THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 403 
— — bin bapgiecsn ines be who gees in, all these benefits, not only may be ogai, enjoyed, — or low and debasing amusements, 7 i 
2 * „Ane pr —— =o ta draw fresh air! but also in combination with several other advantages | do contribute much, not ry to the nord A physi- 
out Of all the numerous . human life is ae but zo — watering places a — capable x cal, but also to the social ell-being of every human 
: to affording or now great soever the a tions 
subject, wapi, ee eee. not 2 zx 8 E meg — 
complaint — we have to make 
of —— * 3 vegetable productions a likewise cannot be contested, that a great num- | dismisses it in a dozen small pages, full, indeed, of — 
or ts 2 flowers, shrubs, and trees? Is not ber of those persons who annually flock ee | healthy thoughts, but so few and short as to produce 
the whole animal kingdom always liable to conflicting watering-place only regard it, and come to it, as to a regret rather — satisfaction. We, irr igre trust 
t in store. 
arena for canibiting their follies wan vanities, that they are but the shadow of others yet 
Wien a and where, however, did we ever meet with ca- if not for the pur pose of indulging vicious excitoments -n 
rieious Roses, vindictive Laburnums, or with a Catalpa | to the certain detriment of themselves and others. THE LOBED c ATTLEY TA. 
in flowers tbat refused to smile on an aristocrat as well How great, 7 — the expenditure required to lobata, Lind 
. lay out and to keep a park or recrea tion- ground, of | Sp. char. HIRS mow clavate, 2 one-teaved, Leaves 
Nobody, t can well — — ot oo u 
U 
be surer of enjoyment, and Vea. on . petaloid, 
more independent in his acuminate, wavy, all straight. 
than he who de- — ——— 
ts in page * 2 Lip rolled round the column 
as min y a short cucullate 
while in s mer,when lamina, which is crisp and 
Nature offers — “pe ya Waleri 1 E the — 
ai e have is in 
rally rewards every care be- i wg 
stowed on her, the smallest 1847, when it flowered 
gard y easily be with Messrs. Loddiges, who 
the source of great and daily received it from $ 
snow compel us to rest from with violet, with some rich 
our labours wi crimson veins e * 
the working of our mind, It is nearly allied to C, 
and the free or unrestained labiata, of which 8 
intercourse with the most is i ces. 
or the 
genial of authors, constitute lip, and the com 
a fountain of light hap- pica size of E 
which seem, however, to point to 
er of contending for the 
combining purposes of cultivators, 
wi raral y 10 * scenery may be looked upon as a 
the p refined distinct species. 
„ the — 
au proceeds. 
To combine then, mental Miscellaneous. i 
and physi sitig with Van Hall 
the enjoyment 83 theo 
and a well uenti mote i ag 
intercourse, appears to amas in ti 2 . 
best to promote He qe in poing 
es health 22 ess i i hp the tens’ 
every cu ing. — 
This, however, ean only be ara singe pM yr 
done, at least in general, in el 
two ways ; and the : $ — — 
either by intersectingand inion He 
surrounding the town we N j » 
live in with public w. tuted, ie — na 
recreation-g by : i 
fixing our abode in a subür- of the Jet and his ables 
ban villa, close 8 5 1 
of our daily la An ye growth. 
rtainly do 7 — 5 
Position more inter f nena vh ni y 
a any doubt. 
placed in than t 
h is owing to 
i j . As a general rule, 
him to enjoy the quiet and seclusion of a coun- | some extent, in per order sit no inhabitant of| and temperature of that country. 
try life, combined oh the comforts of a great town ;| a large town ever should grudge to pay his share of it. however, we learn that the months — 7 N * 
and with all the delightful advantages of a select human | Indeed, if this — r pe is ota Pap epe ta Pe os a aenn À 
d literary resources all n share most cases, exceeded 
“In what, also, does consist the charm which tempts | Which a single one of them has to contribute amounts that of all the other months put together. Van Hall 
80 large a number of healthy persons annually to spend | to a mere trifle, compared with the benefits and enjoy- 1 Saena : = san 
a month or two at a watering-place, except in the op- ments which are offered him in return. For what a by Daham ; heme gan oars anges — : 
; . ati 
the polish of iis soos ppv apare . offer to to the inhabitants of all 4 rats — — fact that there is no dry season in the — 
their own riori 
manners Is l ; pg ops ! „ * For the meaning of these technical terms see Lindley’s 
r.... K. ae ang al| ES 
ee — 
NEW GARDEN 3 PUBLISHED IN BOOKS. 
N.B.—* = Very handsome, f= Second rate. t= Third rate. 1 = Unimportant. 
„%˖. ( 
Colo When first 
Name. | Where Published. of * Quality. Natural Order. of sel of Fi on Fisa. Where, 
K a cza hig Ret s 
F behets Spectabilis Gard. Chron., p. 319, Peru G. E Onagrads Crimson April, &c. 1848 Veitch and Son. 
Jenni? Queen trian geet 1848 i I 
7 . rere, Bot. Mag., t. 4376 New Grenada S. | Spurgeworts Crimson ? *. * 
Anoptérus Oo Bot. Mag., t. 4377 |Van Diemen's G. k Saxifrages ? White Winter 1846 Loddiges and Kew. 
+ Glandular Anopterus. Land. ce 
Mee, F Bot. Mag., t. 4378 Honduras S. r ` Acanthads Dark salmon | Mareh, April 1847 Hort. Soc., Kew. 
T Upright Thyrseflower. e e 
a Eke Hs .........u| Bot. Mag., t.4379 |New Zealand| G. R t Green A es ae 
+ tne Karaka Tree, N ; 2 
Gesnër nsis... Bot. Mag. t. 4380 | Cuba 8. 1 Gesnerads Sant , $ 18 E ari 
an Many flowered Gesnera N 
— nesta a = T 7 i 
\ 
