GENERAL INDEX. 



757 



Ijectures on horticulture, noticed, 376. 436. 462. 



Lemnx, the herbage of the, resists rotting, 

 124. 



Leonard's, St., Hill, strictures on the grounds 

 about, 652. 



Light : a consideration of the action of light on 

 the processes of vegetation, 437. 709 ; a con- 

 sideration of the relations of light to the per- 

 fect display of the beauties of form and hue 

 in plants and in flowers, 534. 



Lime, Mr. Mallet's method of burning lime in 

 an apparatus for heating by the circulation 

 of hot water, 280 ; a notice of Dr. Urc's em- 

 ployment of the muriate of lime as a means 

 of communicating heat, 208. 



Linnsean Society, presented with collections of 

 dried plants by the East India Company, 97. 



Liquidambar styraciflua, facts on the, 96. 



Liriodendron Tulipifera, facts on the, 96. 



London, the neiglibourhood of, includes every 

 kind of gardening and garden scenery, 477. 

 See also Cities. 



Longleat, seat of the Marquess of Bath, 425. 



Love Hill, Langley, notes on, 650. 



Lund botanic garden, plan of, 418. 



Mackie, Mrs. Sarah, the death, and facts in the 

 life of, stated, 751. 



Mangosteen, what treatment will induce the, 

 to fruit in British stoves? 378. See 

 Xanthoch;^mus. 



Manures, instances of the effect of, upon an- 

 nual plants, 597 ; a list of manures, and que- 

 ries on their effect on vegetation, 628. 



Marryat, Mrs., a list of the species of plants 

 in flower in the gardens of, at Wimbledon, 

 on Nov. IG, 1832, 115. 



Marseilles, some account of a floral fair held at, 

 with a list of the plants exhibited for sale at, 

 420 : notes on some of the nurseries about, 

 423. 



Martins and swallows, means to prevent their 

 building their nests in places which man may 

 wish free from their nests, 719. 



Mary's, St., Isle, noticed, 7. 



Massena, Marshal, the park of, at Ruelle, no- 

 ticed, 143. 



Maidenhead, notes on Wakerill's nursery at, 

 660 ; on two inns at, 660. 



Manchester, cemetery proposed for, 700. 



Melon, the (Cucumis il/elo L.), the ineffective- 

 ness of repeated experiments to impregnate 

 the ovules of the melon, with the nature of 

 the cucumber, (Ciloumis sativus/,.) by apply- 

 ing the pollen of male flowers of the cucum- 

 ber to the stigmaes of female flowers of the 

 melon, 119. 374; facts indicative of the me- 

 lon's affection for water, 591. 698 ; instances 

 of the effect of soils and manures on the 

 Barbaresken melon, a sort of Cantalupe, 

 597 ; the results of an instance of growing 

 the melon in heath mould, 567; the princi- 

 ples of the French course of practice in the 

 culture of the melon family,356; Mr. Knight's 

 mode of cultivating Persian melons, 17 ; the 

 qualities of the striped Hoosainee Persian 

 melon described, 182; Mr. Smith's mode of 

 cultivating the melon, 695. 



Metropolitan Society of Florists, &c. 452. 737. 



Michael's, St., Mount, and the garden, 54-3. 



Mignonette, [Reseda odorkta L.), theories of 

 the plan of the structure of the flowers of, 

 457. 702 ; notice of a remarkable monstrosity 

 of mignonette, 457 ; mode of cultivating 

 plants of mignonette into perennial ever- 

 green bushes, 703 ; effect of the mode, 232. 

 703; a notice of a thick leaved variety of 

 mignonette, 702 ; of another variety, 703. 



Mildew. See Fiingi. 



Mirbel's, Prof, object in visiting England, 699. 



Misletoe, species of trees inhabited by the, 89. 



Mole trap, a, in use near Monmouth, 80. 



Money, Mr. Daniel, the death, and facts on the 

 life of, noticed, 380. 



Mont Blanc, remarks on, 276. 



Monteglas, Count, the gardens of, 394. 



Montreal nurseries and gardens described, 16P. 



Mortimer street, the residence of the vicar at 

 noticed, 672. ' 



Mouse trap, a, for gardens, &c., 579. 



