Ocronzz 10, 1863.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 965 
аач нан 
an apt illustration of the where | b Angler" of the | My men wondered whi 
Nature is bountiful man is Mp } how f lin d са ^ A R be e "A Am pem t S 
years we Hiyo lacked a yellow Tea-scented Rose, a free | “What! Pipe vx de o and Common? larg from 2 to 2 
bloomer equal in beauty to the Cloth. y Gold Noisette why not?” feron A "wish энтр вее Ње Pace of х9 
yet not опе ue good Rose has been raised. We have | And other passages. I d t think heonce mentions the the od fellows. І can assure you eral crop 
indeed in the French eatalogues plenty described as| Мы тта hot his" Couiplote ete Angler." Besides, | I have seen geom e о equal them or A Nd dien 
“beau jaune" and “jaune clair," but not a fine thick- | he was the ӨТ and lover of опе, Who wrote so Many "of them measure from 12 to 20 inches long and 
petaled grind yellow Rose like our old Noisette, which | strenu: uously agai the Catholics іп his “ Pseudo- |as „much across the shou! t I will report 3 
"p e assured, have been created under ihe care Martyr," namely, "Dr. Donne, of who m Iza ak says, “ He g 1 y when is seems to be one 
= : 
of an English gardener in the sunny south. t l, from a cloud, b i loud."|of the finest Биет, ^ the wor 
. Козе lover it is pleasing to reflect, "lat we Moe still | The reasons which Sir Humphry тан assigns for| The? climate being hot is suitable for all of а 
good things to hope for and expect ; it are that “the tropical character, viz, Musas, Custard Apples, or 
to have arrived at the end of the tether as far asr gards rivers that contain it | (the grayling) are near the ruins | Cherimoyers, of which I ordered two from you, 
Ф erimson Hybrid Perpetual Roses, perhaps eine 2 of grea drm cen it The AN dir Salisbury the which у. was те carrying coals to Newcastle. la 
* considerably,” as a Yankee would say, but we have а | Ure, M Foun ns Abbey ; ; the Wye, near t seedlings at present. There are чине 
right to expect um. iuri sweet- ке yellow Rea Abbey of Tintern . And it M соп ntinues, · “ "if 1 am of fruit- "bearing trees o Alexandria. I have a fine 
of that class, vators know well that the | поб mistaken, in tl t less than from 500 to 600 fruit 
Tea-scented b оцу freely ^ almost апу | the д Е ап exLellii ve оит об feriari: н оп it; cit e in flower, and setting a fine 
yariety ; Lu ааа) e plenty of room to hope tbat | and tha as а favourite fish of St. Ambrose it was|Crop; CR р жесе japonica does well here, also 
i a cl clev т Engli ish c oss-bre фт rm uld be induced to| worth йул, as well as for its дя sake." Sir Pos egranates, Figs of sorts, ma t Prickly Pear 
tt ce, AtB romfield, which | and Grapes. Penka and Apri e have gathe red 
d P 1 1 lley, з the remains of a | for the pego eeks from iiri onm ings, kon are 
к of the Сы т; Gold Noisette, Vico poem з 280, н REM nry I., part of which is | not of fine e ашу; the fruit is small, dry, and some of 
and that bright but badly shaped Ro o d'Or,| now the church of Bromfield, "e attached to which is | it a little acid have a i 
which by thé way never in the least er Ts name | still the curious old romantic mill on the Teame. n | France, a great bearer, rich and delicious; Quinces 
or the high price at which it ; was sold at. RU wec could | the same river, or within three or four miles of it, Ал are fine, but, like the Apple trees, much troubled 
call g bie aeh in Herefordshire, there was also a stately мыз the borer, a large grub which еміз into 
"n е4 1 EL 
t naste ms, and goes right up through 
in new rre fund ould т Cath. : "St. Ambrose, you are aware, was опе of the | you know it?—itis white with a black head. Plums, 
It is rather ra Бе ноша Гоп an en made such | most shining ornaments of the Church of the fourth Pears, Apples, Strawberries, all appear to fruit well 
rapid advances i in Lini Шап! сокитой Roses— by the vay сепбиту— its most zealous supporter. Elected е -— the | here, and make enormous eut Т appien have 
all owing to undant eed-producer, | General | office of Bishop of Milan, against his n per- | made shoots from 6 to 12 fe and 
Jacqueminot, "» ps ti soiig, repugnance, and most сонеди by strange to say, those shoots on being Shortened "Жк 
g d opm of hd Hybrid тирен the unanimity ОЁ the previously em и ан have thrown out flower-buds, and are setti ing fruit ; 
class. N Catholics and  Arians—when he Gov: but wha at i is more > Strange, almost all fruit trees strike 
ecole ,in (ME oui and perpetuality of flowerin General of the province of Milan, d in person f pples strike азір Some 
Jules Margottin. Ihave a anae of dwarf oes oti ibis proceeding to compose the dcin ыз ры addressed Vine cuttings were put. in an open border to strike 
sort growing in а soil со f what is called here le as sem mbled i e bers upon th 
“ stiff уе ;" they EUR about 10 n old, are, or - Macer i рс 1 cong: illity, | with one and two bunches in full flower at present. 
