220 LANDSCAPE GARDENING. 



And watcli the tiny petals a3 they fall, 

 Circling and winnowing down our sylvan hall." 



The berries, or haws, as they are called, have a very rich 

 and coral-like look when the tree, standing alone, is com- 

 pletely covered with them in October. There are some 

 elegant varieties of this species, which highly deserve cul- 

 tivation for the beauty of their flowers and foliage. Among 

 them we may particularly notice the Double White, with 

 beautiful blossoms like small white roses ; the Pink and the 

 Scarlet flowering, both single and double, and the Varie- 

 gated-leaved hawthorn, all elegant trees ; as well as the 

 Weeping hawthorn, a rarer variety, with pendulous 

 branches. 



The Hawthorn is most agreeable to the eye in compo- 

 sition when it forms the undergrowth or thicket, peeping 

 out in all its green freshness, gay blossoms, or bright fruit, 

 from beneath and between the groups and masses of trees ; 

 where, mingled with the hazel, etc., it gives a pleasing 

 intricacy to the whole mass of foliage. But the difierent 

 species display themselves to most advantage, and grow 

 also to a finer size, when planted singly, or two or three 

 together, along the walks leading through the different parts 

 of the pleasure-ground or shrubbery. 



The Magnolia Tree. Magnolia. 



Nat. Ord. Magnoliaoeaj. Lin. Syst. Polyandria, Polygynio. 



The North American trees composing the genus Magnolia 

 are certainly among the most splendid productions of the 

 forests in any tenaperate climate ; and when we consider 



