231848 J : 
TICULTURAL SOCI ETY oF LONDON.— 
TJ ORTIC 
1 AT THE G 
The Second Meetin l take place on Sarena, 2 10th of 
June. Subjects for Exhit 1 must be u s Office on Friday 
ore ease Eight — A. M., 
he 6 visit P. M. Tickets are 
8 to Fellows at è this. Office, 2 bs r or at the Garden 
in the a of the days of Exhibition — 75. 6d. each ; but 
then o orders fro oni Fellows o 3 
N. 8. tickets 
of Eben. 
7 on the days 
1, Regent- street. 
The ere Chronicle. 
TUR DAT. JUNE 3, 1848. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO eee er- 
Moxpary June 
.. 
Ca d 
; 4 —.— 4 Gardens 
5 F 
seas mae 2 
8 —— e June 8: Birmingham tiain. . 
day and Weduesday, June 13th and 14th: Durham Botanical and Horticultural. 
m 
7 É 
3 5 8 
E 
> 
— 
wh 
We have been re to except the PINE-APPLES | 
from the commendatio which we were able t 
bestow upon other parts of the last Banisia 
Society’s exhibition. Let us now explain more 
particularly what we meant. 
A good Ps ould bs evenly and thoroughly 
seal with a fair proportion eo the liry 
nd cro „it ou ught 
not less baa 5 Ibs. ae not less than 
es below gar weights ar 
DH 
= 
an 
ac 
“6 
O 
8 
E 
Bog 
2 Ss = 
Tapet 
oS 2 
© 
=o 
8 
. 
g 
S. 
5 
D 
tS 
=> 
£ 
a 
some 
ma for e 8 of 
lenis hat that te — redeemed the credit 
THE GARDENERS’ 
weigh, if a 2 mot re than 3 lbs. ; if an Eaville Nature— 
A li ghts in seco eh on 
tions 
enjoy ment. om N ion of these sources is 
rved for the eeding section of my work, i 
the. history of the a co ontemp tion of the universe. In 
the section which fo am 
to e 
exerted « on the int Werte; activity and the feelings 
men by the reflected image of the external world, 
which i Sodir civilisation have 
vi 
prenda 
gw involved in this 
of 
mena, terrestrial pheno life, 
ids a hist 
the universe in te seven a 
higher i 
en 0 
ctiy 
aous. 2 subject 
matter be Te an — 2 gra de yp that of those 
more exalted n p e mysterious themes, 
t come hom eee sated of him 
CHRONICLE. 
Our 
the large- fl 
I advertised for sale at STEV 
e 
necessary for t 
of the p — contemplation of i 
chs, 
with his usual breadth and clear Thess the great prin- 
ciples on which true taste in Landscape e Gardening 
is based. 
It is not for us to say one word on the other 
divisions of this admirable work. . 
is a lasting memoria 
fications for wor rking out the plan 
happily devised, and no reader will 
peruse 
and Lieut.- 
ol. Saztne, its learned and een e editor. 
cor ers may like to kuow that the plants of 
red Puat 3 and the other r 
next e 
n the most perfect health and toe og They 
all, as we understand, from Jav 
SUMMER PRUNING. 
sroga! sad summer pru 
s that hav 
THE oper: 
Some of these buds no 
ould sur 
—— with its 
Trace 
— an outline 
ieture? 
