Siu Pana SPeEeS eae E 
ro 
Ere: 
i 
TH 
E GARDENERY’ 
CHRONICLE. 
195 
Mancn 13, 1858.] 
ium tra, Cyrtop sera, Saccolabium, 
Cam: ag ee Scheenorchis, 
Dipl omeris, and 
ereoe ar 
Podo- 
Sar- 
tonia, Micropera, Uncifera, Angraecum, 
ia “resin, Chilochista, Aceras, 
ere 
wit fos ut bec coming in some teln imbued with their 
o| Te 
pim which iin ose. betokened the most complete 
nezle ct. It w was only with extreme difficulty that one 
outlines of ancient peri which had 
many groups sof fa 
ath 
nake ed walls and adorr the e cracked 
ceilings, 
distributed over a ghi of fram gf bene 
ideas 
m 
ee ees 3 
nature of the animals themselves. The = kingdom , 
has ba een 
divisions correspon 
i 
i The loft win- 
lows, with their rotten frame A d sèd would 
3 
lon, 
ites, inluing z flower, 4 inch; the whole e plant 
he flow rs having no other colour 
and if it is pirr io a aequir wf op mea ns of piyas, and 
spirit, y E iae “ah would it not be 
was with pamen _ The 
Ber ith wer 
+ wid others that ‘the e general sity oft on ne Leg: 
Lythr: 
Sag minds of pe if they 
them ee iad coated en Ans op which ‘still 
| remained with so thick a 
| lost all Deane and iet o 
pla tes of aA: gl aa seal 
, an 
vas nowhere 
in suc ch a mann 
nine, but they aaa: hte “of but one or two 
pecies, some of en Sra mamama own. It p 
I 
3 
} 
I 
1 
mmber of genera 
be 
s 
© 
f 
ss 
the n Islands, Ceylon, 
the Indian Archipelago to tropical Australia, mig 
va in ca oe am idation into natural acre 
s on the sein genera, thea 
sent 
igat 
- io stimei in ‘taking posses: 
on of ot our new quarters, The 
a 
aay ei nen find constant can gmp even in our | panes is SE were me) and where they had been 
dai this etn ei 
lives? Considered fro; of vi 
ew, broken the sag me 
eal is no science that can replace 
sciences gen nerally, and analogy more aE 
t be sented to 
00 pe ed pre 
the pa of the public But o 
fact be given why some branches ofn 
should not be introduced into the 
f q 
can in | 
“Would not the habits thus eae upon 
reason 
history 
mha £11 e 
1 
ieren òE the |-0 
ructo 
args which might ‘oth erwise hay 
So much for the aang of the 
Sickan M, Noble 
ira have dready spoken favourably of the translation 
i e volumes; but we e et to add that a navies 
pages. are occupied by interesting and ofte 
Suc! 
g. Ẹ what he saw 
T 1T 2 net +} a ae 
gave ips their technical distinctions and a synopsis of the 
4. 
> the Hookerian Herbarium,” by F. Currey, 
This extensive: genus of 
— cre in the works of ‘Fries published | 35 years 
_ | sion renders the book almost useless i to naturalists, a fait 
te. ae 
P The ancients characterised the land as their Al 
ot how much m worthy do es the ocean 
usually divided. into 
al groups; 
n pral d by a common stroma, and t 
been 
othe ar saarna ? in which the | 
the 
™, be 
a 
of H parna reading”? which are perpetual] y flowing 
t: hae 1 
a of sore — 
and publisher have an rt ra 
th 
tith 
the e seod, ara rei or turn wer soil 
| before he can gather in the graim that is to n ee 
a os a es oon ban is to gate his thirst. 
l be 
a ye ” in mich the o perithecia are “RS! e = e 
hs, nay 
vape Er pS of 1344] 1 
ing to this family, and the poa now read was ark 
result oe noray of the ser collection | with this 
compense n he 
| vs is abont ass reap ra poet of his toil; a » blas t of geri 
utt pes 
se 
complain. ter a Campbell sa 
r consider an index ‘to be t 
ge right; and moreover to pom 
for his offence, to a pecuniary: penal lty.” 
— l-storm, comes erly to destroy his: ho) 
ean demands no such prot 
wW, sofar as r 
of the family, upwards of 2 300 species being deserted 
illustrated b, Mr. STE urrey m 
rticularly to be attended ve 
d dleseribing aps _Frectietion of 
towing :—the 
and vi 
ar | more “nourishing than oysters; beside: 
gives birth = no such painful di 
tide falls!—to work! to work! both young and old! 
he abour pro ed t 
hours, | 
t 
enuses, which although 
The aw ‘ot the 
as stated to be a variable character and not to be 
Notices of of Books. 
ranslated by Miss Ot 
o| ki 
= mpts to esca 
tes tobianus et 
high esteem, char’ anes, his is 
2 e a to 
m 
Shi fish which is held in 
as easily ets as the shell- es fom 
hide itself owp an sand, wh abont 
with marvellous me je on young 
the 
tion. Life is not gh to b d in hunt 
ing after matters whieh fone 
place his is hand upon in we should ime to 
ae tity ‘atcompdod ribo s raare iin long she would 
lf be in e the author’s very curious 
of Lern 
eas 
A: Dictionary of Trade Products; Commercial, Manu- 
eae and Technicat Terms, with a@ Definition of 
the Moneys, Weights, and Measures of = aoe tries 
res to the British Standard. Ey P. L. Sim- 
onds. Small 12mo, in closely eb 
O. 
