DECEMBER 7, 1861.) THE GARDENERS' анаа: AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 1662 
rance, оп account of its се climate of Lon доп ; but my meaning r is s perceived, ‚ that | | | essay ist, have made a plat atform m of a princely 
c sow. mt | garde n, partiy by precept, partly by drawing; not a 
rs to h it E noticing, that “ nem the breath of flowers [m model, 1 f it; and im this I te 
the runners should be kept cut off. There is a very | is БЕ peer in the air vnum n it comes and goes like | | T vi no cost; but i 4 nothing for great rinces, 
bidh diii 1 3 b it dc ^ 
the ed wes! 
eà e А 
it і the flow d ts which d sweetest ficence, but no vnd to the true pleasure of a 
Eide the plan ME sans i nk m pA" м ч Je the ИЕ biu i Ф Tike ga iie, garden. » From the Builde 
w nd 
becom: Tot e 
The "old sorts of Strawberries known under and to be divided into three parts; a green m i TR ADE MENOR AND 
names of Hautbois and Chili Pines Mein risen entrance, a heath or desert in the going forth, and the| „y. 4 Middlehurst x мае? 
Ananas du Chili) are cultivated in m aen в, but ma in garden in the midst, besides ае ж both yr $ й 
i i ive, and dI like war mar — — of ground be assigne 
ius Маре sect mA th eath four ad four to either side, Home Correspondenc 
of Numbers Е е the the boit English hà He new and 1 to tie m n gar Effects of last Winter in the Botanic e Ozford. 
varieties hav e been introduced ; but owing either to Es gre MEUS -- " QU The one, because | refrained from communicating to you а list of 
or the want of skill i in the culti- | there is Eining more pleasant to the eye than, хта tie айбы in our Garden occasio кес, by the late 
vators, ын a Br Aoii attaining the size and flavour | Grass, kept vA is shorn; the other, because it will the time when so many of your other 
which cause them to be so highly prized elsewhere give you a fi wir alley in n the midst, by t yoa may | не gave in their reports, as if I had done 
- |go im front upon a stately hedge, which is enclose | о I should have had to enumerate hmongst the victims 
— the garden; but because the alley will be and, in | * that severe season almost everything of value which 
LORD BACON ON OLD LONDON GAR — | great heat of the year or day, AE: ought not ur collection contained, belonging to the class of out- 
8| 
| 
the shade in the garden by going in the sun vo pom door xotie irees and shrubs. Happily many uos 
! f Lord orks ; 
A ue little r : ead. "Hie motes connected wit w ith ^ g е gr f p [a 
have a particular in nasmuch as they show the | £749?» to plant a covert alley, en carpenter's work | T 
— st "the "gardens. of the Londoners in the | 20096 12 feet in height, by which you may ps of 
а the garden." Тһе author considers ivt use Oi|as саны pom species ich, xd Bonn of 
ferent coloured earths as but toys, and we are|fiourishing under the ordina conditions, hes the 
"Дне the ear 1507 a sons goti m and at informed, t that “Тһе i arden is best to be a square | climate of this country presents, cannot ecko ше 
* additi 1 as 
ACO) EIE ы 
h 
ra 
heda e; the arches to be upon pillars of mhares i are liable to be cut off whenever, i the cycle of 
i А u las 
hood; nevertheless, it Ma dim me im th T TE carpente ork; and d upper hedge, o T| in in a tan [5 former place situated in one of the 
of Verulam ; Viscou ut St. Alban, and, in the reign of | У wel, * little turnet, "with a belly enough to | mildest districts of England, the latter probably répre- 
ames Chancellor of Engl land, сорав receive of birds; and over every space between | senting pretty fairly the climate of the midland 
jede garden and in he gróunde, which had been із е & arch ther little it will be seen, that whils gh 
newly leid onb апа much improved, in po of round coloured glass, ilt, for the sun to play upon:|expected, Oxford stands very far below the former, 
bility by Bacon's suggestions. Some of the tre — * raised upon & b i ds i respects wi 
which d remain may have pa planted by the Mrs 
of the Hao There is a view, 0 ate e 
f Charles IL, i i 
TO 
have been very beautiful ^ "There was then ee ^ i 
nothin hedge is to he ris v ina var gn; but t-lout а tim my own, the agreement 
E oru ur [кее фе бесе Mw eem wy C" form it is cast in, it must not be 2 heavy | between the two might Tte ыш even greater, for 
the И к. Queen Elizabeth, “and for some time | 9 т full of work, “ wherela I, for my part, do not like | during the spring 1 should have set down several as 
e gardens surro ле ҮЧ York House, and images vá yad in Ju uniper or other А Tik stuff: diy dead which. are now seen to be livi ving. | As mig ht. be 
most of the residence of the nobility which stood along | be for childre | 
the Strand ; and some Hy of the siens and beau 23 | some pretty pyramids, те nifers. All the Сур — in the tala namely sem- 
of E «pha learnt from the f geometrical forms without "^ еен ог gr pervirens torulosa, осатра, Tou vnefortài, funebris, 
was ^ ents, and a mount to be " 
ollowing account, and fini 
ы b and some fine | 
“God Almight, =ж? etched у. 
po of human pleasures. |, cong І e "hut pools mas ай, e Ше ре rb too, most be 
i ; and | capable o! 
