12:22 



GENERAL INDEX. 



cynarocephaletE, H. peren. Eiir. of common cul- 

 ture. 



Serruria, tetran. monog. and proteaceae, G. tr. and 

 a H. tr. C. B. S. free flowerers which require the 

 same treatment as protea. 



Sersalisia, pentan. monog. and sapotese, a G. tr. 

 N. Holl. which grows in sandy loam and peat, 

 and cuttings root readily in sand under a hand- 

 glass. 



Service-tree, — see Pyrus. 



Sesamum, oily grain, didjTi. angios. and bignonia- 

 ceae, S. an. of easy culture. 



Sesbana, diadel. decan. and leguminoseae, a S. tr. 

 bien. and an. K Ind. of common culture. The 

 S. species is a beautiful plant. 



Seseli, meadow-saxifrage, pentan. dig. and umbelli- 

 fereae, H. peren. bien. and an. Eur. and N. Amer. 

 of easy culture. 



Sesleria, trian. monog. and gramineae, H. peren. 

 Eur. of easy culture. 



Sesuviura, icos. di-pentag. and ficoideae, S. peren. 

 and an. W. Ind. and S. Amer. succulents which 

 grow in loam and peat, and are easily propa- 

 gated. 



Shade, in arboriculture, 6763. 



Shallot, allium ascalonicum, — see Allium. 



Shanbally, a seat in Tipperary, 7657. 



Shane's Castle, a seat in Antrim, 7684. 



Shardeloes, a seat in Buckinghamshire, 75^7. 



Sharrock, Robert, LL.D., his works on gardening, 



page 1100. A. D. 1660. 

 Shaiv, James, his work on gardening, pag-e 1111. 



A. D. 179i. 



Shaw, William, his work on gardening, page 1113. 

 A. D. 1807. 



Shaw Park, a seat in Clackmannanshire, 7633. 



Shears, garden, diftferent sorts of, 1333. 



Sheep's beard, — see Arnopogon. 



Sheep's scabions — see Jasione. 



Sheffield Place, Sussex, 7531. 



Shelter, in arboriculture, 6762. 



SJwnstone, William, his writings on gardening, page 



1106. A. D. 17&1. 

 Shepherd's chibfA-erbascum thapsus. 

 Shepherd's purse, thlaspi bursa pastoris. 

 Sherardia, field-madder, tetran. monog. and rubia- 



cese, H. an. Brit, weeds. 

 Sherborne Castle, Dorsetshire, 7598. 

 Sherborne House, Gloucestershire, 7565. 

 Sherbourne Castle, Oxfordsliire, 7558. 

 Sherwood Lodge, Surrey, 7527. 

 Shewhing, or shoughing, a Scotch term for the 



operation of earthing in, or laying in plants by 



the heels, for temporary purposes. 

 Shield-fern, — see Aspidium. 



Shifting, the transplanting of plants in pots, dif- 

 ferent methods of performing, 2104. 

 Shincliffe Hall, Durham, 7584. 

 Shipley, a seat in Derbyshire, 7o/4. 

 Shobden Court, Herefordshire, 7568. 

 Shore-weed, littordla lacustris. 

 Short-grove, Essex, 7542. 

 Shovel, 1301. 

 Shovelling, 1S<56. 

 Shrub Hill, Surrey, 7527. 



Shrubbery, forming the, 6130 ; situation, soil, walks, 

 fence, reserve-ground, 6131. to 6137. 



Shrubbery, planting of, 6138 ; in the mingled man- 

 ner, select manner, systematic manner, general 

 practice, fruit-trees iii shrubberies, decorations, 

 6139. to 6160. 



Shrubberv, its culture and management, 618/ ; 

 times of planting and sowing, pruning, training, 

 thinning, and dressing, grass plots, protecting, 

 water, insects, 6188. to 6201. 



Shrubberv, considered in respect to landscape-gar- 

 dening,' 6802. 



Shrubby trefoil, ptelea trifoliata. 



Shrubs, ornamental, select, deciduous, evergreen, 

 climbing, selection for particular purposes, for 

 concealing vertical and horizontal defects, of rapid 

 and bulky growth, which thrive under the shade 

 and drip" of trees, for margins of water, rocks, 



. edgings' and hedges, highly odoriferous, orna- 

 mental by their fruit as well as flowers, for bota- 

 nical or economical purposes, for shrubberies of 

 limited extent, 6542. to 6587. 



Shugborough House, Staffordshire, 7570. 



Sibbaldia, pentan. pentag. and rosaceae, H. peren. 

 Eur. Alpines which grow in loam and peat, and 

 may be increased by cuttings, under a hand- 

 glass. 



Sibthorpia, didyn. angios. and scrophularinoae, a H. 



peren. Eng. which grows well in peat and loam, 

 in rockwork or in pots, and is increased by divid- 

 ing at the root. 