dò uble columns; 
If the contents of this 
3 
| 
E 
ma 
girts are Piatt Sheir ‘pocket ike ph into 
hay ave been left by t retiring: t e 
ks 
armed with a 
sticks terminating in a sti 
` | below th pene hollows of the rock, 
im 
rong hook, scrape the sand 
and from requ 
| Such saris 
sts us that rar eA do corr: 
of Mr. Simmon 
nformation it contains. 
aire the i 
TSR ER SE 
Jy | an ything but commo: 
place. Aam, 
Aba, Abab, aaa pene Abed, A ain _Abaesum, 
Abaiser, eee andonm 
Abassi, Abatement, Abattoir, piers 
di: bt e threads of the 
For itself, For two or 
activity, whilst 
th to seek its a daily food ; 
he tide 
+ 
> 
+ 4 + 
The reputation en 
joyed by M. de Quatrefa es 
naturalist the highest onder Speen : 
| and all hasten homeward, certain that the sea. will re- 
a free from typographical errors 
Animal mie rg for Schools. Lardner. 
8vo, with 190 illustrations. Walton & Maberly: 
That animal physiology isa subject fit rs teaching in 
schools may be doubted; _that it should be taught to 
rade ne 
m them. 
ents, and gi no small wi 
ia like > the following, > which we ae ad 
and that i ina aae hours they may come forth again to 
P 
hich has needed no season of planting 
“gut be supposed ai roe sa oo atre- 
persons form 
ay many and of oa rl 
fg special si ts: of his voyage. 
His account a his lodging in ‘Selly ahaw that very 
| different matters could oeeupy his pen. Having landed 
at a wi ell’ 
T 
ii 
$ 
i a certain number of atoh in rela- 
its of animals—a spet of information 
it is no doubt. very interesti ing i in Sae 
g. 
g 
F 
E 
T 
if 
88 reed ei 
faon of ha aon 
been 
more ayaba mable. 
Against its intreduction into 
ladies’ schools we mos ly as 
m of Aikin’s Arts of Life has appeared 
diti 
| in the form of a = sab little volume (Longmans), well. 
edited by his daughter, with. numerous: corrections and 
additi 
„Trade Lists. — Received the following :—Lawsows 
comm 
ori igimally’ constructed oor serve the heer pe of 
affordin ommodation m to the lord 
U| aus rare de 
lowi 
very = wy, re — Supplement 
ris, the riehest 
Filmori 
and best of all French | td "S$ Williams's 
“useless in 
a practical p point of vi of the island ; st - many years past the 
if cocnying t the serious nage of a a ei fish have forsaken their old akd the pro roprietors 3 erie te of F towen Vegetable, and Agricul- 
mieh aad. `s 18 @ singular e ut it. is one | have become absentees. The = ala is therefore n saat EOR eli ea 3) > 
2 admits fe explanati a ppropriated to th sie gs the tine ae 
Satory ; hands some little book on praen of our visit, wasa poor Dominican, 1, who, ‘or forty-one Garden . 
a fallen, but ee: most of e tari, or less than twenty francs a apie celebrated SE OF Port E coy ae New 
fe ene ideas of tl every Sunday, confessed the dying, revenge: the | ZEALAND. ae an vedi in = 3d, 
Ean are not corr emi reap tnin service of marriage, and baptized the sa born. 1857, aida dak the un shining y very Di caga and 
Dyan Decesarily ected by by a any ulterior teaching eter his poverty, this who gy upon the Tittle inant town which 
FX to judge op poeome thoroughly ed. And | loved animals of every kind, m otic oea the Rio tek teed lao fe very 
i “Ming: gy eee? our hilt. by the caliedkaas of stori a few chickens, three cats, and two dogs ànd mean piles! ; bu ‘ies Tae s fbb om on 
Bie: co „is very much the same | I asked Sirait pene it was possible that he could | wooden cottages I soon fonnd t mistake and that 
A — ihe ote judgment. of piti Sa ha poe See ures; their starved ce grin cer- | the town was more extensive than I anticipated ; 
ae ae a juggler, or of astronom warra ted. a ge on the subject. The dogs|in addition, some of the hi little gardens I 
rd {pe P teleseope in the open Salk ly rene in a nconceivabiy meagre condition, | ever saw in imitation of those in org mother 
mountains in the moon.” and looked like anim may sgt: to their sim- and fall of all sorts of English fi After ber 
known. to us at the pr plest forms. It eel “a i “the poo up in one of the “wooden walle » of Old Eng- 
thonsands, and the grown up in a state of continu: kih d for 113 days I leave any one to fancy themselves 
able to ole tony “The Padre Antonino, who, with the exception of his | in my onee more ar able ke set my 
aa = us thr pets, was the sole ocen: the ancient residenee of | feet on terra t and view the flowers of “home, 
a the “counts of Ca , was able, without incommoding | sweet home. 
n which are based upon ee himself, to Sic ae tht ae Cres ie iM The mountain side on which Lyttleton is situated is 
