19—1848. ] 
THE GARDENERS' 
CHRONICLE. 
303 
flay vescens ; — - 
reatest symm — and s 
ut one flower - t 
ts native country it was stated to produce spikes from 12 
g 18 ins. in length, covered with — a little flowers. 
| Knightian Medal was is and ma other 
—Of Cinerarias, Mr. Hen m, of St. John’s 
Wood, sent a nice gro up of dwarf — for which a 
Certificate of Merit was awarded; and a beautiful blue 
variety called 
a 
even than 
— ; ; the white-flowered stove twiner Henfreya 
seandens ; e true ttleya inter- 
media; two Cape Heaths ; Choroze and its 
variety eae ~ 45 vimine New Zealand Parsonsia 
heterophylla inea, and the hardy white 
flowered W — i 
a W. 
Exromorocicat, May 1. —W. Spence, Esq, F. R. S., 
ir. — A letter was read from 
8 
produced — — tale with the i inner — in clothed 
with a thick coat of down.—Mr. W. W. 8 ; 
h burrows co 
wine 1 N o 5 e this was 
flavum.— 
22 
vas a 
— ie rimi 
Ea ‘of rok 
55 * 
8 the od ag 
ueen, a 
rosy-fawn . ured mt 
rendering it 
l 
in a 
no bas ge of 2 
may judge fro 
this —— yel low 
when its roo 
du 
open ground a 
e smoky atmosphere of 
ountry 
gre 
8 of — deleterious effects of which he read 
Rovat HORTICULTURAL, 
This, the openin 
in the Rotunda, 
F IRELAND; April 27.— 
exhibition “for the season, was held 
a bea basket g Pelargo- 
— White also “contributed to the exhibi- 
the — G. Roe, Esq., and those 
coke many — and 
ong Florists’ Fl Flowers, Auriculas were pre- 
ected much — on their several 
— eray A W. ~ Plant Esq., M.D., — first; 
Conque 
and his testers Glo: 
aal Of Hyacinths, dhe’ 
Garden Memoranda. 
Briæton.— Since we last visited this 
Pan-roofed house has been erected for th 
beautiful 
due in 3 
2 were j 
. of the Earl of i 
an 
y appears 
to 
much disputed questio 
8 
we may m 
an excellent bed planted by itself ; its elegant, light, | i 
ct ha 
Miscellaneous. 
lip. Some 
in the zen have appeared in 
bed ia — centre of the house having been formed for 
water ipe 2 
und which is a path 
n this the Roses 
ese movable 
bayer — be kept u up after the 
— but at 
a and com bit o wth | 0 
mental. To (i Cloth of oe has 
a Magnolia — has flowered 
r this apa than it has done for 
y owing t 
s | season 
ipi with — thrives ree f well even within 
Lon f third to one -half i is 
4 further 
_ Devoniensis and | o 
to the eye, and nee and flame may both be Seen at 
fa 
t as 
ought to be teste course, I would 205 . e 
much which has not this form ; for — it 1 
| muc 
more extensively than it 
y n 
flowers, will, in all Age continue to 
as long as n order that the relative 
gl 
3 a * dall is ‘alike 1 all through ;’ and 
, that “between these two extremes every shade 
It is clear, however, that in laying down 
of form for our gui admits 
for rent proport rong. 
If one-third of a r ball be perfect, the farther we 
fr om that fo irection, the more 
rm as that 
It is not enough to say that t one- 
alike e good all 4 be or that 
a ball must, therefore, be as imperfect 
whieh is almost flat. 
ing inas 
us for flowe 
uality which . — it very — for the 
5 . 
ous 
irable papers on aes 
ree N 
, 
1 
ye 1. TS lly | 
11 
Fe of a W ball as the true standard of form for the 
Tuli (To bec 
gee gd ger. ard 
8 Prese 
n very care eful consideration. 
r form 
rfect in mo which does not expose the whole 
lance. 
written on the subject, and proving their standards of 
in principle an 
Hence it follows that th 
tline 5 a 
r less 
8 over the — and thereby — the bril- ra 
Other adv 
will also be 
is lay 2 those 
4 so-liberally 
of Roces, both in pots and planted out; a 
quence 0 
| size of each petal, 
e 
& 
eertaining 
is compara atively little — on the stag 
| exhibition, it is not the 1 alone which 2 — — 
ri ish on the outs 
layed, wel 
half. Abele ere itself to our ee ro . 
more erect position n and grea 
uch larger surfac 
opening or 
In the half. circle, 4 flower of 
as | abun ndanee 
5 surface t 
ge in eo 
g 
an | these Hollies — ay conceal serpent, 
n who, upon seeing the individual referred — . aid 
s 
llent pai te 
rene inasmuch as might be obtained in 
for about 124 ois —— . — 108. 
reater 
— 
Acciden acciden mye — — oas- en 
befel a — or while pe iie in my nursery, which, 
I am sorry to think, may be —— with very serious 
eonsequenees — There were 
wing in 
gro shel 
—— — a rare an 
the — — — 
nd — * of the 
een Holly, called the weeping Holy; $ 
— of this tree, in place of growing up 
heaven, —— n — ds earth ; Arare 
ce of 
| prized, and, in — — 
is worth 
Point 
—— —— 
of money. At 2 
| his intellect, an 
„ 
e and so, in the dead of night, he returned to my nu 
n and, in his „ he tore up by the roots ts tite 
beautiful — of the wee 
ually became a thi 
r | by Mr. 
— of Mice. —A curious fact is m 
