1190 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Felwort, swertia perennis. 



Fence-wood, best trees for, 6798. 



Fences, barriers for enclosure and defence j they 

 are either live fences, formed by connected lines 

 of woody plants, or dead fences, formed of earth, 

 stone, iron, timber, or other mineral or dead ve- 

 getable matter. 



Fences for plantations, 6820. 



Fences in landscape-gardening, 6874. 



Fennel, 4097. — see Anethum. 



Fennel-flower, — see Nigella. 



Fenugreek, — see Trigonella. 



Fermanagh, gardens of, 7677. 



Ferme orn^e, 7280. 



Fernaini, D Louis, his tract on the genus 



Finns, page 1128. A. D. 181-. 



Ferney, the seat of Voltaire, near Geneva, 240. 



Fernhill, a seat in Hampshire, 7594. 



Ferns, exotic, their culture, 6738. 



Feronia, elephant-apple, polyg. monoec. and , 



a S. tr. E. Ind. which grows in loam and peat, 

 and cuttings root in sand under a hand-glass. 



Ferrari, John Baptist, his works on gardening, 



. page 1128. A. D. 1633. 



Ferraria, monadel. trian. and iridece, G. peren. 

 C. B. S. bulbs which may be treated as ixia. 



Ferula, giant fennel, pentan. dig. and umbellifereje, 

 H. peren. and a bien. Eur. which grow in common 

 garden soil, and are increased by seeds. 



Fescue-grass, — see Festuca. 



Festuca, fescue-grass, trian. dig. and gramineae, H. 



tr. and an. Eur. of the easiest culture. 

 Feuereison, K. G., his works on gardening, page 1124. 



A. D. 1780. 

 Feverfew, — see Pyrethrum. 

 Fever-wort, — see Triosteum. 

 Ficaria, pilewort, polyan. polj'g. and ranunculacete, 



a H. peren. Brit, of common culture. 

 Ficus, fig-tree, polyand. dicec. and urticece, S. and 



G. tr. Eur. E. Ind. C. B. S. and Austral, which 



grow well in light loam, and cuttings with their 



leaves uninjured, root in sand under a hand-glass 



in heat. 



Ficus carica, the fig-tree, 4839; culture of in the 

 fig-house, 3145 ; in the stove, 3161 ; in the open 

 air, 4851. 



Field, Mr. Henry, his history of the Chelsea garden, 



page 1114. A. D. 1820. 

 Fifeshire, gardens of, 7635. 

 Fig-house, construction of, 2674. 

 Fig-marigold, — see Mesembryanthemum. 

 Fig-tree, — see Ficus. 

 Figwort, — see Scropbularia. 



Filago, cotton-rose, syngen. polyg. super, and co- 

 rymbifereJE, a H. an. S. Eur. of common culture. 



Filasier, N. his works on gardening, page 1119. A.D. 

 1783. 



Filmy leaf, hymenophyllum tunbridgense. 

 Finborough Hall, Suffolk, 7552. 

 Finger-grass, — see Digitaria. 

 Finningley Park cottage, Yorkshire, 7582. 

 Finorchi, Anton. Maria, his work on gardening, 



page 1128. A. D. 180-. 

 jFir-tree, — see Pinus. 



Fischer, V. F., his work on truffle hunting, page 



1127. A. D. 1783. 

 Fisherwick, formerly a seat in Warwickshire, laid 



out by Brown, and described by Wheatley. 

 Fitness, a beauty in gardening, 7168. 

 Fitzwalters, a seat in Essex, 7541. 

 Fl. Dan., Icones Plantarum sponte nasxentium in 



regnis Danis et Norvegiffi. Editee a Ge. Chr. 



CEder, Oth. Frid. Muller, et Mart. Vahl. 

 FL GrffiC, Flora Grzeca, &c. Joh. Sibthorp et Jac. 



Edw. Smith. t ^ 



Flacourtia, dicec. icos. and tiliaceEe^ S. tr. E. Ind. 



which grow in loam and peat, and cuttings root 



in sand under a hand-glass 

 Flagellaria, hexan. trig, and junceEe, a S. tr. India, 



which may be treated like flacourtia. 

 Flambards, Middlesex, 7520. 

 Fiat-pea, — see Platylobium. 



Flaveria, syngen. polyg. necess. and corymbifere», 



a S. tr. Peru, of common culture. 

 Flax, — see Linum. 

 Flax-lily, phormium tenax. 

 Flea-bane, — see Conyza. 

 Flea-wort, inula pulicaria. 



Fleetivood, William, a British author on gardening, 



page 1101. A. D. 1707. 

