458 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Jom 5 
> 1858, 
lawns n may be ample and its trees well grouped, ‘and; would not be misunderstood. Ma any ve ery pleas asing | varietie ies, E, cole chicum and one si 
yet, by ae orm my of what may be considered ne scenes may be created and others sve. sar Mg by ” alpinum, a native species el i which T tinka? 
finishing touches, » the flowers and flowe r beds, employme nt pan colo by noe po particular kinds with me in their beautiful think you will 
bresdthy the: repose, the keeping of tl y | plants. A of Holly , for example, oi toe "4 have the sorts s mente pearance hey C 
be entirely henry acked with a Awa of TAA e a or ye s, or other | laceum, E. cole hicum, E wegen A here alee 
e flowers in a garden must be considered as a/| climbing plants on pillars, or clothing the trunk a a | lilacinum, E. macranth E ba E. i 
portion of its ornament, a h in ie disposal should icturesque old stump, may in proper situations form | tum elegans, E. purpureum E nian, Eia 
therefore be subject to certain non which are more or | pleasing interludes or accessories to a garden scene. | E. versicolor, an = hybrid “7 rum, R, Vickers 
rag applicable to ornamentation neos kini, But | George Lovell, Bagshot. cranthum -and colchicum Taised betwee, È 
e proper use of patee aib tedly demands bahonasini exactly betwee een Sib vada Bryn. sulphur doney 
> ale exercise of the most~ refined ary ‘ite cae a hardly THE COURT OF ROSES. coming an A. R., Brom c ve Several ness 
emp Ne. rs nans eeta e ule, Bur just as, round some slumbering giant, flea Chamæcyparis thuri rifera T shall be much 
em pi by'n ess. Lively and fearless, bon aae they leit,” TEREE any Correspon dent, ae information Olt, 
e great ess esential in a garden scene is repose. |S, while for fort y winks great London slee | Rardinem or Aimer management of this Chame è 
Whateve er its style may be, oa however contracted or | The country r ound with 1 pe r M S. l that wi Shue on th . 
extensive, if it 4 o> it is fau ulty. In d whil M t except for Misha is ate i p: 472 of our SN. 1856 6.] Be Subject i aa 
this particular at least do gardening and painting, as Deepens on evae à Deity frm: arly paper ben visiting 
mparison, go hand in han | Grows to a a Hi rises A shout, ap gone at Egglescliffe, near Yarm Yorkshire, i 
It is obvious that the repose of .a garden may be Which g wakes Leviathan with“ Riss youttote 9th of May, we were surprised to find that On the 
destroyed from many causes, ‘some of which I ‘shall ‘How E Choustunthérs when With min he äta i | fine ae Strawberries in the open ground, 
notice in a future article, confining my present remarks | \ bea teo te all} 1 raits 2 5 ¥ | Mr. N. informed us isa seedling whieh The variety 
to that arising from flowers alone. It may seem parat | ( oe eee ee & J, ke bolt, orn oe ee rae most of the eit kone tat 
doxical to assert that flowers, the legitimate occupants {ve t nt, å d by è ot, be annn Sy 
of a garden, can in any way destroy its beauty. Yet if Or I've an instrument, wea t ee free irasas vers ip pies. ood bensen eee 
a garden is to be considered a work of art, as it} T ono li eVi í eee Ae RE RS mean ? fail to be a very desirabl a » and cang 
song live Victoria !—I ’ve ho thier Queen, K, y © and most useful 
undoubtedly should be, it is saya reia ue No one | « Tone live Victoria!” tis replied again, Eden, Gardener to T. W. Wi Esq sor. B 
that a per- |e al z Farm; George Coleg ‘ sya 
mgA not iie very ill dressed Though clothed ifi ‘the Lona ia} ot E E MEE Boe Tva now, eq. The Trye enage, Yarı : ——T ha rohan 
most costly fabrics; or that, being loaded with orna- ? half dozen of y BI: k 2 
ment, they:inay'bé dis = ew a] vidieulous by. the Nea peek the best j i el on her Aa doors, where Fi oe T ack Ti res picked this year outa 
mode in which it is employed. Tt is too often forgot- A Some 14 days ago I had ossoms 
ten that a given article may in itself be exceedingly a te flies + ind te qi A thy US oie lothes, and had i ttl hopes of seeing Hogi Stary 
beaatiful and possibly doubly so when tastefully | Go p h t P mid à E AE Gi Ameena Gea 1” | May. 
