiarities in the plan 
Dr. KrorzscH which make it desirable to try it 
r which he indica 
ar, however, from pret 
is impeded perspiration, - he expressly declares him- 
elf“ 
For 
tin 
nty as ever ; of this, however, we are persuaded, 
that be it what it may, it is not explained by our own 
original hypothesis * now 3 as a novelty by 
Professor LIE RIA. 
en a gem—a jewel 
y mention 
I _ satis to the in 
stealthily to perpa 
— — — window, and 1 Prete retended 
to listen as if I had heard the thunder afar off, I 
ently agitated the , and so produced an 
pet imitation of the 2 of its Za . to 
dra 
ourselves we regard it with as much uncer- 
S| A very conceited a e on a somewhat bo 
odd 3 writer is very often 
the great discomliture of my con- 
fess that this ent greatly — us it first. 
But we sunk subdued. We d that the re- 
igious peasant ontemplative philosopher— 
the highly excited warri t so vividly 
ng paper could accomplish by his wonde 
mock imitation and bye-play. We were humbled 
0 es. We were driven to the gonviction 
that our own imaginations asa been sinking in the 
same proporti at . the commentator 
had been rising to the sk 
W hardly say that our views now began’ to 
e PHILOSOPHICAL GROUNDS on which 
rest the principles of Sustrwe Taste in Lands 
nin 
sui ENETU 
of Sir ee. Price ; but when Sir T. D. LAUDER 
: ant,” h and lies Parce's de . 
e 0 Wege to the same class of vasi a — 2 o;i be beco ~ | fu 
Hop plant, namely, to that class which | quisitely amusing. We 1 2 not have alluded to 
the matter but chat this Editor conceives his su 2. * 
ardening. For a 15 8 5 to appreciate d ly 
sublimity of sou oon begin to appreciate 
equally truly. sublimity of oh objects. We went a little 
rther—for w w absolutely spell-bound— 
| fascinated — 2 our — and upward course, What 
oracul 
ACCS 
2 85 
“leaving untouched er question 
WHAT PHILOSOPHICAL GROUNDS THESE — 
REA pees ARE THE BEST.” 
w does the accomplished editor go to work? 
Piko; he says, gave some faint indications of the | 
But from the da 
. ists 
lly . 
D 
on 
ys of Praro ; 
y as no 
ar truth or sublimity. next increased our 
onder into even awe 5 a min _ wer could so ex- 
e pound it ? „The buzz 5 
* a summer's day is — to the 
nd.” Before — rea 
. found s 
ar e were 
ublim 
a man, rightly or y, is to lose his head: or 
when armourers are heard sete gee 2 
tainly being no longer w equally 
det — 7 bei bereaved of that sensation of the 
subli 
e way (0 a true sense of 
d praa without which 
ified. 
" i al is pave er 
Sti 
the ee 
M. D. ‘Taylor and 
3 See Gardeners’ Chronicle, Aug. 23, 1845. 
e shall we er: sid dre i this inspiring 
