a veal THE GARDENS RS’ CHRONICLE. 
for their pigs; while 
oot of the Oak 
was Tas gor has 
i journalised by 
alon 
SEPTEMBE 
tum 
— A te atone the ening sh 
P attacked by 
no. 
Algal fo g time i mmeg E ER T — 
No dou bt, res om rane of bloody y p ma? f Foreign Garden Memoranda, 
been noted formerly in am tradition, if Herkwitn I sond i = notes recently made dúriy 
the na and “ss Sees yr E rapid jia urney in Denmark, the south of Sw cle 
e furnishe h an actly oo and Hollar ad, * hopes that some of them 
affo 
of the rav: = 
oo as this gall- nut of = 
lands at Hy S 
analogous to the ie aw hints, 
credulous, times, it was lo Almos as the a 
curiosity. I have met ah 5 maa es is s struck ki far) 
copy of a pamp? hilet entitled, “The most strange and apparanc 
wi at y arful A fB g ray s for 
. | Leicestershire, which continued for the space of four | na eaves of a small district of the Hambur i. 
Mr. | days ; the redness of the colour for the space of those tory called Vierland, which is principally laid out in 
four days every day increasing higher and, higaan to the ens, and which supplies the markets wi è 
t of many “hun dreds of beholders of r t 
all degrees and conditions, who have pao their | th 
handkerchiefs | in this _ bloody pool ; the _Scarlet com 
ac ross Holsteir in, that part of Denmark 
t of debate 
and Prussia (w hich ‘latter would 
cid annex it to haraelf on accou unt Si a > fine ha arbon ur | 
e useful i yan me 
Fangals of the di His 
Paimelia will be ead 
adds som 
Bn the pe Ala and 
soont of ee lood-red 
Sonal 
It appearsthat 
"on snd around a 
patches 
ful truth to many bool" generations.” P; 
London by J. H, 1645. The author jt es ample 
t the pool or lake 
| its nature and complexion so that the attle x 
jsl drink of it.— make a relation of yi to their that 
riends, and | one neighbour brings in another es 
b The noise is spread over 
Er: ae , and in iheonging sas they make Ser i 
see it. The water, which es t began to loo! 
the Club, pun ‘nated the pond | reddish, doth now look highe er and higher, and as the 
our. Thi 
tbat he at first area f = the space of four days, the country far and near 
o had notice of it, coming in to be spectators of it. 
ed e red the p day 
e third day than it did on 
the second ; and on oe fourth day it grew a p the 
pip al "The peo gan to think it was a 
sign fi heaven kd divine wrath for blood alread. 
spilled i in b the civil or as indicating more blood- 
shed that would follow, However, to diseover if 
ible se of the bloody appearance, the pond w. 
says inative anes of the 
ling fort 
mat in September 1854something a appeared 
dat Snead’s Green, =. 
yA is very eae peen and that 
many of nad Kae (where there E Mas: are formed 
of small tree: e Mountain Ash, the red berries of 
Apare a pleasan enliven the otherwise gener: rally dull 
an 
and the atto are either tethered by ropes or “are 
is continued l! 
At Coper pene, and indeed ponpen p me whole 
journey, we ob rved th at Iv eng vely grown 
the orname w See WE. iti is either 
allowed to fall over the edge of the pots suspended 
ay or is trained 
t and forma 
i 
R 
| 
Hi 
raat © 
x 
Fisa: Esq., of 
3 
$ 
4 
l 
Eg 
yrhen 
so brilliant 
i 
: 
n tation 
sa 
nfi 
FFEE 
i 
ti 
a broad wire frar 
prip oy apartm Pta 
observed our common Searlet Ran " 
pro sake of the handsome flowers- ce 
inary point of view being meuxped pei a apa while 
Riinos n (nearly a foot long) v which is gron own in 
the place. But ya 
psed since’ Mr. Peyton had first 
d to assume its stiom 
LET? 
