568 



INDEX. 



Chiswick, 506.— Mr Angerstcin's, 

 51!. 

 Croon-market of Ostend, 20. — of 



Bruges. ?3. — Ghent, 37 Antwerp, 



j';?. _ Rotterdam, 128. — Leyden, 

 1 62.— Amsterdam, 219.— Brussels, 

 273. and 293 — of Paris, 346— 

 Murche des Innocens in August 

 18tlj 489. 



Haarlem, 167.— statue of Coster, 168. 

 — Van Eedeh's bloemistries, 169.-- 

 palace garden, 171 — Kreps's bloe- 

 miotry, 175., and nurseries, 200. — 

 Elderling's bulb-nursery, 181. — 

 Voorhelm's garden, 187. — Van Ma- 

 rum's museum, 188. — Teylerian 

 Museum, 189.— Schneevogt's bloe- 

 mistry, 190 — cathedral, 206. — pri- 

 vate gardens, 210. 



Hague, The, 142— the Mall, 143 



House in the Wood, 144.— Scheve- 

 Hns, 146.- fish- market, 149.— the 

 HorT, ib. 



Hampton Court gardens, 507. 



Hand-glasses, commodious structure 

 of, at Jardin du Roi, 395. 



Haricots at Bruges, 24.— at Paris, 318. 



— at Montreuil, 434. 



Hedges kept ready-formed in Dutch 

 nurseries, 204 — examples of dilF e . 

 rent, in .Jardin des plantes, 385. 

 of furze in Sussex, 501 . 



Hemp, cultivated near Ghent, 85. — 

 near Utrecht, 259. 



Herboriatf of Paris, 385. 



Her\y, M. director of Luxembourg 

 nurseries, 470. —given lectures there, 

 17 I, 



Hoe, large, with wheels, at Brussels, 

 297.— at Paris, 492. — large, with- 

 out wheels, at Enghien, 327. 



Holland, appearance of the very low 



country from Delft steeple, 141. — 



orrof, 1x5. and 262.— subsoil, 187. 



— general aspect of, 261. 

 Hop-plantations in Kent, 12. — near 



Brat* I . 31 5. 

 I ilia at Haarlem, J 71. 



li »mere'l villa near Ghent. 70. 

 Horticultural works recommended, — 



G ritora, I !>.'}. Dutch, 201.— 



Pre* I.. U & 



Hot-houses, structure of, at Bruges, 

 28,— at Botanic Garden of Ghent, 

 42. — at Moelcmeester's, near Ghent, 

 57.— at Oeydonck, 61.— Madame 

 Vilain-Quatorze's, 75. and 80. — near 

 Antwerp, 104. — Amsterdam, 215. 



— Utrecht, 243 at Due d'Arem- 



berg's, Enghien, 325. — at Jardin du 



Roi, 350.— at Malmaison, 399 at 



Boursault's, 453. — Rouen, 495. — at 

 Kensington, 505. — Chiswick, 506. 

 — Loddiges at Hackney, 514, 



Hougomont, 287,— garden at, 289. 



House in the Wood, 144. 



Hyacinths, culture of, 176.— essay on, 

 by Kreps, 521. 



Hydrangea, blue, 122. 



r heifiJ 



Institute of France, 391. 



Invalids, Hospital of, at Paris, 420. 



Jardin des Plantes at Paris, 350. — 

 large hot-house or Serre Buffon, 35l. 

 — large greenhouse, ib.— Botanical 

 cabinet, 353. — specimens of soils, 

 &c. 384. — Medical arrangement, 

 385— agricultural school, &q. 386. 

 — garden of Ceres and Chloris, 387. 

 — of Pomona, 388. — aquatic plants, 

 389. — collection of shrubs, ib. — gar- 

 den of Fiora, 390. — botanical school, 

 ib. — nursery quarters, 392 — general 

 Jussieuan arrangement, 393. — ar- 

 boretum on the buttes, 441. — dry- 

 stove, 443, — bank for alpine plants, 

 ib.— list of fruit-trees in 1802, 542. 



Jargonelle, English, its names on the 

 Continent, 473. 



Jews of Amsterdam, 218. 



Judas-trees, at Leyden, 159.— at Ver- 

 sailles, 410. 



Jujube-tree, 476. 



Jussieu, Professor, 445, 



Justice's " Scots Gardener's Director," 

 199.— extracts from, 530. 



Jut-pear (or Yut-pear) recommended 

 at Rotterdam, 127. — excellent at 

 Breda, 266. 



Kampcn, Van, treatise on hyacinths, 



536. 

 Kensington Gardens, 505. 

 Kent, agriculture and general aspect 



of, II. 