t Tofreshment to ake the garden un е and full of fies and very fime specimens of w Z 
E збана intend to be of two matures ua "a, bein in this 
скі 1 - і spouteth water, t e other a air Е; wi us v i leaves a 
нанду ЕЕЕ ач еа vot receipt of water of аи 30 or 40 feet square, but|been ошу browned, but even than Tamwort 
e grea ево Ede without fish, slime, or mud. For the first the orna- eld ihey ar e only stated к have been omo 
2 3 of images, gilt, o or of dnd iic -— in use, e On the other hand, the two allied species, 
matte: 
ma 
as it never stay either ч the rindan ч їп the cistern; | are recovering. wunipers in general perish 
he i 
ver 
m 
take sucl á У red, or the like, or gather any моме ог беке. chinensis, virginiana. 1 mS 
Bays, Juni Pins woe Cm p d Duc Holly, Ivy, | faction: — s Qa it is to be cleansed every day by hrs а е io b e killed, but it i pushing 
the hand; also some steps н Ф — it, and some fine „Out of our collection of Pinuses, P. excelsa and 
pavement "about it, do well. the other kind hardy he t 
eet | fountain, which we may aki a batbing ere it may а but. Crpfomeris MM which was killed 
admit icum SUIV ind uU uty, гы we will|with us, appears to have survived tbe winter at the 
of J. ы not troub ves e bottom finely | latter place. Others, viz., р insignis, macro- ^ 
Los n prn Ды e n = ra paved, and with images; the” sides likewise; and |сагра, and pinea were killed, or at least во far injured 
id th 2 ip, | Wit 11 [4 ings | ast i 1. At Helston it would appear that 
e grey; Primroses, аак the wd Tulip, у fine rai above stood the winter little, if at all, 
у 
ris, Tor ot lustre ustre, ^ compassed a also "ro rails of low | most of the dia 
ее 1 statues ; ut the main point e same which we injured, but at Tamworth they wer ру g- 
hich are th ^ r- sk; зе НЕ early ГЫ e Daisy, mentioned in the former kind. of fountain, which is|tonia gigantea appears to be hardy in all localities in 
ti Pod > | that the water be in perpetual motion, fed by a water д country. ОЁ the Oak tribe, iiir. was killed, ilex 
— than the „pool, and deli ivered into it by fair | severely injured, but now recovering. — Even the 
spouts, 
1e Corneli in blossom, S z 
llow ae dab Де ue ] Swee Briar In Api P 2 y | i variety of the Q. Cerris suffered severely, 
tock gillidower. the Cowslip, Flower-de-luces, and Lies | equality of bores, that it stay little; and for fi ЧЕ Ti it m c ag uw of the  tender- 
"all natures : R mary flowers, the Tulip the double | devices of arching ved without spilling g, and iakin |ness belonging to by the pollen 
eony, wea pale Daffodil, the French i Honey 'suckle, the 1t rise in several forms (of feathers, drinking- Diis, | of which it is tho аш, E lare been produced. It 
бүтө: {тее in blossom, ti е Damascene and Plum roði | сапорїе 8, and the lik 2. they be pretty „things to Took | | has owore since recovered a iss welL The 
in blossom, the White Th leaf, gentis fln but nothing Ju nigra, digessit E nut, was also ve 
May a : z фу. ч Tte e ЗИ For FS heath, or am \ part of the plot, it is desirable копу dam: "o; n d variabilis 
Е kinds the 
Тет онд 
ҥкошашев к зяшщв 
Ф Е 
а t € зи ма а natural | p 
to have 
: ur mi го 
loss, — { "Marigold, Flos Afri- | Тее in cut to i Ро 
nus, Cherry tree in fruit, Aoi ea ТОЕ Rasps; [588 нса, and idis "nd Vine amongst; and ously; the Laurustinus equally so, and the Bay 
Vin o flowers, гӯён а ower, the swee t Satyri the ground set with Violets, Strawberrits, and other | Laurel, Laurus nobilis, most of 
vits the "Ris flower ; Н ym Con. | plants suitable for such а situati ide 
to 
e shar ksian Rose see! 
M dis ERI p x E tting out 
pu 1а irees, and set with flowers, “but thin арре Ф althoug! * ew are now putting 
8 oa solum т come Grapes, 308, sparingly, lest they deceive the tres. ТЫ AL UM. joie in DS гаан 
Apples, сетери ОЁ ай es ved Melocotones, | might also е some mounts, of a нари leaving the кее, ndi a ; ә m сое ты ^ 
Nectarines, Memes Wardens, Quinces. In October | Wall of the enclosure breast high, to look abroad into | unedo CE "n ere аз wel a A trenities 
and the beginning of November come сни» | the м пе А му at the extremities. 
v or ийбей. to come late ^| For aviaries Bacon does —— 
Es Өү ed, d have < Ат 8 wil n ecover the effects of 
ie tad mb ikes Tan patina wee tor dh planta an buds pr con may Hed pum utis, бода it has "made some feeble Wai 
SES penon ot meh roes ырш in Pig Tree Court ia | mo re scope and natural nestling, and tbat no foulness w out leaves. Ав it w ee of old 
om appear on the floors of the aviaries ; and “ s0,” says the ^ p берса йай: "ot the past winter is 
з 
