GAR 
This floating gar = {cene is highly curious and interefting, 
fo as to form a pla pas Le recreation and amufement. 
Garpeun-Frame, a of frame employed in gardens 
for forcing different a ee cee &ke. See Frame, 
and Forc 6-Fram Nee. 
ner, on arches, y} e- 
bachtaees king : Baby oe with the view of gratifying 
his wife Amy€tis, who was the daughter of Aftyages, king 
of Media. ‘Thefe gardens are fuppofed by Quintus Curtius 
to have been equal in height to the city, which is fifty feet. 
They contained on every fide a {quare of four hundred feet, 
over which was placed a 
en two rows . iis pte 
cemented together with kee and the 
breads, 
root a s, plants 
and flowers of various kinds were aed pee thee 
gardens. 
The upper terrace was likewi e ia with an hata 
er engine, by which the water was dra up fro e river, 
in _cifperfed over the whole of the pre when necef- 
far 
Sou have condemned thefe gardens as unnatural, while 
others have confidered them as deferving of a portion of 
Yowed them 
rural character ab See PENSILES 
cep eae ia pas diferent forts of cools that are 
employed in perf of gardening. Thefe are 
of feveral ‘nds, as “pad, hoes, rakes, fhears, ae 
.faws, rollers, &c. as may be feen in the annexed plate 
' Garven-Roller, nici as is made ufe of in gardening. 
They are of two d and iron; the for 
the moft ufeful oe ee ene the latter dere ere is : 
be rolled down. See RoLLER. 
Garven Sheds, fuch as ave neceflary in gardens for con; 
frames, glafs-fathes, and 
‘they may be made to hold cn furnaces, fuel, and many 
DEN Traps, a fort of ftrong iron traps of confider- 
able: ce conftructed for the purpofe of being placed in 
fuch garden grounds as are much wee to the Eoftomal 
Pape 18 of robbers. 
ite co The form in 
which they are made is, a general, eee: that of the 
common rat-trap. Wherever ae of this kind are fet, it 
is neccflary to have a notice fixe oe 
yedi in gardens 
See VER- 
p! 
for taking mice and other kinds of ca ia, Bie. 
IN. 
GAR 
GARDEN Bay, in Gengraphy, a bay on the eaft coaft or” 
Neu N. 1 42'. W. long. 54° 50’ 
GARDEN Tftands, a cddiber of _ Peete in the Pacific: 
ocean. N. lat. 21° 45. W. lon 
GanpEN ful in ais 
GARD a a \geieas hac 
ment 3 a 
See “Hsin hortenfis. 
eare and man 
It is only in this way that he can be fully ne os for a elie 
plo yment. It is very feldom, SS 
gardener is mu ch informed in refpe oo. bee ae 
of the art. The bufinefs of the ee requires a con- 
tinual care and attention to the different objeCts, and of courfe 
much iteadinefs in the perfon wuo has the sear of it. 
G ARDENTA, in Botany, fo named by Ellis in honour 
of his able friend ie cor aac, Dr. yeeros re —_ 
F.R.S.: fee that article. n. Gen. 116. Schre 
Willd. Sp. lh Vv. Is re un 
Kew. y Mart. Mill. Dia. V. 2. 
en. ae. 
143. 
Amer. 
9 
ourn t. 43 37. — aie 
can 111. Jul 199. 
t.8.f4. Lamarck aoe t. ae Maifenda Jac 4. 
en 
five, — or lefs 5) 
m of one are funnel- thaped s tube eis. 
ioneee a. die calyx ; limb {preading, in hve, rarely more, 
deep, oblique or contorted fegments. Stam. Filamen ts none s 
anthers five, linear, ftriated, feffile in the mouth of the 
aa half as long as the limb. iff. Germen inferior ; 
flightly club-thaped, as long as the igma 
obovate, obtufe, lobed or furrowed. 
of from one to four cian Seeds imbedded in pulp, nume- 
rous, deprefled, imbricated. 
aff. Ch. Corolla abe one petal, contorted. Berry coate or 
oe with many fecds. gma lobed. e 
in the mouth of the tube. Segme 
is five; but in fome fpecies it varies, as Thunberg remarks, 
as far as nine in the me ‘as likewife in the divifions of 
the corolla and calyx. efile seis and the twifted 
or vertical fegments of the ae x, form the moit eae 
characters, Reedy the firft. Linneus, from the 
and direCtion of the fegments of the corolla, particulary in 
his original {pecies, eefeered this genus to the natural order 
of Contorte, but Jufiieu more properly reduces it to his own 
a 
means incli ned to prefer it, independently of the great in- 
convenience ef fuch a change; nor are we fure that Randia 
cought not to remain by tele, on account of the feemingly 
horizontal calyx-teet 
- The original idea and characters of this genus, are taken 
froi 
