SEERA RS Ber Peo 
a. 
= 
n 
o N  — 
Sp 2 FS & 
Se u e, TES i Me ME a 8 
{P ee Sos o WR E S kt Se R SSS eS SS eS Sf ese am nû 
iii sere i 
JULY 11, 1874] 
NER , 
za To 
GARDE 
CHRONICLE. 
35 
FIG, 7,—VIEW IN THE GROUNDS 
Our business lies not so much with the vill age as 
occupied by 
With the grounds around the P: ieee renee now 
Mr, Thomas Han Placed in a 
` the projecting 
n.c 
onaco is situate, and almost equally 
lovely in i Surroundings, this garden is one of the 
most interesting, from the richness and variety of it 
contents, th be seen in any country. It occupies 
} 
Q 
FE 
OF THE PALAZZO ORENGO, LA 
and Wild eae and yet in UER: Coriaria 
m characteristic plant, and so is 
ax, Aspera whose be ie ed >big or 
ink berries of a 
ntal charac linai Retai, a atid raat 
grow abundantly on the rocks. Convolvulus psa 
| oides is one of their gayest ornam age The er 
flourishes a the walls, spec Moricandia 
om everywhere in the neighbourh ood as 
, but is one of oE 
legan 
um grows here in some pre 3 
ternus, so familiar to ome, abun- 
us h 
i the rode; ; Euphoria 
in particular a little spiney | 
a 
MORTOLA, 
clefts of the rocks close to the sea, where little else 
will 
An admirable selection from these native plants— 
oo wg “9 only “A the judgment with which Pte eo | 
havi ect t also for the faithfulness 
which tiy have deat represented, 7 the interest 
that has been thrown around them— is given in Mr, 
Mogeridge’s S tastos of Ment 
From the nature of the ‘ite it aaa the garden 
is nat i t levels. Moreover, much of 
the gros 
Oli 