f 
y 
Lo (and who has for aji. those s Had 
and form what are termed laterals ; and pie hors will ever 
remain do 
p 
may be d 
ing. f aoe 
ANG 
creations 7), tells with 3 greater e 
of other infe bole ats 
has distinguished the national characteristics of 
—＋ for Nature and natural scenery in every age 
r the utter absence bac that taste, or * complete 
perversion Then rk 
0 he 
n be 
ected i in this way (of Bih to the dade of 
buds > 24 lr . — flow rro — de — ote! — 
by the buds removed —— de shared 
by oar thet mr and hence they will 
io greater a 
of last summer’s growth, 18 inches 
rtened 
bu 
been 
I 
t 
Supp mp e a sae e 
in length, furnished with 18 buds; if left uns 
at the 
R winter pruning, it is vi Serge N = 
verful a pen various | three or four of the * num = would. h m4 
tat of We ig painting from ient Greece | into shoots, and these situated near the — mmn 
and Rome and India— through illuminated MSS. | the others below rema ining dormant. If this shoot had 
nd s ax Exe , Titran, and the | been cut back to within 6 inches of its base in autumn 
European painters of the 16th and 17th centuries. | several of the buds that would othe remai 
Go ead his pages on the characteristic repre- e sema” — erit certainly E yeng eed if 8 shoot 
e = tropteal scenery, and in ber ee C1080 eo 
different zones 2 on pan subject of — have ms into shoots rn the 3 
2 ar well re From what has 
e general effects of 
redig Mg be ene — There 
a cumstan 
Tt has — ee to us that it would be Nature), t than by any kind of. scene-painting : om 3 2 vs Shag ngs * 
desirable to fix a minimum wei belo hich no | this part cause in a panorama, the specta be pointed out. When the shoot 
fruits of certain kinds should be admitted to Exhi- enc 3 in a magie _ and withdrawn — ou to be shortened at the wi 
‘bition tables. But we have not pressed the opinion, | all os = realities the readily ima- its wood at base was „ and the buds on 
because we trusted that the good sense of exhibitors | gine irae on all sides by Nature in | the portion left were i 
Would prevent their offering for competition any- root elim Fad ars, indeec affording ample channels for the sap; but 
thing dis table to opel: we continue | that if large panoramic bullalnge, — ng a suc- | of sum: being similarly short 
to entertain this opin At the meeting which | cession o andscapes banog ng to different observed that ——.— omparatively 
pra now refer to, the Tudges expressed their feeling geographical latitudes 85 hs nt 2 zones of eleva- | the 1 ep Gii e A 
2 be by awarding only | t = in d, Tike our ar u de Eee 1 exert its force i der 
mae snd: that the lowest at their disposal, for alae ks 7 n of paintings, aie freely , e and tense’ tie danger of caus 
for s of Envilles or open to the people, it would be a powerful means |; ipient flo buds to p h inte 500 as 
he only point in which we differ | of rendering the sublime co of the creation | a vast shoots buds ih h 
| fom tbem tei having awarded even that one. | more widely known and felt. ompre! i present in a quiescent state. sité. 
i make these o ns with great regret ; of a natural “eer feeling of the unity and Tue pete mode of proceeding may be, however. 
rit is ee t of a public harmo mony of the cosmos—will become at once more | relied o perfectly safe with regard to Pear, 2 
Juoqurnalist to Say unpalatable things when the inte- vivid and — generally diffused, with the multi- Plum, and € her: trees o n walls, 
| ts of e require them. sincerely plication of all modes of bringing the phenomena| Commence forthwith 2 pinch off n 
Aust ae it will be long before similar animadver- | 0 Cue as before the. contemplation of the — he points fal the n Oe — arte to 58 
0 oP n n „and fruit at eye and of t 4 a ame rare 
pucceeding exhibitions at Chiswick will present a 8 i even 1 = N which we have served fo priren of 2 oirer jida of the 
brilliant contrast to that which has wrun ng from us indicated and term nnot but have traa boii pinched off ; and, at the same time, a con- 
: these remarks, some practical effi yr 8 of good 5 siderable portion of those the u hould be 
13 * for the ceed ai P such comprehensive still further sho d to within 3 inches of their bases. 
fester part from that portion OLDT’s | can have no result but that of making that su anes It is i gence reducing the shoots at the 
i ‘ac ts strictly within ee with- ee not only more pure $ in r. but 2 grasp upper e the — 2 eA bee latter 
PONC e section. r range n a have hikken Comparatively Wesi; 
; ; variety of character- | leans ee, DEW But when tiny ied ene and this is greatly counteracted by prc 
s which, i ent age, are | this division by one portion “on the influence of as above. reg! 
c observation and to land- well-contrasted. grouping,” and by t on 
a lively i ber anid fad Di 
pe afford 
which have prepared 
Ad dang extended. Boki and this inereased | 
up with which we commenced this article lays dowa 
+ 
ming | 
PRACTICAL, BIN HINTS FOR AMATEURS 
SMALL @ SARDER 
Errrer oF 
ie Naz Frome ON — observer 
of mankind must be often — th the influence 
