(iliNEltAL INDEX. 



669 



Cottage Residences ; or a Series of Designs for 

 rural Cottages and Cottage-Villas, and their 

 Gardeni and Grounds, adapted to North Ame- 

 rica, 570. 



Covering* to pits ur frames, h mode of securing, 



Cowthorpe oak, notice of an engraving of, 130. 



tree's mode of pruning timber trees, 320. 



Cuba, botany ami gardening of, 136. 



Cuckoo, on the, 257. 



Cuckoo a eggs in the nest of a hedge-sparrow, 

 431. 



Cucumber, culture of the, 279. 



Cuttings, effect of light on, 324; preparation of, 

 07 ; sand for striking, mode of procuring from 

 the sweepings of gravel walks, 452. 



1). 



Dahlia stake, Saul's, 15:3. 



Dartmoor granite as a building material, 139. 



Delphinium Harlow/Y, 429. 



Delphinium sibiricum ple.no, 499. 



Destroying worms, Whittaker's composition for, 

 188. 



Dictionary of the Arts, Sciences, and Manufac- 

 tures, 473. 



Dinbur Castle, its gardens and its gardeners, 443. 

 495. 506. 



Don, David, Esq., death of, 48. 



Donaldson's Treatise on Manures and British 

 Grasses, 34. 



Douglas, the botanist, monument in memory of, 

 289; report on, 289 i portrait, 292 ; description 

 of the monument, 293; engraving, 294 ; in- 

 scriptions, 295, 290 ; list of subscribers, 296. 



Douglas's monument, subscribers to, 384. 431. 



Downing*! Cottage Residences adapted to North 

 America, 570. 



Draining-tiles, improved, 37. 



Dumas on Chemical Statics, 1. 55. 



E. 



Edgings of basket work in flower-gardens, con- 

 struction of, 271. 



Edinburgh Botanic Garden, 383. 



Elements of Agricultural Chemistry and Geology, 

 372, 



Encyclopaedia of Cottage, Farm, and Vdla Archi- 

 tecture, and Furniture, First additional Supple- 

 ment to, 636. 



English Agriculture, what can be done for it ? by 

 Professor Johnson, tt!6. 



Epsom Nursery, hardy plants in, 41. 



Errata, 489. 



F. 



Falconer, David, Esq , notice of his death, 384. 



Farmer's Gazette and Journal of Practical Hor- 

 ticulture, 383. 



Farming in France, 39. 



Fastening mats, or other wov» coverings, on the 

 sashes of pits and frames, 1U9. 



Fences, 327. 



Fielden on the genus I.obeli/i, 113. 



Filberts and Coeford nuts, 327. I 



Flavour of fruit by alternate heat and cold, in- 

 creasing the, 192. 



Floors for cottages, composition for, 38. 



Floors of clay, to form, 140. 



Flower-baskets, remarks on, 271. 



Flower, florist's, what constitutes a ? 454. 



Flower-garden on gravel, designs for a, 180. 



Flower-gardens and song birds, 854. 



Fly-catcher, remarkable instinct in the, 259. 



Forcing the melon for early fruit, 115. 



Forestry, ornamental, remarks on. 112. 



Forest Trees, British, History of, 567. 



Fountain at Barrackpoor, 41. 



Fowlds, Allan, Esq., his death, 336. 



France and Northumberland, the peasantry of, 

 42. 



Francis's Analysis of British Kerns ami their 

 Allies, 2d edit., 635, 



Francis's Dictionary of the Arts, Sciences, and 

 Manufactures, |7J. 



Francis's Little English Flora, 63fi. 



fruit-corridors, construction of, 273 ; peach- 

 growers' in the northern counties, 275. 



Fruit corridors, criticism on, 478. 



Fruit, packing of, 229. 



Fruit oftrees as afflicted by age, 134. 



Fruit trees, general principles applicable to tho 

 management of, 499. 



Fruit trees, Godsall's label for, 34. 



Fruit trees, root-pruning and canker in, 309. 



Fuel, charred peat as, 2J0. 



G. 



Garden and collection of plants of Baron Iliigd, 

 at Hietaing, near Vienna, description of, 160. 



Garden architecture, present state of, 392. 



