1222 
removing them, summer * pinching becomes the most INN were the chief „оштета aj, the. kitchen, garden, a 
THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 
als struck аз; records, oi 
simple of all operations. The cultivator has ош 
ATI hi 
Sir Charles Lyell . 
week during J une, J Шу and | wife. - 
look over his trees.t 
ог the ; first rudiment 
August (penknife i in hand), and eut Tuy і 
pinch in every ор е iam р. d ; 
e Ror 
e and various other j fruits, e 
Viney: ards р! anted i in the third 
ОЁ ап . obseu cure 
бр =. wer Tertiaries, 
"l'ertiaries, or Міосеп 
| Pliocene ; each distingul 
» 
ТИ 2, 1 
hed i^ its 
three leaves ill put fo th а а een Аз byo our E mathor) ке in, the eighth century. For 
soon as they have made their n or P fye eaves, the long eriod the Romans, withdrew from. this | 
must be shortened to two, and s ery young | coun E Б appears, to. have n almost 
| neglected s „but in in the 
the summer, паар the leading 
aid, in August. 
root pranin 
f Henry *H 
ine Netherlands, a 
ceeding reign of ohry VIIL, 
| Nonsuch were „la id o 
shoot, as before s 
The directions for 
T 
great attention. 
ree Бе | ments of pies 
suffered to grow god or оре tai з, and. then be | stuf? which ; 
me "pruned, it will r eive a k if the spring be | accordance witl ш or improvement which then 
it ed be jeopar rdised, preva аПей. А gre at impulse was given to gardening in 
Tie erefore, those vir are аваа ed to the anr f Charles II. Hampton Court, Chatsworth, 
operation, and prete root-pruning once in two years, | and so me of the Eos gardeus in England were laid 
Should only operate upon half of their trees B опе out, and garden structures began to be erected. lipped | fi 
2x they will thus deve the remaining hal an|Yew trees and other Dutch tendencies, became the 
unchecked bear e d stati rage in the rei all and Mary, “terraced 
This is the p аан we have seen carried out for lks, Hedges of evergreens, shorn shrubs in boxes, 
years, and invariably found it to be followed with the Orange and Myrtle trees in tubs, being the chief excel- 
ces" Аз the taste for gardeni mproved 
happiest result. len 
Besides the pyramidal form, of training the Pear, 
other modes are illustrated and des cribed, but for all 
that сам these we must refer the reader t to.the 
book f. „We will only remark in pass g that, 
o be 
Шоро Ше 
а 
analysing them 
posits. 
ће chemical үчен on of soils, 3 
puer 
Ireland, mg ёге 
оп Ше olal d tion ge шетају р ч 
loose, friable character, АРн ap lto mar 
nseful for e While 
able mould; wi ch 
veget: 
ry few, ogn h part in the dir 
we fag will incur the брег of. ЕР such Ea of the old style rushed to the opposite he remarks on 
trellis as represented at page 31. extreme—fine old gardens Jue recklessly pulled. to | various points which do "i b 
"to ck are grown as Pyramida | pieces; and, in the words of Sir Walter Scott, * down | selectiö n, will be read 
aT вај be “ob jects, of great bea and, went many a trophy of old magn nificence,— courtyard; may E the porel 
utility. E uud on je Doucin stock, Ans. are огай, , enclosure, fosse, „avenue, barbic ican, | and the formation of a new one. 
more vigorous unn n the Paradise and les e 
than when gra on dis Cub. Root pruni N id tower ” The арти of Sir Uvedale Price, in 1794, | more БЛ -à 
SOR, d shoots of pyramidal , Apple trees, апа | led to a consideration of the principles on which the choice will no! 
