740 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [Асатвт 9, 182. 
a ——— n бо ССМ nct tine 
d them as being well spent, if they | many fine avenues Teak , Cathartocarpus, з, Fic а [vide are some very good statues, copies f, cm 
inito herr gi a visit to the es Stablis hment of|reflexa and indica, Quid inas, and Poinciana regia, ool. S, copies from the Itali; 
Mr. Kay, of Finchley. e the management of this | with which it is бг 'ghese last are about bn: the north хаб of the basin, against the 
generous fruit, Mr. is undoubtedly a master|30 feet high, branching at about feet from | wall is a small Moresque temple forty 
hand, MS well кыт. | healthy pe ш. house|the ground into regular soot aded trees, the | divans, &c. A "ov wall, with a gilt га ed with 
after house, sufficiently attest. Our cipal object, | branches at their greatest breadth being about divides the hareem garden in the centre ей, 
however, is Eu direct attention to one in particular of | 80 feet in diameter, lying massed over each other in in kind of rubicon, and the gardeners are on isa 
the Vines growing in his garden at Finchley, which ренке Бер from which i compartment just described, unà 
seems deserving of especial mention. This isa Black | spikes of ше ous vermilion and orange batter -like | surveillance of some of the Swarthy sons of er the 
Hamburgh, and be but 6 years old, entirely fills | flow (ie just enough to illuminate the tree without known as eunuchs. These fellows are the бы 
m ar 90 feet long, and 19 feet wide. | ыс the bát of its silken verdure. the poor Ara gardeners, who scarcely ever ы 
i ing 1 it, Dotted ке ut still remain some fine examples оѓ | соп{ас& with them without getting a beatin: Come i 
which уала Бу, ahin mature and coloured, will form Seen noble Cocos plumosa. em ees Banyan.|they have managed to bring with them - mia 
a picture worth travelling to see. We should be тй The latter stands i in a front of the h cupied by Mr. дос {тиф їп tho garden, for those thick lipel 
m Mr. Kay some e particulars of the hist Traill, and m 25 feet in сігае е аб Ше ns of s ity to wag their jaws over, Ты 
nage- | base, and fro de spreading еа aériel Subs are ге бй, tof this garden, about an Acte lad 
ment under iio во large and healthy а development fast finding e way to the ground. There are also half i in extent, s ei a kind of walkin ng or play 4 
— Agere ке also hope to hear by- and-by | some groups of Parkinsonia aculeata, "опе of the most | for the ladies when they feel disposed, or Ans ні 
р ises in the fuii оге, trees in Egypt; it forms a compact round | permitted, to enjoy a little fresh air. The eunuchs 
The stem enters | head from 10 to 15 feet in height, clothed with Blech- | scour the Dra with loud cries of yella yella, and the 
licae which is a low оба опе, near the | num-like delicate ping eaves, and the stem and | lazy Arab gardeners, anis too glad of any excuse that 
and branches are led away right and left at | branches are of е sam colour ; , in summer it is gives : an opportunity to have a sm oke and talk 
proper distances towards each end, the whole area dt ау h g red e joyous 
being completely —— tipped ant! ше ers. Shouts and eals of laughter “which follow 
At the same place w which e first great destroyer ы Lu arden was ап | һе clearan Se E gar Fido tel how mach the faie 
— re only be been plated ги yum. bu pt cover unusually uo riso in the Nile, fike hat of last P prisoners ач enjoying themselv опе corner 
of 2 паге feet, and wi time we ем above. Оу Nile sd and dro of the garden я ауда formed with Муг 
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p win b iin T eonrpersiivaly good. т of fruit. ashed a any of th uable plants ta жен hedges, and in the other corners are wi horses 
whic . Kay works will be lected topo ETA him. Pa ana, when w the|and box swings, such as are seen at fairs in England, 
by the concluding рабар o of a plain | havoc the Nile had made, said * Malesh A lac ош Ашу In the centre of the garden is a beautiful fountain {тош 
practical homely paper of his on pruning foren trees | caminh ”? (Ne ever r mind, it will be necessary for y you u, Mr. the Val ď’Osne, surrounded by a marble basin and stes 
published some 17 years since in the Ке ted Gar- | Tr aill, t d lk 15 feet i whole in with 
з’ „ which reads thus I can easily care the n was agai uming its former|a 2 feet balustrade and cornice, and entered by 
i (9) та, will not | appearance when а Елмен mis забой occurred. | four céntral paths, each having two of the mos 
be very favourably received by some portion of your | Ibrahim Pasha died, and the garden became the |elegant m arble vases, erected on round columns and 
when they find that their hitherto agreeable property of his three sons, Pashas А. Же. im pediments, Т ever be held. In the divisions formed чм 
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hich are left, is not only erroneous, but diame- E the fable about the bundle of "А dix ach | We seping, pee the whole being as garde 
tricall to all laws connected with vegetable |f — different ideas of its utility and Worth, | appearance as the most fastidious taste could 
physiology." and as every Viceroy of yp f ШЫП opinions diametri- | The pem к Willow in Egypt deserves - 
—— We ently mentioned (p. 478) that Mr. who pre седе d him o| mention for its rapid luxuriant growth and great 
Me of Dalkeith, who been discussing with arrangements were made prodere keeping beauty, beyond any other tree in the country. 