ai ; 
á 
eyi 
EE 
fii 
ti 
: 
A 
hi h oakin more like Hops than Kidney B 
on Eke Bo rah Garden ny Sng p in n tho middle 
pond, divers fis of the town, adjoinin, thea it is very 
fish seemed still to be ver d, and and is consequently 
FS hears wines seid which baa made fet the | not in a very thriving condition. A large le pr ure room 
* Howsoever, "E hir being drained ay [pa attached to it. Some beehives on a orefying 
which may increase the onder, the bloc m. We eee ed ‘that 
a condit tion f d 
l 
| 
i 
H 
ni 
ea them only pune ts the space of a squar 
Ey 
Ta 
her gee? have covered the pond. The fo 1 
slime, including granules forming the fructifi- Be 
soon disappeared, leaving the empty globules 
t for a time. These acto an appear 
ilar to a number of ‘lower-case’ o's, in fae. 
juxta-position, thus :— 
00000000000 
to th 
con- | face 
aigi | bit of t high 
As at H: ET the poe eae acte: zisio ont umes are 
ms | Worn by the gardening Vv ierlar ders, so also at Copen- 
_ are Ry 
jin 
ble raamis ot the behotders? pte 
is stated that after four days “the w 
ts “fret genuine colonr,’ 
z his acco unt, allowing alittle for the ‘ pone | 
with whi seems precisely an 
case to, va sanguine appearance at the Mathes. an 
where in like manner the ‘he mata resented was 
“ee temporary. This is of t 
be developed by an increase of t 
hot weather by Desmidea or ae and rpe famili 
there tore be di erent. from the oolung 3 matter 
the-lake as was tives 
ng the ohn and whic Dy 
landers, slg om old Dutch 
occasioned | o the producers of the it eget 
as in the Linden at 
igre 
gE 
by “the inhabitants of pond 
00000000000000000 ng 
| that ca ital on the south, and ‘which is i “the 
€ 
of an 
ure, é as shown | 
00000000030000000000000 
0000000000000000000000000900 
0000000000000000 
0000000000000000 
00000000000000 : 
000000000000000 ae dar 
00000000000000000000 Morat: in Switzer 
Laie na i pr aas 
pondat Mathon alas, 
and the mud around it, is the celebrated Red poor me sist the ive pat on its co 
Protococeus ni pu d days of teat a0 piss er (1856), | 
visited in ‘the nick of time,’ 
specim 
tind dapi Shane pa 
ith specim sears 
o | pe visit to Snead’s G 
Pear a. sg aen chiefly interesting as having 
ella from 
enta) | to ol 
was visible, and a resident close 
pro- 
md had been cleaned out 
d scum, whic 
ree years before the col 
the water. 
int 
ul 
i i 
rf 
f 
: 
3 
4 
& 
K 
3 
J 
u 
l 
? 
[F 
i 
H 
d 
: 
$ 
years 
Gatehouse 
| sery, Sadiury) Eer 
| Catalogue, which 
m 
E Lists Recrtven.—Bass §& Brown’ 
g 
T 
A 
PSE 
j 
d 
BE 
af 
ER 
H 
i 
P 
F 
H 
a! 
Fal 
; Te 
zi Ẹ 
Ba 
Py | 
ii 
p 
j 
4 
j 
È 
j 
$ 
p 
E, 
j 
3 
F 
Ẹ 
! 
kinds.—John Cattell (Westerham, 
Catalogue No. 7, 4 : 
list of plants for 
short post sa no 
Kent), 
| also 
PP. 
tae 
He 
ef 
7 
and 
We 
HE 
, 
see st Charlottenburg) we 
geranean 
u ‘owerehis givi! 
oa also the care with w 
walks are 
Gensd’armes Plata 
There 
È 
Be aa 
-8 
iH 
cee 
E 
E3 
Jeaves with Sowers 
interspersed 
Santa plant, its 
among them ; 
|| Water Lily was in much vogue, as well as the common 
Hanover railroad in the neighbourhood of 
observed 
grown upon G Grass plotsand in 
leaves 
