14 



HISTORY OF GARDENING. 



Part I. 



gardens which became insensibly embellished with the many productions which were 

 poured into them from Greece, Asia, and Africa. 



52. The fruits cultivated by the Rommis, in the summit of their j)owerf are described by 

 Pliny (lib. xv.), and with the exception of the orange and pine- apple, gooseberry, cur- 

 rantj and raspberry, include almost all those now in culture in Europe. 



Of kernel fi-uits they had, apples, twenty-two sorts at least : They had rovmd berried and long-berried sorts, one so long that 

 sweet apples {melimala) for eating, and others for cookerj'. They it was called dactylijes, tlie grapes being like the fijigers on the 

 had one sort without kernels. Of pears, they had thirty-six hand. Martial speaks favorably of the hard-skinned grape for 



kinds, both summer and winter fruit, melting and hard ; some eating. Of Jigs, they had many sorts, black and white, large 



wera called libralia : we have our pound peeu-. Of quinces, and small ; one as large as a pear, another no larger than an 



they had three sorts, one was called chrysometa, ft-om its yeUow oUve. Of mulberries, they had two kuids of the black sort, a 



flesh ; they boiled them with honey, as we mate marmalade. larger and smaller. Pliny speaks also of a mulberry growing 



Of services, they had the apple-shaped, the pear-shaped, and a on a briar ; but whether tliis means the raspberrv, or the 



small kind, probably the same as we gather w^ild. Oi medlars, common brambleberrj-, does not appear. Straivberrics'ihey iia.A, 



two sorts, larger and smaller. - but do not appear to have prized : the climate is too warm to 



Of stone fruits, they had peaches, four sorts, including nec- produce this truit in perfection, unless on the hUls. 



tarines, apricots, almonds. Of plums, they had a multiplicity Of njiis they had hazel-nuts and hlberds, which thev roasted; 



of sorts, black, white, and variegated; one sort was called beech, rnast, pi.staria, &c. Of walnuts they had soft-shelled 



asinia, from its cheapness ; another damascena, which bad and hard-ahelled, as we have. In the golden age, w hen n^en 



much stone and little flesh : we may conclude it was what we lived upon acorns, the gods lived upon wahiuts ; hence the 



now call prmies. Of cherries, they had eight kinds, a red one, name Jiigluns, Jvvis Glaus. Of chestnuts, they had six sorts, 



a black one, a kind so tender as scarcely to bear any carriage, some more easily separated from tlie skin than "others, and one 



a hard-fleshed one (duracina), Uke our Bigarreau, a small one with a red skin ; they roasted them as we do. 



■with bitterish flavor (laurea), like our little wild black, also a Of leguminous fruits, the carob bean, ceratonia sUiqua. 



dwarf one not exceeding three feet high. Of the o/i re, several Of resinous or tereUinthinate fruits they used the kernels of 



sorts. four sorts of yme, including, as is still the case in Tuscanj, the 



Of berries they had grapes. They had a multiplicity of these, seeds of the Scotch pine, 



both thick-skinned (duracina) and thin-skimted : one vine QtamirhHacemis fruits, they had the gourd, cucunCvr, 



growing at Rome produced 12 amphorae of juice, S4 gallom. nitlon, in great variety. 



53. The grape mid the olive Were cultivated as agricultural jn-oducts with the greatest at- 

 tention, for which ample instructions are to be found in all the Roman writers on 

 Geoponics. Some plantations mentioned by Pliny are supposed still to exist, as of olives 

 at Terni and of vines at Fiesoli. Both these bear maiks of the greatest age. 



54. The culinary vegetables cultivated by the Romans were chiefly the following : 



Of the hrassica tribe, several varieties. Cabbages, Columella Of the alliaceous tribe, the onion, and garlick of several sorts, 

 says, were esteemed both by slaves and kin^. Of sullacis, endive, lettuce, and chicory, mustard and others. 



Of leguminous plants, the pea, bean, and kidney-bean. Of pot and stved herbs, pai-sley, orache, alisanders, dittander. 



Of esculent roots, the turnip, carrot, parsnip, beet, skirret, elecampane, fennel, and chervil, and a variety of others, 

 and radish. Mushrooms, ar.A fuci were used; and bees, sujiUs, dormice. 



Of spinaceous plants, they appear to have held at least sorrel. &c. were cultivated in or near to their kitchen gardens, in ap- 



Otasparaginous plants, aisparagus. propriate places. 



55. The luxury of forcing vegetable productions it would appear had even been at- 

 tempted by the Romans. Specularia, or plates of the lapis specularis, we are informed by 

 Seneca and Pliny, could be split into thin plates, in length not exceeding five feet (a 

 remarkable cuxumstance, since few pieces larger than a fifth of these dimensions are now 

 any where to be met with); and we learn from Columella (lib. xii. cap. 3.), Martial 

 (lib. viii. 14. h 68.), and Pliny (lib. xix. 23.), that by means of these specularia, Tiberius, 

 who was fond of cucumbers, had them in liis garden throughout the year. They were 

 grown in boxes or baskets of dung and earth, placed under these plates, and removed to 

 the open air in fine days, and replaced at night. Sir Joseph Banks (^Hort. Tr. i. 148.) 

 conjectures, from the epigrams of Martial referred to, that both grapes and peaches were 

 forced ; and Diiines Barrington supposes that the Romans may not only have had hot- 

 houses, but hot-Avalls to forward early productions. Flues, Sir Joseph Banks observes 

 (Hort. Tr. i. 147), the Romans were well acquainted witli ; they did not use open fires in 

 their apartments, as we do, but in the colder countries at least, they always had flues under 

 the flooi-s of their apartments. Lysons found the flues, and the fire-place from whence 

 they received heat, in the Roman villa he has described in Gloucestershire. Similar flues 

 and fire-places were also found in the extensive villa lately discovered on the Blenheim 

 estate in OxfordsTaire. In Italy the Romans used flues chiefly for baths or sudatories, 

 and in seme of these which we have seen in the disinterred Greek city of Pompeii, the 

 walls round the apartment are flued, or hollow, for the circulation of hot air and smoke. 



56. The luxury of ice in cooling liquors was discovered by the Romans at the time 

 when they began to force fruits. Daines Barrington notices this as a remarkable circum- 

 stance, and adds, as a singular coincidence, the coeval invention of these arts in England. 



Sect. IV. Roman Gardening considered in respect to the Propagation and Planting of 

 Timber-trees and Hedges. 



57. The Romans propagated trees by the methods noiv in common use in our nurseries. 

 Fruit-trees were generally grafted and inoculated ; vines, figs, and olives raised by cuttings, 

 lasers, or suckers ; and forest-trees generally propagated by seeds and suckers. 



58. TIho\i^\ forest-trees were reared with great care round houses in the city {^Hor, Ep* 

 i. 10. 22.), yet it does not appear clear that they were planted in masses or strips expressly 

 for useful purposes. They were planted in rows in vineyards on which to train the vine ; 

 and the sorts generally preferred were the poplar and the elm. Natural forests and 

 copses, then, as now, supplied timber and fuel. Trees which do not stole (arbores cceduce), 

 were distinguished from such as being cut over spring up again {succisce repullulant) : of 

 the former class was the larch, which was most in use as timber. Pliny mentions a beam 

 120 feet long and 2 feet thick. 



