496 
THE GARDENERS 
CHRONICLE. 
[OCTOBER 16, 1875, 
beg of ach 
denn consisting of 
с 
berie (whereo 
мава) at T frst ч, апа RN чув red, and 
som asant oote omething 
боса іе ; from ы hich hice or fois dus slack a 
few: uch is Ge ipe description 
of our r Cloulbery, ta- 
о 
pos rathe of his descriptions, he by some 
versight he mera ‘describes the pla nt further on in his 
аав der the , Cloudberries," 
accompanied with a totally different т In his 
time the plant appears to have n known only as 
growing ‘‘upon the tops of two «e h mountains 
(among the mossie places), one in Yorkshire, called 
e, called Pendl 
n 
a curions gen! 
Master Heskett, to whom ed үр was indebted for 
sod eal of i it British plants. The 
description above cited applies in some respects to the 
Stone Bramble (R. — better и to the present 
notably as regards th which in the 
berry are white, large, 
m oudberry is sufficiently explained 
above to Knot Е 2326 
ated in rhe knotty jo oints of th 
at least as probable that it refers to the habitat ofi the 
g sometimes employed in the North 
Cnout berr 
= 
© 
ЕТЕ 
21 
a 
eating of its fruit. Ка. or Кпо 
of its names, may likely enough. be connected with the 
lo-Sax ce me parts of Scot- 
i and Queensberry - 
to owe its name to this cir 
"The cog yar ti is entitled to some consideration 
= a thee perha most done ant indi зма fruit 
he northern arts of E jx amusing 
read before the Caledonian 
Ea had for its object the advocacy of the Cokivation 
w 
of the plant, im a vie 
w to the in 
fruit into the m i 
Noth 
** Antwe ” having apparently been 
thought too m sable atical to be worth attempting. 
It is in Sweden an Non that the Cloud is 
in ial. esteem, The fruits are preserved i 
sugar in various ways; with cream and 
sugar they · ‘sufficiently tempting dish, and 
which i E 5 n of by travellers in Norway con- 
with 
siderabl Корсо val Mr. J. S. Shepard, in his 
pleasing 1 vamos ook T ES this country which appeared 
two e yea says, ‘бо i 
inicis 5 die are The Clo udbe 
a special act of the Storthing devoted to them, which, 
amongst ea Hes forbids any one other than 
the proprietor to ga! more tha t on the 
spot" where they 
Dee: 
In some parts of эчи чечен, the —— i is very 
t, and is eaten by the nati th fi ue 
=E ia his A Nort гч 
AUS “ whole 
' and I a 
wers, eized 
a long time dangetously 
but бна freely nti Следна blended with 
e 
after eating 
hese the northern vens of s Gulf 
of Bothnia, roc Seg about Tornea, the fruits are 
commonly collected ren = in the form к а бъ 
to Stockholm, gi hey are used as a sauce for 
meat, ming soup, . Casks are also sent to 
that city filled with 1 en Me of this Bramble, from 
which vinegar is made. nzeus mentions that the 
fruit bruised and redeem with. the milk of the reindeer 
dish. 
Fe eet S macies 
species 
insufficient, | 
R me an especial favourite with Linnzeus, who tells 
at he had often been refreshed wit E the nectar of 
in E and describes it in full a 
gratitude to e and i ita a to neis hon in equal 
esteem amo magnates” of Norlandia, who 
were accus ar ioni ng to the same author 
obta in hio the berries iiid wine a 
for t own use, m p uM 
eo friends, a pretty Y 
Maced petals in s ira арта 
he 
emt 
л 
a 
n 
о 
un 
a 
o 
a] 
09 
e 
EB 
mp 
р 
time; t 
X 
berry ; and hav 
jam decina та them whic 
country, we have no hesitation in saying that it is 
highly to he cien de B. M. 
PLANTING CEMETERIES AND 
CHURCHYARDS, 
THE fall of the leaf at this time naturally reminds 
us that all the we P field and forest have added an- 
other ring of w o their stems, and that another 
fleece of leaves ча à a shorn from their twigs ; for 
the baldness of winter is approaching, and the summer 
foliage will soon be scattered to the winds. 
other Чез! їп E are gradual, but the fall of the 
leaf is a swift process, and frequently with little warn- 
ing. The fall of ма leaf is the beginning of the 
paang season, "i therefore, this is giving op 
rning class of trees that not only cas 
their leaves at ity жоры of winter, but when the 5 
have done so disclose to view a poly ре phare 
ter, a veritable hanging down of t if so 
thing had weighed heavily on them ge given them 
look of sorrow. The Weeping Willows, Weeping 
Elms, and Weeping Ash trees are of this character, 
and when planted by themselves are all too sad-look- 
e 
the Weeping Ash, &c., for a EA 
character being changed ^ look like hes weeping, 
or nearly as the poet 
EU SÉ теч зи = unalterable mien.” 