Garden, large and small, dilfbrence between cul- 

 tivating and managing, 169. 



Gardener and Practical Florist, 473. 



Garden pots, draining, 404. 



Gardening, books on, &c, 239. 



Gardening, cottage, adapted to Scotland, 315. 



Gardening, principles of, physiologically con- 

 sidered, 67 ; propagation of plants, continued, 

 07; by cuttings, 67 ; preserving the cuttings 

 till they take root, 157 ; accelerating the form- 

 ation of roots, 167 ; practical mttnod of propa- 

 gation by buds, 260 ; bj cuttings and layers, 

 201 ; sorts of soil, 304. 



Gardens at Brighton, notes on, and its neighbour- 

 hood, by the Conductor, 313 ; views from the 

 Brighton Railroad, 343; bridges which cross 

 the railroad, 345 ; the street gardens of Brigh- 

 ton, 345; the grounds in front of the Pavilion, 

 3+7; the squires, 348 ; St. Peter's church, 348 ; 

 St. Nicholas Church, 348 ; Hanover Chapel, 

 S49; the Royal tea-garden, 349; Hose Hill 

 Nursery, 350 ; Norman's market-garden, 350; 

 Rogers's flower-garden, and l'arsons's flower- 

 garden, 351 ; the park, 362 ; Park villa, 353 ; 

 the architecture of Brighton, 355 ; the remains 

 of the Antheum, 390; the Swiss Gardens at 

 Shoreham, 391 ; Worthing, 391 ; Tarring, 391 ; 

 Earning, 361 ; the garden of Mr. Sharp, 441; 

 the Miller's Tomb, 441. 

 Gardens and Country Seats in Somersetshire, 

 Devonshire, and Part of Cornwall, Notices of 

 some, 481 ; London to Nettlecombe, 481 ; Han- 

 well, 481 ; Slough station, 481 ; Caversham 

 House, 481; Swindon station, 482; Bridge- 

 water, 482 ; NettleOOBlbe Court, 4K2; fattening 

 swine with fern or brake, 487 ; large trees at 

 Nettlecombe, 487; Old t li eve Abbey, 488; 

 Punster Castle, 486; Nettlecombe to Exeter, 

 through Tiverton, 489 ; Cowley House, 4.60. 

 529; Mamhead, 491.531; Gxton House, f.32 ; 

 Powderham Castle, 532; Exeter, by Luscombc, 

 Dawlish, Teignmouth, and Babbicombe, to 

 Torquay, 532; Luscombe Castle, 533 ; Babbi- 

 combe, &34 ; Torquay, 535 ; Woodbine ( ottage, 

 535 ; Torquay, tol'aington, Totness, and Kings- 

 bridge, 536; Tor Abbey, 536; Paington, .536; 

 Berry Pomerov Castle, 536; Sharpbam, 537; 

 Sharpham to Kingsbridge, 539; Kingsbridge to 

 Combe Royal, and by the Moult, Woodville, 

 Salcombe, and Marlborough, to Modbury, 536 ; 

 Combe Royal, 539; the Moult, 540 ; Woodville, 

 540 ; Salcombe, 541 ; Modbury to Fleet House, 

 Kitley, Saltram, and Plymouth, 541 ; Fleet 

 House, 541: Kitley, 542 ; Saltram, 542; Ply- 

 mouth, 54.3; Atheiueum Cottage, 543; Mr. 

 Pontey's Nurseries, 543; Rendlc's Nursery, 



546 ; Plymouth Bone-manure Manufactory, 

 546; Tor House, 547 ; Monadon House, 517; 

 Pennycross Chapel, 547 ; Mount Edgccumhe, 



547 ; Plymouth to Saltash, Trematoii Castle, 

 Pentillie Castle, and Calhngton, 548 ; Tiema- 

 ton Castle, 548 ; Pentillie Castle, 581 j Calling- 

 ton to Whitford House, Fndsleigh, and lavis- 

 tock, 549; Whitford House, 546; Fndsleigh, 

 5-16; Milton Abbey Free School, 55 ; Tavis- 

 tock, 550: Tavistock to Buckland Abbey and 

 Moreton Hampsteari, 550; Buckland Abbey, 



