1 176" 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Buchox, Pierre Joseph, his works on gardening, 

 page 1118. A. D. 1760. 



Bucida, olive-bark tree, decan. monog. and santala- 

 ceee, a S. tr. Jamaica, which grows best in loam 

 and peat, and well ripened cuttings root in sand 

 under a hand-glass plunged in heat. 



Buckbean, menyanthes trit'oliata. 



Buckhurst Park, Sussex, 7531. 



Buckinghamshire, gardens and residences of, 7546. 



Buckler-mustard, — «ee Biscutella. 



Bucknal, Thomas Skip Dyot, Esq. a British author 

 on gardening, page 1112. A. D. 1797. 



Buckthorn, — see Rhamnus. 



Buckwheat, polygonum fago[)yrum. 



Buckwheat-tree, mylocarpum ligustrinum. 



Budding, different modes of, 2050. to 2062. 



Buddlea, tetran. monog. and scrophularinese, G. tr. 

 and a H. tr. Chili, and C.B.S. which thrive in any 

 loamy soil, and cuttings root freely under a com- 

 mon hand-glass. 



Buenos Ayres, a seat in Gloucestershire. 



Buffbn, George Louis le Clerc, Count de, his works 

 on gardening, page 1117. A. D. 1739. 



Buffonia, tetran. dig. and caryophylleoe, a H. an. of 

 common culture. 



Bugle, — see Ajuga. 



Bugloss, — see Anchusa. 



Bug-wort, — see Cimicifuga. 



Buildings, how to operate with, in gardening sce- 

 nery, 7232. to 7236. 



Buildings of the Greeks, 7234 : Indians and Chinese, 

 7235. 



Bulbocodmm, hexan. monog. and melanthacese, a 



H. peren. Spain, a bulb of common culture. 

 Bulbs, their management as articles of trade in the 



nursery business, 74S7. 

 Bulbs, what, 778 ; to propagate by, 835 ; to cultivate 



hardy bulbous flowers, 6501 ; exotic bulbs, — see 



Frame, Green-house, &c. 

 Bull, herb., Herbier de la France, par M. Bulliard. 

 Bulstrode, a seat in Buckinghamshire, 7547. 

 Bumalda, pentan. dig. and rhamnete, a G. tr. 



Japan, which thrives well in an equal i-ortion of 



loam and peat ; and ripened cuttings root readily 



under a hand-glass in sand. 

 Bumelia, pentan. monog. and sapotete, S. tr. N. 



Amer. preferring ioamy soil, and propagated by 



well ripened cuttings in sand under a hand-glass; 



and H. tr. which grow in common soil, and root 



in sand under a hand-glass. 

 Bunias, tetrad, silic. and cruciferea^, a H. peren. 



Eur. of common culture. 

 Bunium, earth-nut, pentag. dig. and umbellifereje, 



H. peren. Brit, of common culture. 

 Bunium bulbocastanum, common earth-nut, 4303. 

 Buonapartea, hexan. monog. and bromelcaj, a S 



tr. which thrives best in loam and decayed 



leaves. 



Buphthalmum, syngen. poly super, and corymbife- 

 re£e, G. tr. and F. peren. Eur. and Amer. which 

 grow freely in loam and peat, and cuttings root in 

 the same soil under a hand-glass : and H. peren. 

 and an. of common culture. 



Bupleurum, hare'.s-oar, pentan. dig and umbelli- 

 fereae, G. tr. and peren. Eur. and C. B. S. which 

 grow freely in loam and peat, and cuttings root 

 readily in the same soil, under a hand-gl ass ; and 

 H. peren. and an. of common culture. 



Burchardt, Th. H. O., his work on gardening, page 

 1127. A. D. 1805. 



Burdock, — see Arctium. 



Burleigh, a seat in Lincolnshire, 7578. 



Burley-on-the-hill, a seat in Rutlandshire, 7579. 



Burnet, — see Poterium. 



Burnet-saxifrage, — see Pimpinella. 



Burnhall, a seat in Duriiam, 7584. 



Bur-parsley, — see Caucalis. 



Bur-reed, — see Sparganium. 



Bursaria, pentan. monog. and pittosporese, a G. tr. 

 Ind. and Amor, a showy plant which grows best in 

 sandy loam and peat, and cuttings root readily in 

 sand under a bell-glass. 



Bursera, polyg. dicec. and terebintaceas, a S tr. W. 

 Ind. which grows in loamy soil, and large cuttings 

 root in sand under a liand-glass in moist heat. 



Btirtin, Francis Xavier, his works on gardening, 

 page 1129. A. D. 1784. 



Burton Constable, a seat in Yorkshire, 7582. 



Burtonia, decan. monog. and leguminoseae, a G. tr. 

