300 THE 
GARDENERS’ 
9 
e the requisite ventilation and cleanliness in 
English 1 i — they are likely to be 
cabins our friends across the Channel 
es. 
— be worth while 
s could not be 
connected with village sc 
Pery To that subject it is, however, useless. to 
advert until the money question is pae ed of. 
.. 
In his progressive review of the pas 
Vox Humsotpr not only shows his mh * 0 
in every panine history 
that he 
> le 
er which . 
e eta 
“That which we miss with regard to 2 55 Greeks, 
I will not ef in their appreciation of na ral phe- 
nomena, but in the direction which pa g rel- se 
ngl ong th 
7 5 
®© 
nS 
| 
482. 
= 
BS 
© 
— 
®© 
=] 
(en 
were very- 
day life, TE to an idealising poetic tent 0 
of Natur 
Such i is Honzorpr's summary view. It certainly 
e should speak of the in- 
the country whose 
nery laughs in rata gladness—as 
beings o i i ty ot 
Wee but w 
Pay Rw the tr iy of his assertion. 
n at this hase ote dist 
iti 
Not only, then, is much of the Roman 
erature borrowed in form, spirit, and ideas from 
the G but, in reference to this subject, it is 
when 8 so borrowed that t e co 
ness of the Roman Imagination and 8 — 
obvious language e itself, as 1 rather 
curiousl; puts it, “ possesses mo 
an of ideal mobility.” 
great events compels 
all—when, for example, they paint a 
—the ere angerous riv Las ae strug 
n pas Eve 
7 who oat. deeply Bos 
with the spirit of Greek ae 2% perception, only 
pene 8 miniature what Prato loved to 
e and 
anvass, a ric 
breadth of amine In reading Cicero, as Hum- 
BOLDT well it, we still recognise the actual 
Lan he rs sh lofty 
endi 
side to the east, behind the old castle of Arpinum, 
we look on ag! of Oaks near the Fibrenus, 
IL as e island now called Isola di Car- 
as 
nello, which i is T by we heey i 2 stream, 
ace 
n TASTE, 
f 
appreciati tural beauties. y 
And if what he lays dowa concern stig ‘the Greek be ix 
abs is not 
contemplation, we cannot mistake the evidences 2 — ö 
true myad pee oetic inspiration. 
oncern 
3 are onl 
ned within 
imit Ov 1D in his sit “had no taste 
ng as he dwelt 
over and over serait a in e ed 
terms the same principles aay be averred as th 
characteristics of the Roman ee, 
b 
e with a remark of Hum 
„ 
8 8 
i=] 
wm 
i=] 
co 
PE a | 
— 
which 
almost . Nienie o 
engaged their attention. 
when returning to his legions in 
Gaul, employed his time while passing over t the 
i aring a grammatical treatise, “ De 
THE CLARA. PIPPIN. 
A rror of this variety was kindly furnished by 
ear 
F. J. Graham, Esq., accompanied with the following s . 
note :-— 
Tinged 
with 
~_ lies in its ng 
eat it, cially as regards those amateurs who ea 
fruit without alii for the rind is exceedingly to ie 
I think 0 ed to be the case with most 
not so much g so long ex 
ali g expose 
and into which Cicero says, to 
s 2 himself up to a 2 to r or to 
tha 
his passages 
a a% not wantin aoe in that perception of 3 
eh popuri he so seldom expresse 
minute cale. He writes thus to Arricus: 
5 * Nothing can be ore delightful than this solitude 
easing t this cou W ry dw 
pia ye oa shore, and the pro 
hee. lovely island of Ara, and at the m 
5 
g, I hide 5 in q thick 
wild forest, I do not ty it until the evening.” 
ik the elder ehi UMBOLDT Writes 
rmly, but with great justice. Speaki 170 
r © History of the n of the Universe,“ 
he says: 
“ Unequal in ometimes simple and 
sometimes 
ornate—i 
well- 
uniy 
PER @ majestas) i is the object of 
-I e Clara Pippin ; 1 have sown some of the 
pips c,d in order to see if an 
place, in 
whose o otion, I consider, was amply v 
the — of excellent t hardy sorts 
be confe hat his principle 
1 me never ger 97 to e but like some —— 
mysteries, it may be better both i in rinciple 
than those plans which are we ~ — e e 
e Cranford, April 20,” 
erified by 
3 it tore 
The fr W ikel Se 
À e fruit likel, * 
the end of May. It is tekelore Paipak 200 toi nyin A a 
pag The orange colour of its E 
and it has been observed that where a ‘yellow or orange 
tinge prevails in the flesh of Apples, it generally in 
presence of much saccharine matter.— R. P 1 
CAPE HEATIIS. No. VIII. 
eee ie from any cause the organisation of 
UM MBOLDT'ST remarks | is ger 
0 first — — fil the final 5 of 
as affected 
y to | 
ture amid which they habitually 7 
d s 
—F. J. j 
de 
„he flesh is firm, orange, like that of the 
this variety, the Court of T W M Sue pe of 
pine am & the | sugary flavour 
an 
agais! In v 
y 
ee 
Certain tribes 
emen 
clusion a 3 we are all rey or th, babe to arrive a, 
A „the slightest 2 of which i 5 
never failing aes of death in i 
which we mus e paramoun 
will sometimes elapse ; but, “like ene 
Vietim, 
availin sooner 
or later death must ensue ; — . for * 
sym 
he plant is is probaly a fae 
Bs 
8 
3 
5 
E 
en 
* 
S 
43 
sl 
< 
z 
2 
ao 
— 
res struck perhaps me a slight e oats 
the foliage at the base of the shoots, 
like all evergreens, it is ashe: casting its old fo 
eem the circumstance of much m linge, you 
r 
though not 85 less cer 
longer in its — Its 
killing a branch at a time, till the whole plant is d 
ranches sfirst attacked are 8 
pearance 
2 that side (for in this on 
troyed), it wil be found partially deca; 
se no a nees are evident. But as in the 
i gra dually preys on the of the 
— till I the whole i is subdu 
disease attendant on the 
when it exudes in ex 
he vestitas, if e is not taken, aphides 
re to follow. A iative i 
affected with sulphur vivum, 
ays. Then with 
— — is given to Plant, 
ende is better than 
your p free 
e | hardly ever appear.—G. 
AMATEURS: 
kind in a 
losin mae, drought and 
pr Sarva Reece A hele wie 
e — — — made rich ™ 
uld not be 2 
The soil for on flowers shold n of ect o ofp 
tP elargoniums, 
