THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



[Sept. 



QEmroaid solve the 



and the good Taste 



f a Rent, a Burlington, and 





a Poi-e. But the tru 















rw/e. And Walpolk's com- 





mentary is as capital 





gaudy scene j*** e JJ 



.uid whim : and 







. ■ " 



adS^MuU-er^t^ulv 1 



' ^,T«i"iti.^) 





«hU our escelienJe 



j uure-that of a 



and r llTon* 'tftops par acr 



of a moderate Carrot ; and before we si >. 



Ci Am^ f ^er^v trett 



• victory it was. Yet in what 

 ..d queer garden 

 iriutii le t'r :iu t: 



ornaments differ in 



the Radish, we would do well to look at a eroj 



- 



■ ' 







the expanded iniagi 













•;.,.:.. 



tially ugly, barbaio 



i?, and irrotesque : the very 





objects which, aceor 

 those days of Elizj 



iing to the notion- 





] JonlX£:jJ 



m's tame, and in proof that 

 ot his work?, or large portion? 



gardeners have * the red Beet 



..', or field Beet, is a very 

 tatoes are generally p'ant. 1 in -May : 





























fivated. As the seed is a 



Rent's avowed a 3 _ 



lgiu and principles, and con- 





idling was tne original from wide h very poor pi 



vthe gi. 



night so clearly saw the gap 



^ ' " ' ' . ' '^ ' '• ■' ^ ' ; ■ ^ ' •'■■ " ^ ; , 



- 



have irs s .e> \\ I i wild wholes Jine toad, of an n-'ee- 



able as we would an\ uth-.-r ■ : 





nly about 30 days old 



ring and after th 



i retained, as represented i 



:■■■... 



■■■• .. . ■ ■',■ . , .... ■ . ..,'■ 



■ 



■ : : i ..-.:.■■ ■ . 



very scales, very ' ' 

 objects for the i 



t wbteh f 



rt ' u ...ouced in :■ - 

 very lung and slender, 





XoVoYthe ifead "in the 

 17 joints in both sexes, tl 

 and united together by a 



■ 



-x 



Tin: a.m. w- 



i good deal to be attribu 



orance of the law excuses no ] xnese uttie larvse 



nee of culture is equally in- ! are destitute of legs, 



.\ re t for the use of laud f< r nuated to the head, 



The species [whose history forms th( 



ir - nt article, i 



A different kinds of Willows and Osiers, 

 * as basket rods. We - 

 this insect by a correspondent, " I. C. t j, 



twigs of the yel t„ the gard 



wd of the green- leaved CMier namerocn 



varieties, out of about a dozen other sorts grown by > lne decay 



- 



l>re mo ^ ,o ; ithoug h th e*g 



the body being i 





iys to the growth of larva). The terminal segment of the body is angulated 

 growing weather can • and marked with a longitudinal black line in the middle. 

 :e a crop of Radishes These larvse eat into the pith, but seem to prefer the soft 

 like to leave things inner part of the woody texture, boring into the latter, 

 >p, and measure tl ; when full grown they appear to 



his crop and its capa- gnaw away the wood so as to form an aMrtttM tor their 

 escape, or to leave the bark so thin that the pupa can 

 e lazy man will say. protrude itself half out of the twig. They remained 

 too, and it will stand ; in the state of larvse till the middle of May, about 

 time is but short in ; which time several of them quitted the stems, evidently 

 id with other cr j .ling into the water 



e raised in the time ; in which the twigs were placed these were drowned ; 

 otatoes ; perhaps six others, however, were saved and placed in a box, shortly 

 " S'.s (jpdos f or - d into reddish or pink-coloured 



ckuess, leaving nothing 1 

 ; unsightly steins. ^ ^ 



„ studied. If»J 



be found that gro, 



theplum^pnes. of t e - p^ ^ fce goff 