ind eed e Tees st le was based, thou ugh he went a certain 
1 Pears p.e Quince stock, may | ШИЕ with the prevailing mania, the moment he dis- 
be follo fos with a att, 3o Sverd Í his тар т һе wrote strongly. in favour of pre cases, s 
Although the larger portio 3 бе book is devoled | serving i the remains of, ancient, magnificen It was ir 
to the Th and Pear, yet it contain riter first pointed out the three-fold division | most. im 
directions for the men of t m and the|of the dos and the peeuliar style by which each conveni 
Cherry, which may. both be grown as Ee or | should be distinguished. * For the architectural terrace | the place 
bushes, and rendered productive by means of biennial (aŭd flower garden e direction of the house, he elevation; and 
n } рту g. With respect {о E: Elan we are told | admits the formal style ; for the shrubbery or pleasure | much ex posed for either fruit; ve 
“л has yet been found t p the en energies " | g ound, a transiti n between flowers and irees, he grow and pt in the otlier tlie 
of ЕН їй Ва but 16 is SUE dwarfed and kept iu | hands over to the improver; and for the park, which | fo Su ch localities render ы 
ord 1 grafted on the Plum stock by biennial belongs to the picturesque, he gives full scope to th i 
emoyal, most picturesque disposition provided it is not frittered | 
or es, Mr, Rivers prefers the Cerasus Mahal eb, | away by trifling details.” 16 i by “Иң these three 
or perfu: d Cert) as the best stock, “ Гіз great | essential points in view th: f Ns landscape 
NT AUN is that gardeners of the ед day 
o 
and Мо; 
НӨТ, as practised for 
in two or three years a down, the 8 К p» С 
HR еу are s enet an mes 
EY of fr 
рс. А, Nie VELIE work bë eatea 
i ке 82, in allusi ion to 
" page 48 instead of 4 45. uf dir с th È 
so be improved with adya S 
ей. ue bh Pelle oiaren iot At Te M у тау К; pb orietur 
book s | mofe € ЫЗДЫН genet, ad bui ultivate 
ап teret 1 А yd jue d Pese 88, РЯ the last bi than 
per 
of gardening wis 
ling 
оп of s 
çt fhroug ghou 
ien 
minated, until e 
i ti ы k 
e one of onal dist 
mploy 
its АЦ, Ёйуоп T 
Ta ойт 
with, ревет 
а I^ % Ка 2-4 
огу of the formation of soils is chiefly com 
The 2 7 Garden nagement a works of Sir Charles Lyell and other 
LY on н Taning: b an NO. o 
Fruit, Flower, and Kitchen G 
Tilustrated Em 
London. 8vo. 
The author of 4 very useful addition to our garden | « T 
iterature dere states in his e ace, that fir the | their 
arger portion of the. — “he claims n 
bal 
pead 
agement, óc. | 
Man 
man ay A engravings, 8. О. Beeton, | 
Wo 
nated by g 
ese "rocks are су 
‚ Biruetur abo 
Журе ry form 
by their. фр к by 
lb fossiliferous 
ist; has 
| ter 
о 
als per, pu the loose so 
f 100, 
заан fish | ponds 
stru 
the ri 
m given 1 for | more ДУ ишш, landsca 
rarja 
е 
eatment of 
owers, and vegetales tht b f Lares нож 
Мое ча — 
Бе агіо 
ҮШ 
the 
out the year. nt geologist ^ 
ences with а short Historich? sketeli м 
to Pliny. 
ies man's field. orandi days rece: 80), woin „and the great, secret 
end our day the cloud is torn asu der, 
of ahcient nature bon ne 
| :— | climat ate, of Londo. 
at | 
[of f the garden. 
on the ripe. of the glass 
cases shou laced as to combine 
the study of shells— | but t it is in our opinio 
ier 
ана all the. most ЁТ ү, r 
i is сес tly deco pe 
vir i prec 
pm г hygrometric 
rtg its impo X icy ie 
Eos es are ү „аше 
uctirig drains, and an outline о] 
H Lo in which B^ 
atter, wë think, is on too sma 
g ti id " 
а 5 
hi 
LE р: 
e result 
лү Eur 1] 
A Makes e Lepus P S0 lache. 
isla of i 
di st; 
ои юй. y pee 
this die will жы 