Mr. TILLERY, of Welbeck, inm шер, of Lare versus | order; and the B imean war a few years qns dh trees referred to in connection with the fountain in 
EARLY xam proposed to bit before the iam raised Wheat up to war prices, eq р of the — eei were planted about five years ago, and wem 
Hortieultur;l S vt rye es in January o available was ploughed and во Ы ge Xe 10 feet high, with stems the thickness of a 
ebruary next, ewly ripened Back "Hamburg s, g s тїзї. They are now 25 feet in height, hare 
perci the best old black га Grape intimate with Mr. Traill, told me that shortly after s ends proportionately broad, and the stems at the base 
The challenge was ант t al eet in cireumference—they form intense shade, 
же апа туб ваше pales Mr. Тїн now | the Rhoda Garden, and found it in the just|and have the appear m ook a mountain of plumes; the 
accepts the Чандын in these words :—“ Not having levis aras He me “ When I saw the d furi poetis young shoots, which are produced in great masses, are 
received the May Number of the Florist and Pomo-|&nd broken up in such a manner, knowing the trouble | often 10 and 15 feet long, and so flexible, thata | 
logist, I did not see friend оке challenge to | and thel labiis те Traill had had to реб it into the Ја ady might darn her кош ings with — These trees 
rb t "un 
show his iba pene Ога ones. in state of perfection it was in a po time before e hareem ladies, who ue 
anuary or February, until noticed "lately in ied | lovers of shade and pe plants of almost every 
an " Chronicle, І shall be quite prepared to do „Among the other rarities, of this garden were ind, fra mer Ап scen = Jas m Sambae tothe 
battle with him during these months аб the se Clove, Nutmeg, ; they Southe атой, "After the Willows 
meetings of the Fruit Comm eei We may therefore | were moved some years аро he garden f Ismail the Rose trees of this uds. "attract most attention. 
look forward to some алей, exhibitions at the | Pasha, on the Island of dod ues the uam and oses do not long remain sma! ushes in 
opening of the season of 18 Clove trees only Ma exist. The Mid of this fine | climate; they rise into large shrubs, particularly the 
—— The following further "report by Mr. SKINNER | garden has still m visitors, particularly on a day Ch ina i and Tesacentod Lue which are always coverel 
on the state of the Orchids in the drawing room иг Shieh. occurs about the Таһа of April or bagi nning g mn and spring. To break the 
Maivern Link, rers alluded to in our columns at t | May, termed А the Arabs Shem el naseme С monotony of the Mig blank wall which surrounds 
pp. 212, 856, 380, and 452, will doubtless when ooy class of the Cairenes turn | this garden, Bananas are planted, which serve a double 
interest, in the ing m uquet in [^ nd, ШО purpose of hiding an ugly wall and producing fruit for 
Aug. 4, 1862. sys Онду attiré; to "Walk e gardens and groves|the vortex of mouths one has to supply in an esia 
1. Lycaste.—I sent yet ^ prim for exhibition | of the vicinity e ; Кы though Myrtle а fine ment where 150 ladies live. The Turkish women are 
n the 21st May; € "wards returned to| shrubs, an nd gay ers have given way to Clover and | very fond of roaming the garden and gathering fruit 
Mr. Үкттон, and са ill tl df for themselves, consequently every bareem 
Chelsea. Á : ace to be found in Egypt, and has in addition to its garden contains a mixture of everything the -country 
2. Lycaste Skinneri. — The leaves of this are still с attractions the reputation of being the р1асе | produces; in the garden at Gezira were | 
perfect, and two na pseudo bulbs i in great health | where Pharaoh's daughter found the infant Moses; | Guava, Custard Apple, Soursop, Rose Apis ae 
are forming. Iha eut off а dead flowe er to-day, | also the Nile ometer, ау work of great antiquity, stands | kind of Orange, Citron and Lemons, a first-class | 
but the bl 23d M collection of European frui& trees from Ee. 
