672 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Summary of the progress of gardening, fe, du- Training the pearh, Seymour's mode of 240. 



ring the year, H-15 ; science of vegetable cut 

 ture, '14"; experimental culture, 647 ; agents 

 of culture, 630; implements, instruments, &c., 

 6-31 ; operations of culture and management, 

 651 ; garden vermin, 651 ; garden architecture, 

 651 ; landscape-gardening, 65:3 ; arboriculture, 

 653; floriculture, 656 ; horticulture, 657 ; agri- 

 culture, 653 ; domestic economy and bee cul- 

 ture, 658; rural architecture,^ 659 ; weather 

 and crops, 659 ; horticultural societies, 661 ; 

 public improvement, 661 ; public gardens, 662; 

 cemeteries, 666 ; commercial gardens, 666 ; 

 window and drawingroom gardening, 666 ; 

 progress of gardening in foreign countries, 

 667 ; garden literature, 667 ; obituary, 6i~. 



Surveyor, Engineer, and Architect for 1841, 129. 



Sycamore, large, 404. 



Syringes, hand, a simple and good mode of pack, 

 ing the pistons of, 3S0. 



Syrup, orange, 573. 



T. 



Transactions of the "Horticultural Society of 

 London, 2d series, vol. ii. part v. reviewed, 121 

 upon raising coniferous plants from seed, 121 

 on the improvement of the wild carrot, 122 

 upon forcing the peach tree, 122; heating by 

 hot-water, 424. 



Transplanting large trees, 102 ; and small, 643. 



Treatise on the principal Mathematical and 

 Drawing Instruments, 471. 



Trees and shrubs deserving to be more generally 

 cultivated, 329. 



Trees and Shrubs, Encyclopaedia of, noticed, 321. 



Trees and shrubs in the 'looting Nursery' 12* 

 Mr. Gordon's Heport on, 17. 



Trees, hanging musical bells in, 432. 



Trees in Kussia, sudden death of, 233. 



Trees, single, in park scenery, 13U. 



Trees, desultory notes on, 462 ; drainage, 465. 



Turf edgings, neatness in, 32S. 



Turnip fly, to destroy, 429. 



Turnips and the cabbage tribe, clubbing of the 

 roots of, 480. 



Tussilago fragrans, on the culture of the, 182. 



Twigg, on labels for French roses, 114. 



Vegetation, effect of mercurial vapcur on, 225 ; 



jiowers of, 365 ; singular instance of, 189. 

 Vermin in small gardens, on destroying, and on 



relative matters, 202. 

 Vienna, 476; Itailway Company of the Nordbahn, 

 _ 476. 



Vines in pots, on growing, 23. 

 Vine, on the management of the, 214. 



Tattcrsall's Sporting Architecture, 32. 

 Temperature, progressive increase of, 34. 

 Theory, 324. 



Thompson's Railway Stations, noticed, 322. 

 Thunbergia, on growing the, 21. 

 Tiles, the new French, 230. 



Timber, preservation of, by the water of a copper- 

 mine in Anglesea, 174. 

 Tomato figs, 3S1. 



Tomato, or love-apple, culture of, 277. 

 Torreya 6uxifolia, 36. 

 Tour, a gardening, recollections of, in the North 



of England, and part of Scotland. By the 



Conductor. Buildings at the railway stations, I Virgin soil, on, and on the origin of soils, 70. 



49 ; Gla.gow cemetery, 5.( ; Necropolis of j 



Glasgow, 51; Garscube, 145; Glasgow new 



Botanic Garden, 149; Glasgow, 149; the cli. 



mate, 119; Glasgow to Uddingstone, 193 ; Cd- 



dingstone, 195; Bothwell Castle, 19.3; Both- 

 well Castle to Hamilton, 3.37; Hamilton Palace, 



338; Cadzow Castle, 341; Barncleugh, 312; 



Hamilton to Allanton , 585; the village of I 



Allan ton, 386; Allanton Park, 387; Milton i 



Lockhart, 388 ; Milton Lockhart to Lanark, 



389; Cartland Crags, 389; Lee, 389; Core- | 



house, 433; Corehouse to Peebles, 137 ; Biggar, ! 



437, New Posso, 438 ; Peebles to Melrose, 440; 



Traquair,440; Abbotsford, 440; Melrose to Dal- i 



keith.by Drybu-gh Abbey andThirlstane Castle, 



577; Drvburgh Abbey, 578 ; Thirlstane Castle, 



578 ; Oxenford Castle. 581 ; Preston Hall, 582 ; 



Newbattle Abbey, 582; Dalkeith Palace, 582; 



Dalkeith and Dalhousie Castle to Edinburgh, 



583 ; Dalhousie Castle, 585 ; Edinburgh lo Kin- 

 roes, 586; Fordctl,586; Blair- A dam, 5.87; Loch- 



leven Castle, 587; Kinross House, 587; Kin- 

 ross to Kincardine, 58S ; Blair Hill, 588 ; the 



Botanic Garden at Dollar, 588 ; the villa of 



W. ' 



Walton Hall, the seat of Charles Waterton, Esq., 



the thunder storm at, 476. 

 Ward, on the growth of plants in closely glazed 



cases, 376. 

 Wanning and moistening in plant structures, 106. 

 Wasp, common, nature and habits of, 621. 

 Water, composition of, 7. 

 Watering plants immediately after being shifted, 



evils of, 11. 

 Watering-pot, new, 134. 

 Weather of 1841, the, 144. 



West's Picmarks on the Management, or rather 

 tie Mismanagement, of Woods, Plantations, 

 and Hedge. row Timber, 470. 

 Wighton's History and Management of Bees, 



noticed, 322. 

 Wighton on the origin of soils, 70. 

 William field, the residence of Mrs. lairlie, 42; 

 treading the soil rendered loose by wire- worm, 

 140. 

 Dr. Walker, 58:- ; Tullyalla'n Castle, 589; Kin- | Wood and Sons' descriptive Catalogue of Itcses 

 cardine, by Cuirass and Valleyfield, to Stirling, '■ for 1842-3, 636. 



Wood I ice, 326. 



Woods, Plantations, and Hedge-row Timber, Ma- 

 nagement or Mis-management of, 470. 

 Worms, to destroy, 32G. 



589; Vallevrkld, 590; Valley field Cottage 

 Garden, 590'; Culross Abbey, 591 ; Castle Hill, 

 or Dunimarle, 592 ; Alva, 592 ; Stirling to Air. 

 thrie Castle, Deanston, and Blair Drurnmond, 

 588; Airthrie Castle, :^3 ; Deanston, 594; 

 Keir, 594; Blair- Drurnmond, 594 ; Stirling, 

 596; Messrs. Drummond's Agricultural Mu- 

 seum, 596 ; Articles noted it: it by Mr. Loudon, 

 597—602; the Bowling-green at Stirling, 602 ; 

 notices of the King's Knit at Stirling Castle; 

 tii 3: the King's Gardens, 003 ; an Arboretum 

 at Stirling, &A. 



Tower of Lcidon. the fire at the, 37. 



Training and proilhg fruit-trees, some remarks 

 on, 183. 



Training of calves ar.d horses, 328. "573. 



Yew branches, their peculiar propertit 



tecting wall trees, 326. 

 Yew, poisonous effects of, 51 1. 



for pro- 



Zinc labels, mode of forming and writing on, 114. 



END OF THE EIGHTEENTH VOLUME. 



Lommjn : Printed by A. SrorriswooDK, New-Street-Square. 



