754 



GENERAL INDEX. 



the prospects of gardeners who may purpose 

 to emigrate thither, 164. 



Canker, on the cure of, in young fruit trees, 503; 

 a mode of planting adopted to prevent canltor 

 in the apple tree, G50. 



Caoutchouc, a mode of dissolving in pyrolig- 

 neous ether, 243. 



Caprington Castle, noticed, 10. 



Cardoon, the, its uses in France, 93. 



Carlsruhe, notes on tlie park and gardens at, 

 2o9; on the public gardens at, 262; on the 

 public English garden, 263 ; on the garden of 

 the Margravine Amelia, 263; the principal 

 cemetery at, 265; the botanic garden at, %6. 



Carnation, Mr. May's mode of cultivating the, 

 345; do iron stakes poison the roots of the 

 plants of carnations to which they are placed 

 contiguous ? 278 ; an enquiry for a black 

 flowered carnation, 599 ; remarks by Mr. Hogg 

 on laying carnations, 690; true clove, pink, 

 yellow carnation, and yellow pink, 631. 



Cassia multiglandul6sa Jac, hardihood of, 581. 



Castle Dykes, noticed, 11. 



Castle Semple, noticed, 11. 



Celery, Italian, its qualities, 671. 



Cereuses, the fragrance of the fruit of, 475. 



Chair, a, inventeil by Mr. Saul, for a garden ; 

 with remarks on the principles involved in 

 designing of chairs for the same purposes, 541. 



Chalybeate spring, a, in Dortoii Park, 700. 



Chantilly, the park of, noticed, 131. 139. 



Chelsea Botanic Garden, Indian and Chinese 

 plants received at the, presented by the Hon. 

 E. I. Company to the, 615. 



Chemistry in gardening, 122. 285. 237. 376. 

 502 ; and remarks on accenting the technical 

 terms of chemistry, 122. 376. 500. 627. See 

 Electricity and Radiation. 



Cherry tree and its fruit : on pruning and train- 

 ing the morello cherry tree, 73; the relative 

 periods of ripening, and relative qualities, of 

 the early purple Guigne, the early May, and 

 the May duke kinds of cherry, 86; notes on 

 the cherry gardens in the Vale of Mont- 

 morencv, 129 ; the progress of the formation 

 of the seed within the nut of a cherry tree, 

 531 ; considerations on sowing cherry stones, 

 596 ; low price of cherries at Reading, 668 ; 

 kirsch-wasser from them suggested, 668. 



Chestnut tree, the Spanish (Casu'inea vesca L.), 

 the mode and result of kiln-drying the nuts 

 of the, in Cevennes, France, 93 ; notes on the 

 quality of the wood of tlie, 550. 593. 



Chimon&nthus fr^grans, on cultivating, 630. 



Chinese, their method of propagating fruit 

 trees, 290 ; a criticism on Mr. Main's observ- 

 ations on Chinese scenery, 714; a criticism 

 on Mr. Main's notes on the practices of the 

 Chinese in relation to tea, 713. 



Chrysanthemum, Chinese, the late Mr. Ha- 

 worth's new arrangement of the double- 

 flowered kinds of, 218 ; a notice of the small 

 brown flowered variety very recently intro- 

 duced to England, 727. 



Churchyards : notes on the churchyard near 

 Hedsor House, 646 ; on that at Arley, near 

 Kidderminster, 646 ; on that at Beaconsfield, 

 647; notes on a churchyard at Reading, and 

 a description of the structure of a certain 

 kind of tomb adopted in it, 669. 



Cities, a list of the plants which will thrive in, 

 62 ; names of some species of trees which will 

 live in, 118. 



Claremont, noticed, 478. 



Cleghorn's nursery, Mr. Robert, see Montreal. 



Cliefden House and gardens, notes on, 645. 



Climates, its influence on vegetation, 436, 709. 



Closeburn Hall, noticed, 14. 



Coast, the effects of the wind on the, on trees, 

 547 ; a list of trees and slirubs which will 

 grow on the, 550; an enumeration of the dif- 

 Acuities which oppose the decorating of coast 

 grounds with trees and shrubs, 715. 



Coccini51la septempunctJita, habits of, 445. 



Cockscomb, the dimensions of a large, 198. 