Sickler, Francis Karl Ludwig, his works on garden- 

 ing, page 1126. A. D. 1802. 



Sickler, T. A'olkman, his works on gardening, page 

 1125. A. D. 17&4. 



Sic3'os, single-seeded cucumber, monoec. monad, 

 and cucurbitaceae, a H. an. Amer. of common 

 culture. 



Sida, monad, polyan. and malvacese, S. and G. tr. 

 bien. and an. E.'and W. Ind. C. B. S. and S. Amer. 

 which flower freely in rich light soil, and are 

 readily increased by seeds, or cuttings will root 

 in sand under a hand-glass. 



Side-saddle flower, — see Sarracenia. 



Sideritis, ironwort, didyn. gj ranos. and labiateae, G. 

 and F. tr. peren and an. S. Eur. and K Ind. which 

 grow freely in rich light soil, and are readily in- 

 creased by cuttings. 



Siderodendrum, iron-tree, tetran. monog. and rubia- 

 ceae^ a S. tr. W. Ind. which grows in loam and 

 peat, and cuttings root in sand under a hand- 

 glass. 



Sideroxylon, iron-wood, pentan. monog. and sa- 

 potese, a G. tr. C. B. S. wnich thrives in loam and 

 peat, and cuttings, a little ripened, root in sand 

 under a hand-glass. 



Siegel, , his works on gardening, page 1126. 



A. D. 1802. 



Siegesbeckia, syngen. pwlyg. superf and corymbi- 

 fereae, H. an. India and Peru, of common culture. 



Siewssen, A. C, his work on gardening, page 1125. 

 A. D. 1797. 



Sieve, the garden, 1394. 



Silene, catchfly, decan. trig, and caryophylleae, G. 



bien. and H. peren. bien. and an. a numerous 



genus, which thrive in light soil, suit well for 



rockwork or pots, and are readily increased by 



division, seeds, or cuttings. 

 Silene inflata, the bladder-catch fly, 3952. 

 Silk cotton tree, — see Bombax. 

 Silphium, syngen. polygam. necess. and cor}Tnbife- 



reae, H. peren. N. Amer. robust, unsightly plants, 



easily increased. 

 Si/va, Sigismondo, his work on gardening, page 



1128. A. D. 1803. 

 Silver-tree, leucadendron argcnteum. 

 Simplicists, — see Physic Gardeners. 

 Sinapis, mustard, tetrad, siliq. and cruciferca-, a 



G. tr. and a H. peren. bien. and an. Eur. and E. 

 Ind. of easy culture. 



Sinapis alba and nigra, white and black mustard, 

 4020. 



Sinapis arvensis, field-mustard, 4287. 

 Sinapis Pekinensis, 4335. 



Sinclair, Sir John, his writings on gardening, page 



1114. A. D. 1813. 

 Single-seeded cucumber, sicyos angulata. 

 Sion, — see Scion. 



Sion Hill, a seat in Middlesex, 7521. 

 Sion House, Middlesex, 7522. 



Sison, honewort, pentan. dig. and ambellifereae, H. 

 peren. and an. 13rit. and Siber. of easy culture. 



Sisymbrium, tetrad, siliq. and crucifercte, a G. tr. 

 Canaries, and H. peren. bien. and an. Eur. which 

 grow in any soil, but most of them prefer a moist 

 situation ; S. tenuifolium, however, grows on old 

 walls. 



Sisymbrium officinale, common water-cress, 4052. 

 Site {situs, Lat.\ the situation or ground on which 



a building, garden, or other object stands. 

 Slum, water-parsnep, pentan. dig. and umbelliferese, 



H. peren. Eur. and China, chiefly aquatics. 

 Sium sisarum, the skirret, 3740. 



Skelton Castle, Yorkshire, 7582. 



Skibo, a seat in Sutherlandshire, 7646. 



Skirret, — see Sisum. 



Skull-cap. — see Scutellaria. 



Slaine Castle, a seat in Eastmeath, 7661. 



Slaines Castle, a seat in Aberdeenshire, 7639. 



Sligo, county of, as to gardening, 7675. 



Slip, a stripe of ground. 



Slipper-wort, — see Calceolaria. 



Slips, to propagate by, 1989. 



Slo. hist"? A voyage to the islands of Madeira, Bar- 

 Slo. jam. 3 badoes, Nevis, St. Christopher's, and 



Jamaica ; with the natural history of the last of 



those islands. By Hans Sloane. 

 Sloane Square, London, 7321. 



Sloanea, polyan. monog. and tili.^cea?, a & tr. S. 

 Amer. which thrives in loam and peat, and cut- 

 tings may be rooted in sand under a hand-glass. 



