1847.] 



THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



,r THi: DUKE OF DEVi.i.XSHlRK. 





. . ' - 





ZM ffarBmersP C&rotif tie. 



SATURDAY, JULYS, 1847. 



. . ... . 



': '■:- •WashinthodavsofthoTrulliber.and 

 Square?, when the cler.viiian i . -- d wi h hie 

 tutler'r or in those neighbouring times when the 

 squire and the churchwarden could find no better 



. wa'sir:- 

 May we ask, too, in all humility, whether it is 



i 





corporation, and adds discord to the village 



neighbourly and illiberalT e a\lowThrdTfference U i , n 

 the date of the aged church and the modern chapel 

 to be stamped upon them by one of the most un- 



nustakeable of signs.- (!, f- it tl,ou_ r inc nsUtent 



: 

 "•'- •■ 'an be slid to the eoii'rarr, hy us de- 

 pint says th?t ^"knowTof ''Tel! "n h which 

 towe b r een rendercd so unsafe from the cracks . ia the 



5fc IVJ ° auS ^ «a^f because it is^wodated 

 «nd i >\ Il . natura % 8' r . ^ s in neglected places, 

 *i» and povertfare 8 ako iociates^butT wdli 

 J^^ncapable of the action assigned to it. Its little 



g^fadthe^. m ^lr^n n ^i^^nhe r 4elY e e8 



^th U a e nd° r th PerhapS fomed areal rootther( 

 U iShc y n 8UCh ap ° WCr exist8 > and » Wonderful pov 



under ; matlrialsXha g^nUould n 

 'Plants have, indeed, a sort of fan- 



hie'/ timer.. 



JJ-owns upon the Ivy; ami that its severity^!, uh 



Jasteadof "tearing away Ivy, stonework ihook 



tlm3djng. inhe^'c^n-tniiu'll^M^hm, 

 become whole again by scraping its surface 



than when left naked to the effects of a few winters 



column^ and wetedl/knoVlw to add to'wha' 

 has been so often urged already. Instead, then, o 

 an argument, we will to-day produce some facts 

 which we glean from Mr. Thompson's account o 

 his visit to Paris.* 



In the Garden of Plants there exist certain pvra 

 midal Pear trees, which may, we believe, be re 



mly say that we did i 



"The pyramidal-trained Pear-trees are from 10 

 to 15 feet high, or more, having a regularly taper- 



tefm^nltc^nVsinde shoot" The °voung plant is 

 stopped according 



f Bacon's E-savs was published. But the 

 fa-hlo * vlmh prevailed in H .s'- «.,»•.!.< orioUy 



dictated his immortal poem. Before his sight 



bionable taste to'uuke Vi-.i Xade-.n it in his 

 irt. And when the plan ol Paradise Lost 

 >ught him to describe Edl> (however question- 

 e might be the propriety of attempting it a' all). 



ughout the poem— 







gives*™ not only". 



.in l.o i-.iio- -f 



anders through 