Coffee tree of America, see Gymn6cla(lus. 



Colcy Park passingly noticed, 669. 



Coramellnrtcoelcstis, modes of cultivating, 231. 



Conservatory, a magnificent domical, 464. 



Cork tree, see Oak. 



Corn, British kinds of, the obtaining improved 

 varieties of, by hybridisement suggested, 125; 

 benefit and injury to corn from the rook, see 

 Rook. 



Corn, Indian, Cobbett's, the results of three 

 years' experience in cultivating, in Lanca- 

 shire, 76 ; the best mode of malting maize or 

 Indian corn enquired for, 380. 



Cottagers, see Labourers. Cottage gardens 

 in the west of Scotland, see Scotland. 



Covont Garden market, the price of garden 

 products sold in, and observations on the 

 successive prospects in gardening policy, 127. 

 246.381.511. 634. 724; the capacity of mea- 

 sures used in Covent Garden market, 3&0. 



Crat<E'gus, see Hawthorn. 



Crocuses, an eulogy on, 699. 



Crosslee Cottage, noticed, 14. 



Cucumber (Cucumis satlvus L.) the germen of 

 the, cannot be impregnated with the pollen of 

 the melon, 119. 374; a description of a pit 

 suited to the culture of early cucumbers, and 

 of a mode of cultivating them, 71; Mr. Smith's 

 mode of cultivating the cucumber, 693 ; the 

 results of an instance of growing the cucum- 

 ber in heath mould, 567. See also Melon ; 

 notes on the Cucumis flexubsus, 656. 



Culzean Castle, noticed, 18. 



Currant trees, modes of removing aphides and 

 the honey dew from, 338, 339. 



Cypress, the deciduous, facts on, 96. 



Daisy plants from turf, on extirpating, 378. 



Dalscairth, some objects at, noticed, 12. 



Delphinium grandiiiorum, and D. elegans fibre 

 pleno, varieties of, described, 123. 



Denham Lodge, notes on, 648. 



Devonshire, lists of plants which winter in the 

 open air of, 581. 



Ditton Park, and gardens at, notes on, 650. 



Dorton House and Dorton Park noticed, 700. 



Doublat, M., the gardens and grounds of, 137. 



Drayton Green, Mrs. Lawrence's villa at, 517. 



Dropmore Gardens, showy flowered plants In, 

 560 ; species of Pinus added to the pinetum 

 in, 560 ; strictures on the gardens, 643. 



Drumlanrig, noticed, 1. 



Duckweed, see Ltmm£. 



Education, national, remarks on, 664. 696. 



Egg plant, the varieties of, and the synonymes 

 of the name of, the, 81. 



Eglinton Castle, noticed, 10. 



Eichthal, Barcn, the chateau of, noticed, 394. 



Electricity, that of nature, and its connection 

 with magnetism and with the other grand 

 natural plienomena, 179. 



Elms, the, in the Champs Elys^es and those in 

 St. James's Park, are they of the same species ? 

 630 ; an answer, in part, with information on 

 elms, 720; the origin of the variety of elm 

 which has pendulous branches, 597. 



ElysL-e Bourbon, the Garden of the, noticed, 145. 



Emigration, on the, of gardeners to the United 

 States of America, 29. 32 ; to Canada, 164. 



Englefield House, the kitchen garden at, 670. 



Engrafting, various modes of performing, 39 ; 

 recipe for making wax for engrafting, 42. 



Epinal, the grounds and gardens at, 137. 



Epsom nursery, notes on the, 482 ; a selection 

 of the rare and interesting plants which have 

 flowered in the Epsom nursery from March 

 to July, 1833, 489; Mr. Henry Laundy, of the 

 Woodbridge nursery, is the author of the 

 strictures on the Epsom nursery, which were 

 published in vol. vi. p. 357., under the signa- 

 ture of Aristides, 712. 



£rica, causes which induce the presence of 

 parasitic i^ungi, termed mildew, on the leaves 

 of Cape ericas, and modes of banishing them 

 from these, 244 ; criticisms, facts, and sug- 

 gestions on cultivating, 624; Mr. Forbes's 

 practice in exposing Cape heaths to the open 

 air of Britain, during summer and autumn, 