 N. Holl. I'equiring attentive treatment ; it grows 

 in sandy loam and peat, with the pots well drain- 

 ed, and young cuttmgs will root in sand under a 

 bell-glass. 



Burwell Park, a seat in Lincolnshire, 7578, 



Burwood Park, Surrey, 7527. 



Bury St. Edmunds, botanic garden at, 7552. 



Bushey Park, at Hampton Court, 7523. 



Bushnell's Wells, Oxfordshire, 1662. 



Bussato, Marco, his work on gardening, page 

 1128. A. D. 1794. 



Butcher's broom, — see Ruscus. 



Butea, diadel. decan. and leguminoseae, S. tr. E. 

 Ind. splendid plants which grow in loam and peat, 

 and cuttings taken off at a joint, and planted in 

 sand, and not deprived of their leaves, will root 

 in moist heat, covered with a hand-glass. 



Buteshire, gardens of, 7650. 



Butler, gardener to the Earl of Derby, at Know- 

 leslev, and afterwards a nurseryman at Prescot, 

 1589.' 



Butomus, flowering-rush, ennean. hexag. and hy- 



drocharideaB, a H peren. Brit an aquatic. 

 Butter-bur, tussilago petasites. 

 Butter-wort, — see Sanicula. 



Buttneria, penUn. monog. and malvacete, S. tr. 

 Amer. which grow in loam and peat or rich loam, 

 and ripened cuttings root under a hand-glasd in 

 sand. 



Button-flower, — see Gomi>hia 

 Button-tree, — see Conocarpus. 

 Button-weed, — see Spermacoce. 

 Button-wood, cephalanthus occidentalis. 



Butict, , his works on gardening, page 1120. 



A. D. 1795. 



Buxus, monoec. tetran. and euphorbiaces, H. tr. of 

 easy culture, and propagated by cuttings or layers. 



Buxus sempervirens, the common box-tree, the 

 best of all edging shrubs, 6582 : as a timber-tree, 

 7118. 



Bysshe Court, a seat in Surrey, 7527. 



Bystropogon, didyn. gymnos. and iabiatese, G. tr. 

 Canaries, which thrive in loam and peat, and cut- 

 tings root readily in the same soil under a hand- 

 glass. 



Byzantium, gardens of, 306. 



C. 



Cabanis de Salagnac, his works on gardening, page 



1119. A. D. 1/86 

 Cabbage, 3483 — see Brassica. 

 Cabbage, Chinese, 4330. 

 Cabbage-moth, phalaana oleracea, 2253. 

 Cabbage-tree, — see Areca. 

 Cabinets de verdure, 6813. 



Cacalia, syngen. polyg. ffiqual. and corymbifereee, a 

 S. tr. and S. an. C.H.S. and Amer. succulents, 

 which grow in sandy loam and brick-rubbish, and 

 are propac:atcd by cuttings ; the H. peren. are 

 of the easiest culture. 



Cachyris, pentan. dig. and umbcllifereffi, H. peren. 

 Eur. of common culture, and propagated by seeds. 



Cactus, icosan. monog. and cacteas, S. D S. Indies 

 and Amer. and G. tr. succulents of easy cul- 

 ture. 



Cactus opuntia, the Indian fig, 5956. 



Cacucia, decan. monog. and onagrareas, a S. tr. 

 Guiana, which grows well in loam and peat, 

 and cuttings root freely in sand under a hand- 

 glass. 



Cadet, Charles Louis, his works on gardening, page 



1120. A. D. 1801. 



Cadet-de-Vaux, Antoine Alexis, his works on gar- 

 dening, page 1121. A. D 1807. 



Cadia, decan. monog. and leguminosece, a S. tr. 

 Arabia, which prefers a light soil, and cuttings 

 root in sand under a hand-glass and plunged in 

 heat. 



Cadland, a seat in Hampshire, 7594. 



Caenwond, a seat in INliddlesex, 7521. 



Caernarvonshire, gardens and residences of, 7604. 



Caesalpinia, decan. monog. and leguminoscEe, S..tr. 

 E and W. Ind. prickly branched, which thrive 

 well in loam and peat, and cuttings sometimes 

 succeed, taken off in a growing state, but not too 

 young, and plunged in a pot of sand under a hand- 

 glass in moist heat. 



Cajsia, hexan. monog. and asphodeleEP, a G. peren. 

 N. S. W. which grows in loam and peat, and is in- 

 creased by dividing at the root or by seeds. 



Caasuha, syngen. polyg. squal. and corymbifereffi, a 

 S. peren. E. Ind. requiring a rich, loamy soil, and 

 cuttings root freely. 



Caithness, gardens of, 7644. 



Cakile, tetrad, silic. and crucifereas, a H. i)ercn. and 