lemiloyall, a. but bl o forth to gree = high SMN Aahe § —the Rose! 
employed, yet produce anything but ple S e sensa- “Wher Pana Pih loyal London said, | = SE soe to cover the early per A ho to 
tions by 1 by. being g noray = paren oR ees profusely | d, sitwtltaneouly, Teng a dti of bed. ` ma ‘a — old of the foliage; ex sr at 
) 18.1 y lee o’cloc! 
and riara tely over lawn — ech SEAS “Where? i Co art ate nse ‘Ts ve Ss all” and the Paea bn rose 5°, | By and bye I 
order or arrangement, they dis and harr the Here thou, grea bee? Beri = hra u fös send an account of the ay wh = 
bh ime produce m Aag From the Eaa hall “thy ke th ie oe he plan Seer 
e resi from ‘every “‘point of vantage,” in SE orn Hes many. J Outhill, Ci Specimens 
so quiet - nook o or shady « corner; — same everlasting g| Since tale Hes oe nd geniu ké ay t ea aa fate to east val lt Fhe: ay 
Shote” sige J s, flow ors every- t ,0 prince of decor ators i “ Tlanthus.” —Ther 
jni ‘no Fa no quiet, no Pay SA garden thus |m called-by the natives “ Aa ai tas wh 
ed is a very motley; it may be thoughtlessly tof it, 
jadged be to, or wane a and rege oc ae yet, And, trey Teet bi "ight royal pl = me | find FES description with tage p Tani 
rules ‘of go ua e K hav 
£ ‘condemned with one who shoul “tick connie ini ite a bit Aver ape of this gentle queen, [We P ero ia S F raz J 
. PERL at’ in -publie.in ace shall prevail and tranquillise the scene, Sa ae a 
arb o prety ta Harlequin or appe e | Grim-visaged war an wear his gala cane, Societies, ean 
__The flower-beds i ina garden should ap dete be a ie ee iy Biss Beare Bic ; 
| 1 designed i Royat BOTANIC, pame Panx.—The seeond 
‘them, = aca th efil a ml appropriate rn 
groups, in keeping with the surrounding otjeots OF e Correspondence je took place on Winco tase i 4 
course detached be occasionally employed i in| Wild Varie ee Plants,—Allow me to inform your | p X 4 
A < being fine i Lier, ‘well attended, Falling as it did» 
tt. bane ‘garden, ‘but they should be very a Pros ‘J. M.,” or eke other p after the exhibition at Get ; the 
5 use the “theat 4} fall 7 of 
repose of any particular scene. Many y persons appear ds ave, t 
never to tes tisfied unless every nook of lawn | 12 ee sty the sy Pot orth the Lord tof eat * | ERE Tae on that oceani - iy 
a Spare n now to deal joa Be wes features | 
as its er-bed, often of the most tasteless or ks Pollock, — &e., at Hatton, near Hounslow, Mid-| novelties as have not been before ed this year, 
lenie is practice is ually or evén more | dlesex. to ma e known to collectors that I| Stove an Greets u: 
han that alluded to in a prenhs should = ea o exchange plants with any of them, | were again produced in bi 
article, of dotting si ut a garden | and to receive communications — mn t prizes ate 
can be found for ‘one, without ‘order = es a wes is the list o 
design. from other considerations, too, “ti two warietion, c 
shapes of flower-beds should receive a ae gonad Matricaria Chamomilla, Mdo orina. in this cl 
attenti should be studiously ee Valea. (gabona te aa varieties. EA maa per 
avoided:;. they never ean be pro; covered ; anid Plan’ À i t j, < 
designs i in — they ar apna tt rarely satisfac- ae erina, in ihesian oten M Dd “a be 
tory to theé Ribes gros Laurel, common. set hy eed le te oe ‘ 
A ee a5 grossularia bign, : gr se s were 
stat yh, incongruity in ote aspect of a garden two varieties. I tenge aor r 1 variety, | there was nothing new. 