jeden t beanty, though the plant Several other gardens and experimental grounds | kind of which ОС 1 їп Ше country, and ТЫ 
-— er ibm ХЕРЕ y^ in shadin, were formed under the direction of Mr. Traill; - gathered Peaches andard trees 8 oz. in weg 
i t f t 
8. Ваг — This owing viguit and will these are likewise in a state of decay, owing to е | Amongst the она trees of this " 
ver| young scions of err t having no reverence for the about 200 Erw! which were intended for ie x 
in the month of November, | works of their ir sires; each seeks to build up something garden, were piace front d pi 
4. I brought this down on | new merely the time. | Pasha's Kiosk ; t one day a venerable an а 
de. gti May;it has formed a new pseudo bulb, | The works. of yesterday are neglected for those of to- | Sheik or D.D. of the Mu creed, ging в Р 
and the flower stem is now half an inch high. Thus ruin and novelty are ever side d side. Ismail Pashar told him 
The mode of treatment has never been changed from | smail Pasha, the heir appare - à cs —— = of бой апа the Prophet to make anythi 
the first. at the present tim i d producing the Koran to afirm 
a ву! » 
gi E Enna fave paa p d denn years in progress, and th bo | hareem garden, where only my 11 never forgé 
М». Т. Бена ЕР ork i pn slow that it makes ani gardeners were allowed to enter. I shall n 
ла, AER Р g by the fine climate, soil, and bs es ache to ve an ts progress. Yet many жш 6 amusing ап Tee face of 1 ed 
cen position o! Egypt, and „aided by the liberal have crept in, and the parts finished are ва id to be th told me to remove т tatues ; he really а portions of 
cippus etri of anything of t d all the Sheik had told him. The ed, contain 
mwi as жо ^ uan ak in М ханан m collection. | attempted i inthat country. As in the case of every do outer Gezira garden which are n 
en ult fask to go ln and exotic а very diffi Egypt in which there is e Hareem Palace, а |a beautiful side Kiosk, fronie p e are BWADS, 
renes у г: prunis 2 plane во surfaco must be separate garde en for the ladies is formed adjoining the | around a circu м) lake of water, 0 Ses of will 
ways maintained urposes of i cta n. The | Palace, and dt and many of шс ү "айай d vi 
simon total abae Mene 509 тыһ, їп 158 ht ; th zi bably ducks for which E б is t 4 feet in 
airo renders mode o very rendir pris garden in ce country, and муы " My rtl abou! 
, ld b f b mi hedge o d e three 
ai makes an oig =. E. ee шш: of prison-liko кыл be ше 2 dise ES Fac i EE Hs feet M dud a half in thi ness, having with 
groi work almost i ‚1шроввї ible. windo ows о Ње occupied by the ladies ео, entran each | by two lion 
: Р. 
+ Mr Traill 
Tim with the directors of ihe ding large lions jet exon: of water from the outside of The e bn 
Horticultura p". and Botanical Gardens of ne ba. Chinese podeis нле y pes едок аиел hedges, pem iwi borders 1. shrubs; à 
Continent, о India and Americ a, from w ce he con- | by a от rts e iron railing with gates at each side, | with various trees and pere of the borders tO 
— t rance ral some miniature boats which float|of Duranta is j partent 
diens тта ax m fo obinin Ee d plants of |in the | Еа n; walks and steps of marble, and а cased | hide the cultivation of the interio © 
wth ог Кее ‹ е " oen к That he|marbled wall about 4 feet high, surround the in | which are e ice used for veh he Orange and. 
there can bac " 
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the nay wW urser pla: 
Tun ъз ly gera peniso bestowed upon his garden vim from the different. compartments, are some | trees of larger growth, At he 
knew poe days, and the | fine marble vases, and at the different angles of these ' some lawns formed of the common 