were, on the Manetti stock, and planted so as to cover | gis el th s followed by the unasimous I intend to see what they will produce. 
the junction of the bud; I пели mor pate гош, acclamatory 8 shont “ буге will have Ambrose for o “This 12 " pes where Mr. Peter Wallace was, who 
roots from the young stems, b tI P hat they are | Bishop. T. «T п,” says a modern Protestant author aw rote las n Egyptian Gardening in the CAronicle. 
the earliest and most beautiful o Can 1 Roses, and |'« did the Bishop-elech in order to disqualify himself in Бо do Ek bes also all tropical plants—it is one 
also the latest, for they never cease to give Mores till | the eyes of the people for a sacred office, publicly vast hothouse. I never saw the Banksian Roses in 
the buds are destroyed by frost. J think of Mr. | commit some acts а judicial cruelty and flagrant aia mel be "e оге. Тһе Weeping Willow grows most 
б. ЖЕЕ os : ctum ko. а. I see this bed of old Roses— immorality » (mind jo» м» was then merely $ uxuriantly, and is here an нае en; we ZT two 
* never buy old Roses on tlie Manetti.” Өзүнү; t ndergoing probationary claim o | marble а planted round w them, as well " 
I hope Mtl: one nh 0 бе Ње ра sure of reading inp indo t the Chord); 4 the people. exclaimed, a large pond, which is a nice deg cen їп ei hea 
in x columns a descriptive list of Roses T€ LAE * Thy e be upon eads? In of р day, especially when the fountains are playing, 
Mr. Wm. Paul, and I trust he, will then seek out о nly a d and has a truly Oriental appearance. The Bou 
few ott the bes iem 4 faithful friend ; he was discovered Ре conii V | villes, described ly Mr. Wallace, is one sheet of баве 
акаа himself responsible for all that he says, во that пао th tihi мек to Milan? “He enjoyed universa] | I think it surpasses in beauty any plant I ever saw. 
called. for, we Rose lovers may bring . him to the celebrity throughout Christen dom, and deserved from | The Cinnamon and Pepper t ; 
M Court the praise that he was the first and We — re beautifully i ма j фер: 
| justice. — In ing a about. new Roses, раба, the | effectual assertor of isl exalted toties eite] pre- | Ficus ardenias, 6 feet 1 and as much 
bane of Е authors, should be av oided— plain E so essential to the existence of the Romish bi covered with flowers; Hed alin often 8 feet 
rege in as few words as possible are all wel system.” He in favour of beautiful dower Тенты in 
i ——À p Russelia jun : Vincas, Cle- 
rd to the 60 new бы. сла + of РЯ nt his с ha “ honoured ree pa — fish, rod фае јапсеа, РЕЛЕ incas, 
quis Jed g re all clean and healthy, and do поб require the sponge 
Wis us. "^. P of the 30 or 40 nitent | to thinke hat the ай of England ud ales might d s thé ey do in England. It is a great PM COE at 
the e found equal to many in that|y, ve d esired to possess the favoured fish. E let them. [Ашчы are splendid, and requi 
очиб collection a do not like the word “ brood,” | inq der is it an ascertained fact that all vem ike; of DOS qr qu. fece Mio get senes any size y Ө 
used b roseists, reminding one of а farm where the grayling is found, there for stood | 11е 5 pienty o e vein E be muc 7l | Du 1, 
EA sent Fu [^ the spring of 1861, among which | monasteries or ei very 6. , Cover ith flowers. The 
Charles Lefebvre, Professor Koch, Maurice pm rdin,| Pise.: There 
c de Rohan, Frangois Lacharme, and som others | 
are во brilliant and beautiful. Monte- Rosa. 