a m the use of lowers a Lyehnis o iam (female | varie- |frofiy,donimbb, This plant eas we 
a ee eee it, Phen ee are —-— officinalis Pose in| Shows ‘the commencement | best ; but we di 
with a bare margin of soil round one which in A and pleasure| of a very ‘tnusual variega- | nificent plant of 
EN ec the objectionable, -besides detracting | ), Variegated in the common Holly. | perfection i from M 
ery from Sarde the ne na selves, | Josepa Newton, at the Lord sanai Baron’s.—In was a large ms eral ate 
and to diminish theit sipptont dira, If 1a =e “J.M” I found — last ye: ated specim: S ANA TEY oar 
ae admitted inte - eh sang sage of a senimi of the Bramble, w ae UE and ad Rib Soden = 3 Ao itto eas i rd? 
ff my own part I wi ve few, pt such "a S latter is probably far ‘far spuras uncommon, for Isaw two or | colours i es in one heat we 
pe er pees y the s tages th rast ay aa should be | three omen ones myself during last summer and | same firm, 
wholly confined to the sides next the’ > walks and wher TPES M.”mentions having found two'also. O.W. Strick-| Roses tn 
they cannot interfere with the general aspect of the | Zand. css Lan eres 
oe Oe eee principal p ints of | nd ci am deriving so much pleasure from th sperii 
AS 3 h D it large circular bed bins } 
es trail out and to determine their own outline. Of] in; h fully expanded "eones of all shades, from Con é, al 
ourse, in newly-formed places, the boundaries of the pare: sree to intense crimson, that I cannot forbear | but the lighter sorts showed 
_ shrubberies must for a year or two be kept defined and | noticing it to you, in the others may here- | eff of fhe brilliant w 
ipres for be spo of the ‘young — but — find the seve ei rsa in the cultivation of | éxperi ‘Of Cut blooms M 
i ought never protracted beyond w is | this magni er. ass ollyhocks in th 
iapa i nang rans pana ete amiradia te ee etre gore ee show | the 
‘ ich the shrubs are ed gr y ‘thus early. ` I ust yellow 
to sweep os tel ong ee Dom _ cin oe of a dark crimson Peony 19} inches, a wnt, wale’ saree? 
2 on ‘a harsh out and margin | white ditto 173 inches, filled to crowding 
of bare earth is every year renewed, can h T i. a ae teat a 
Sstinia Tn ted without actual ark sles edding. Plants. —Kindly name the enclosed plants. | we 
: a large old garden, which, a y or tiro ince, was No 1 makes a most t gorgeous bed, andtir st corte eon! tape tri 
intrusted to ‘me to remodel, T ounid the vations shrab- | No. 2 cannot be surpassed by Slee eee have | n oe 
: eet eri e tied Both nn been in bloom for ‘two months, ‘and | im 
5 ‘sk i 0. 1 is still in fall flower. peram n this ies 
‘grown Sinet mst, A ‘the garden /pre- | the thain stay of my spring garden, and the facili with sae Uf bi 
siren! ap Painted à i h | abundance yet. Te oe 
eee which they Soweto: all ri fe ‘this season, and the plants were alt % 
en a of tly in the 
now T Have. several entire beds presentin en at are 
dazali: to the eye BTN, Car gr. to J. Butler, Ei 
ares, Aer tare capa ef low, Ireland. (For iiprbig pardeitiag these are unsur-| Pelar larponiene, as a be 
iA rere 1 is the golden Alyssum ‘saxatile; 2 is the contributed largely tothe g 
violet Aubrietia Mrs 
. —T am glad to ae hritë 1 on “Marvel 
= ti ina garded, [20 of the tribe of Bpimatinms f for’ do not think te ri ime ees Vt , ar 
e than ers and’ di distinct features, I|are I enclose the leova of mer | Stindaed, Symmetty, Wenderfel, Lucy, Unas ¢ 