Munches, the features and condition of, 6. 



Munich, notes on the gardens in the neigh 

 bourhood of, 385. 398 ; on the English garden 

 at, 398 ; on the court garden at, 399 ; on the 

 Chinese tower, the Paradise, the Tivoli, &c 

 at, 399 ; on the garden of the Glyptothek at' 

 400 ; on the general cemetery at, 401 ; on the 

 botanic garden at, 403 ,- on the state of flori- 

 culture in the neighbourhood of, 406; on the 

 royal kitchen garden at, 406. 



Mushrooms, the mode of cultivating, in use 

 about Paris, 130; Mr. EUes's mode of pro- 

 ducing mushrooms in plenty, in the open air 

 from June to November, 228 ; Mr. Patrick's 

 mode of cultivating mushrooms, 527 ; means 

 of cultivating the mushroom indicated, 695 • 

 Mr. Greenshields prefers fire heat to dung 

 heat for forcing mushrooms, 672 ; Mr. Mai. 

 let's economical mode of constructing houses 

 for mushrooms, 193 ; what is the best method 

 of raising mushrooms all the year ? 378. 



Naphtha, its effects on trees and horses, 300. 



Narcissus, the hoop petticoat, facts on its com- 

 parative hardihood, 118. 242. 373. 



Nectarine tree : information from Mr. Seymour 

 on his mode of training the nectarine, 498 • a 

 proposal to succour peach trees and nectarine 

 trees with nitre, a preparation from blood, 

 Ac, 319; on the evil effects of cropping the 

 borders in which fruit trees grow, 321 ■ a 

 notice of the quality of certain seedling nec- 

 tarines raised in the garden of T. A Knieht 

 Esq., 18. ^ ' 



Nets, for gardening should be tanned, 723. 



Neuilly, the park of, noticed, 143. 



Neuviiler, the chateau de, descriljed, 144. 



Nicolles, J., the death, and facts in the life of, 

 noticed, 128. 



Norman Court, gardens and grounds at, 16. 



Nuremburg, notes on the gardens of Madame 

 Heppe, at, 397 ; on the suburban gardens of 

 Nuremburg, 397; on the garden of Michael 

 August Stottner, at, 406; M. Falcke's nur. 

 sery at, noticed, 409. 



Nurseries, London, notes on the commercial 

 relations of the, 232. Notes on objects in 

 the nurseries of Messrs. 

 Brown, Slough, 52.3. Buchanan and Oldroyd, 



Camberwell, 612. 

 Chandler, Vauxhall, 343. Colvill, Chelsea, 



233. 475. 

 Dennis and Co., Chelsea, 233. 243. Dickson, 



Clapham, 343. 

 Fairbairn, Clapham, 343. 

 Groom, Walworth, 343. 

 Hogg, Paddington, 343. 

 Knight, Chelsea, 233. 343. 474. 

 Lee, Hammersmith, 343. 471. Loddiges, 

 Hackney, 467. Lowe and Co., Clapton, 469. 

 Malcolm and Co., Kensington, 233. 343. 

 Rolands and Son, Brentford, 520. 

 Whitley and Co., Fulham, 343. 475. 



Nurseries, provincial, noticed. 

 Epsom, Messrs. Young, 482. 489. 

 Frogmore, Mr. Vare, 651. 

 Goldworth, Mr. Robert Donald, 612. 

 Ipswich, Messrs. R. Jeffries and Son, 102. 



368. 493, 494. G23. 

 Maidenhead, Mr. Wakerill, 660. Milford, 



Mr. Wm. Young, 480. 

 Norwich, Rlr. Frederick Mackie, 751. 

 Reading, Mr. Myles Priest, 662. 

 Salthill, Mr. Stewart, 655. 

 Uxbridge, Mr. Wall, 648. 

 Warminster, Mr. Wheeler, 426. 

 Discussions on the utility, relatively to the 

 majority of our readers, of inserting in this 

 Magazine lists of the rarer plants culti- 

 vated in the provincial nurseries, seve- 

 rally, 102. 368. 493, 494. 623. 



Nymphenburg, notes on the palace and gardens 

 of, 387 ; on the botanic garden at, 405 ; on 

 the kitchen garden at, 107. 