 Flemingia, diadel. decan. and legummosea;, s. tr. 



peren. and bien. India, which grow freely in loam 



and peat, and cuttings root inider a hand-glass in 



sand plungetl in heat. 



Fleurs, a seat in Roxburghfihire, 7621. 

 Flintshire, gardens and residences of, 7606. 

 Flixton Hall, Suffolk, 7552. 

 Flixweed, sisymbrium sophia. 

 Florence Court, a seat in Cavan, 7676. 

 Floriculture, 6075. 

 Floricultural catalogue, 6220. 

 Florimania, 145. 



Florists, or floristry gardeners, 7397. 



Florists' flowers, enumeration of, 6221, 



Florists' gardens, commercial, their formation^ 



7357 ; management, 7467. 

 Florists' societv of Paislev, its origin, rules, &c. 



7628. 



Florists' societies, 7706. 



Flower Hill, a seat in Galway, 7672. 



Flower-fence, — see Poinciana. 



Flower-garden, formation of, 6076 j exposure and 

 aspect, 6080 ; extent, shelter, soil, surface, 

 water, form, boundary-fence, &c. 6081. to 6090 ; 

 laying out the area, 6093; placing the hot- 

 houses, 6099 ; flower-nursery, 6104 ; walks, edg- 

 ings, basket-edgings, &c. 6105. to 6108. 



Flower-garden, its culture and management, 0187 ; 

 times of planting or sowing, 6189; pruning and 

 training, &c. 6190 ; grass-plots, 6191 ; protecting 

 tender plants, 6192; water, 6193; insects and 

 vermin, 6194 ; cutting off decaying flowers 

 and herbage, 6195; gathering flowers^ 6196; 

 ordering seeds and bulbs, &c. 6200; neatness, 

 6201. 



Flower-garden, planting of, 6110 ; mingled garden, 

 6111; select garden, 6119 ; botanic flower-garden, 

 6126 ; decorations, 6127... 



Flower-pot, 1407. ~ 



Flower-stage, for pots of plants, 1526. 



Flowering ash, — see Ornus. 



Flowering fern, — see Osmunda. 



Flowering rush, butomus umbellatus. 



Flowers for borden;, — see Border-flowers. 



Flux of juices, a disease of plants, 885. 



Fogs, 1200. 



Fontainbleau, blue or clear fountain, a royal resid- 

 ence near Paris, the gardens of which are noted 

 for the precocity and excellence of their grapes, 

 159. 



Fontaines, Louis de, his works on gardening, page 

 1119. A. D. 1788. 



Fontanesia, dian. monog. and onagrarese, a H. tr. 

 Syria, a shrub rather tender of frost, but which 

 grows in common soil, and is increased by layers^ 

 or cuttings planted under a hand-glass. 



Fonthill Abbey, Wiltshire, 7597. 



Fool's parsley, — see iEthusa. 



Footscray Place, Kent, 7538. 



For., a Treatise on Fruit-trees, by W. Forsyth, 

 Esq. royal gardener, — see page 1110. A. D. 

 1791. 



Fordhook, a seat in Middlesex, 7520 



Foreign exotic culinary vegetables little cultivated 



in Britain, 6022. 

 Foreign fruits deserving introduction and cultiv. 



ation, 5974. 

 Foreign fruits of Africa, 6018. 

 Foreign fruits of Asia, 6021. 

 Foreign fruits of South America, 6020. 

 Foreign fruits of the West Indies, 6019. 

 Foreign hardy culinary vegetables little cultivated 



in Britain, 4326. 

 Foremark, a seat in Derbyshire, 7574. 

 Foremen of gardens, 7381. 

 Forfar botanic garden, 7637. 

 Forfarshire, gardens of, 7637. 



Forficula auricularia, the earwig, a coleopterous 



insect, 2237. 

 Forking, 1872. 



Formica, the ant, a hymenopterous insect, which 

 may be collected by whelming empty pots with 

 the holes in their bottoms closed, 'near their 

 haunts. The pots should be moistened with 

 honied water or with milk, 2262. 



Forskolea, octan. tetrag. and urticeee, a G. peren. 

 and H. an. Egypt, C. B. S. of common culture. 



Forsyth, W. Esq., his works on gardening, page 1119. 

 A. D. 1791. 



Forty Hall, a seat in Middlesex, 7520. 



Fothergilla, polyan. dig. and amentaceae, H. peren. 

 N. Amer. which require a peat soil, and are in., 

 creased by layers. 



Foulkebourne Hall, Essex, 7542. 



Fountains and other hydraulic devices, 1829* 



Foxglove, — see Digitalis. 



Foxley, a scat in Herefordshire, 7568i 



Foxtail-grass, — see Alopecurus. 