ys 
e require the aid of history and of ire 
the antiqu ary. In passing, let me remark on опе of| ж trust I have said enough to give youa slight idea 
the objections wi Sir H. Da avy to to the proposition. Не |t what gardening is in this ld, d country." * R. 
says: “There are rivers near the ruins of the most 
FISH теча sint snis ae | m establishments of this kind in Europe, and 
| (3) How GRAYLING GOT LAND. those nearest the e In the $ where the i id is not PEACHES UNDER GLASS. 
(erint rp лу found; ; for instance, in the - at Canter m mms Іх your last issue (р. 939) I have read an article 
Piscator : Now ing to Izaak Walton, he wrote |! if the ylin mport ve »- ra presume, ав an — to some 
I think about the yonr 1 ear 1653, =) at the first blush it ipee ain that it should zot be fonnd” w the obser of mine which aeri ce Á— but 
would seem, that had n been any ers in Kent and along the south-west coast f| which pA is in fact a reitera nother 
to the in ЕЕ of y Foie by the monks, 1 he A nd, asin Dorsetshire, йет and Cornwall, form of certai ain doctrines which T think M to be 
е kno own and have mentioned it controverted ; I hope t the erefore you will allow me to 
wou 
chant. ва 
Cath. Would it have been safe for ous arts of Г и, as in that near Llanwrted” A (n „Айн the bendi of Bouguer, it must be 
Walton i T put Md said Wwe that much in | women on the Irvon, 12 miles from Llan-|evident to и writer of the article in Modi, and 
favour of the monks of old? I fear me that it would | doe and the Dee ; not near Valle Crucis Abbey, but will I hope b equal ally so to the ere of this, that 
мз piana his life. Теп years previously, in 1643, you | 15 miles bigher up ече Corwen and Bala," which | the quotation frón'h tables proves а great deal more 
a doli passed the Parliament, directing |he makes r thus—" It hav а | than was intended ; ed shows that, in the exceptional 
that. ltr and tables i in churches shonld beu tterly | fish imported from the continent and carried to à| circumstances quoted, the glass roof of an ordinary 
taken азга: emen all communion tables rem: тей | 10 i Dd of rivers, only a few o of which est A have p greenhouse wil transmit more light than will be 
h, all rails I them | 18 5 
yes н Ке. : Mid: fiv tanding |z weed Hal. replies—“ There may be n what ыз Acccrding to Booguer, as quoted by your correspon- 
cruci vá now imaginin z for ы > grayling ке а number д the loss of ligh 56 dana when it falls upon 
one or more persons of the f circumstances nable it to increase." | glass at an of of 85°, is upwards of опе 
г images and pictures Ё. С. falf of the w ; that is, when the rays deviate as 
, much as 85° from perpendicular to the surface of the 
circumstances 
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habits received by a model sonth wa 
and у 
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ей;” and in May 1644, St. Paul's Cross, 
N GARDENIN! на 
Ка. y received from : ; - 
Charing Cross, and that in Cheapside, London, were | м, Tyg lerig onm is ona tae ived from | sach a deviation would be possible. It could only take 
Uy levelled: E it might have brought old | preven preparing it e wur 
b m Mit. Is 
he sun would be 
I even to mention the ome in | conveys such an idea of the monas | prodnetive а the Mouth val, which would thus turn its back 
such a fev а — eie ly if it amounted to powers Iik t тете the 
e pos debt to азм for the fish, and announcing md thought worthy of i rs Bei Ta ern i ih being w ing “ in some гр 
Walton "Tho Gardens Gaia, Ciro to the distance it traverses mfter passing through the 
EON am n дс еж нін in, too much so to May, 1 lass,” that is by no memes M ач 
pania i Sho o ot Шыу лы мукдар ТР o Озу Нарат ра 
devoted to the Reformed Church, to на and print iln еа t is true, » E than 
anything in their favour—wise, for the ауе = Leintwardine, near tat thera i e gita inane m Ce glass 
reasons you have “н A the Society for wishes to ascertain the 
méntioned-—devoted, he proves himself to have been, | ths pilita ot the Charos publ by MEUS mm 
