THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



■ " - 



Z\)t mtimx W €i) vonitU. 



SATURDAY, FEBR UARY 27, 1847. 



Km, effect all that 1 



s demanded 



,;, An individual is 





suitable to all cases tha 



i a Govern me 



for all places. For any 





rsons of station or 





selves to the utmost, ea 





To bewail their hard 





lost, to cling to a Gove 



matter, to squabble, do 

 wte, h worthy only of 





doing. The PoTato iTg 







for seed is impossible; 



-verei^oThe" 



' Much is already 01 

 le case 



and it is o 





2 Jf other plants m; 



iy buy Cabbage or Beet 



De most profitable in his own 

 does not himself know, let 

 gardeners of his a 



Parish, if 



■ 

 «jactap 0r 

 .^Produce i ne „ 



•fiould CTn* ♦!,; , . that best succeeds ; wc 

 J^^wJl WhlC t wiU P roduce th * grates. 



'■> ^capable of sustaining hui 

 ^f 6 **. Possibility 



useless. They must 1 





. 



They could not make a mis- 



opinion. The return of the se 



certain than that this groat com 

 danger, we do not say of famin 



;;';X ( ;; : : ( , ;.? ! ; 1 ; 



,.i,ly adduj udi 



I I * 



The prospect is not inviting, to say the best of it. 

 aytning to "the faur" tES' with a the ^wo* e°x- 



■ ion of an invested garrison 



ision to last eight months. 



Let no one rely upon a large stock of corn in the 



one cling to the notion that abundaru 



from abroad ; they will find themselves mistaken. 



nearly emptied, except NorthAn.erica. Itis true that 



we may have a fine haired 



may again teem with corn-stacks. But it may be 



aad where would England 

 Let every man depend, then, upon himself as far 



self with the means of 



t must be equally so in another; aad that 



.. be iroxsn profitably where the 

 ure is high and the air dry. Itis 

 lor hulter summers, to /tope that 

 ;limated,* to talk of latitude with- 

 mer heat.tooverlook the difference 

 : sol islands and continents in the 

 lto dwell upon the hardiness of the 



ericnce is here a safe guide ; and 



livating a plant for which our 



is efforts iinally ended with I'ailui 



^er? Theth 

 k<h to suit this climate are the 

 iiose called by the French a bee 



sven in the last hot summer the Indian Corn, 

 tlthough grown in gardens under south wal!s and 

 vith every artificial aid, including a hotbed to begia 



ruest about providing hur 

 ty be averted, his only loss will be too gre: 



. e must complete our statements as to 

 the general principles on which true Landscape 



.. . 



be brought togel pn any scale. 



Among them are those by 



ingly created 



found to be of a ii taken sepa- 



rately, to yield no pleasurable sensation whatever ; 

 : really is not is made to 

 appear that which is— the triumph is achieved of 

 the operations of Art, and of making 

 the whole landscape believed to be the result of 



pleasure of beir 

 But D in n Lands C ca < j 