t eightee 
about 
species a rer mrt aem peeping s tees iion Ш 
deciduous, d эы ves 
H im 
e-shaped trees that belon 
e de rug as if by birthright : these = the upright 
Jusipes and the Cypress trees, and the Yew in all its 
„Те Savins, too, must ** have edd саца сонча. н 
eeping plants w with heads reclined ; 
the í Cotoneasters, creeping low a and laden. with heit 
perio I 
flowe t 
seem not at ae in Lemon The ved oneasters are 
sometimes worked on tall stocks of the same natural 
d sg nd make ir little PAPAE 
requiring small space ; and, being of slow 
thus pom. he require mane years to ant to anything 
like a used a ock for 
plants of is es visis per Men itself, is us a 
lot of toy нес! that never require much room and are 
ved; these are useful am 
z 
num scarcel 
remark that the Ro ry ѕ bape—dwarf, ураза 
- — climbing always 5 welcome, а nd is n 
opening buds, full biemans 
final fall, are all a^ could be 
28 
wished for in a place 
f sepulture, where it -is À quim of the buddin 
babe, the rosy manh he pale decline of old 
age, all >= me rred and m bee et among the dead, 
The ent озна чн p clipping Yew trees into 
fanciful Ыр, however quaint and objectionable in 
pleasure — à is perfectly at home in the ceme- 
or a ma venue of Ye 
once entered, what m 
clipped to the form da ac 
а trangle—for [ have seen in Cheshire 
a peacock cut in Yew iiec cones, plain 
notched, у the triple cro 
and Loudon tells 
of a churchyard Yew clip Ы "represent то i 
that w . Peter of his s ” and MM. an 
inscripti y cut in stone to the following effect 
«This is a con w ho gapes to crow it : 
world is mine and all below it.” 
I mention this to show that I am not obtruding a 
but a Savins, especially on a rising bank, is 
s sight mot to be forgotten. 2 have - good 
examples of this in gardens in two or three i 
only, and the rn was grand, dating not for a a 
or half a cen 
peas trees ands 
imely warnin gi’ 
The ra vay officials 
occupy the permanent A for e 
ground to i ake way 
whether long or short, is 
ke - oi 
` А very old 
if; a нге а m before Christmas, yo 
if you waited till after that es ty 
pe the 
d high wages - 
at the great іще 
provements сап be : bwi ae as been 
laughing-stock to his neighbours for buying his 
Daisies and Primroses in b to plant in his front 
garden, with a tuft of wet grass by wa roots; ће 
produces immediate t, but it is not lasting, for 
the flowers, when he bought them, bee н: , but the 
аА were wisely hid then, as they form part of 
the bargain, and it would be gross е to 
bite that they were there : such blunders should act 
ed. 
sies a are never awanting, onl 
the poet has wisely praised them, for they fleck the 
rass : ir flowers upo d me 
grave; and the Pansy— better termed Heartsease in 
case—frequ ery £s in an appearance ; but of all 
flowers that grow to adorn the beds аа bordel of a 
cou 
and flowers, ma 
of the “ SN of the blessed." Опе is gl 
s 
that art 
ed in y ape es, but hey have not th 
or 
741: HESS 
in good seasonable time, et get a small pittance ‹ 
==. earth to start in ; - а though their beauties ar 
literally but for a day, yet they flower so y thi 
we do not vi their (Re je their flowers only ор 
ce IR n cemeteries, where little else cou 
with Rock 
r th 
twigs and finely cu 
weeps 
were saluting the earth uad h.: ich it rose. 
I have ertain plants here in o to 
named c шы 
, ut le Tana 
confine! the planting of a cemetery to these only, whe 
series. Only let our cemeteries wal our E 
public — and Lam content ; and let a good pr 
ical to su 
All that can be done for our heroes is te 
gi place our affections, and a grave - 
St. Paul's cathedral or in Westminster Abbey, w 
ades. sadly out of 
Б е Teo. 
ON THE WAY TO HOLLAND 
iy bled Se КА | 
de Kerchove's winter garden. Before resumi 
onward jo urney we will linger a few hours, in July, i 
Ghent, to skim the last-risen cream a for town hi 
to mways ins a 
sant means of taking an evening glide about the pla 
And some such assistance is 
mo f 
bec that 
building, like the Palais de Justice or 
Ville, is quite a relief, By 
