GENERAL INDEX. 



1225 



Stock, see Mathiola. 



Stocks for grafting, science of, 2020. to 2024. 

 Stoebe, syngen. polygam. segreg. and corymbifereas, 



G. tr. C. B. S. which may be treated as stizolo- 



bium. 



Stoke, a seat in Herefordshire, 7568. 



Stoke-hole, the excavation in one side of which 



hot-house furnaces are often built, and the hole 



contains fuel for its supply. 

 Stoke House, Gloucestershire, 7565. 

 Stoke Park, Buckinfjhamshire, 7547. 

 Stoke Park, Wiltshire, 7597. 

 Stokeld, Yorkshire, 7582. 



Stokesia, syngen. polyg. aqual. and cynarocephalese, 

 a G. peren. Carolin. a pretty plant which grows 

 in rich, light soil, and roots freely under a hand- 

 glass. 



Stokestown, a seat in the county of Roscommon, 

 7671. 



Stole (from stolo, Lat. a shoot or twig), trees which, 

 when cut over by the surface, shoot up again. 



Stone-crop, — see Sedum 



Stone-fruits, catalogue of, 4480. 



Stoneham Park, Hampshire, 7594. 



Stones, how to operate with in gardening-scenery, 

 7230. 



Storax, — see Styrax. 



Stork's bill, — see Pelargonium. 



Stornberg, his plan of a Chinese garden, 478. 



Stourhead, a seat in Wiltshire, 7597. 



Stout Hall, Glamorganshire, 7608. 



Stout's Hill, Gloucestershire, 7565. 



Stove, dry, — see Dry-stove. 



Stove, moist, or bark-stove, — see Bark-stove. 



Stove-plants, — see Bark-stove and Dry-stove. 



Slowe, a seat in Buckinghamshire, 7548. 



Stowels, a seat in Gloucestershire, 7565. 



Stradballey Hall, in Queen's County, 7659. 



Siradmore Yale, a seat in Cardiganshire, 7607, 



Slranionium, datura stramonium. 



Stnipwort, corrigiola littoralis. 



Stratiotes, water-soldier, dicec. dodec. and hydro- 

 charideo?, a H. peren. Eng. an aquatic which 

 only requires to be thrown into a pond or aqua- 

 rium. 



Stratton Park, Hampshire, 7594. 

 Straw coverings used in gardening, 1508. 

 Strawberry, — see Fragaria. 

 Strawberry -blite, — see Blitum. 

 Strawberry Hill, Middlesex, 7520. 

 Strawberry-tree, — see Arbutus. 

 Streams of water, how to improve in garden-scenery, 

 7223. 



Streatham, Surrey, 7527. 



Street -gardens, 7292; their management, 7426. 



Strelitzia, pentand. monogyn. and musaceze, S. tr. 

 C. B. S. which grow in sandy loam, and are in- 

 creased slowly by suckers. By rubbing the pollen 

 on the stigmas, when the plants are in bloom, 

 perfect seeds are readily obtained. (Sweet.) 



Streptopus, hexan. monog. and smilaceffi, H. peren. 

 Hung, and N. Amer. which succeed best in light 

 sandy soil, and are increased by dividing at the 

 root. 



Structures, in gardening, 1523 ; portable or moveable 

 structures, canvass screen, canvass curtain, oiled 

 paper frame netting screen, common glass case, 

 glass tent, common hot-bed frame, separating 

 frame, moveable bottomed frame. Mallet's frame, 

 &c. 1524. to 1538. 



Structures, partly moveable, 1539 ; earth-pit, bark- 

 pit, flued pit, M'Phail's pit, Alderstone pit; pit 

 with rising frame, W^est's pit, &c., 1540. to 1544. 



Structures, fixed, 1555 ; garden walls, brick, stone, or 

 mud walls, solid brick u all, flued wall, cellular wall, 

 mud or earth wall, boarded wall, wavy wall, an- 

 gular wall, zigzag wall, square pier wall, nursery- 

 man's wall, piered wall, sheltering piers, arched 

 or roofed walls, espalier rails, wooden espaliers, 

 framed wooden espalier rail, cast-iron espalier rail, 

 horizontal espalier rail, oblique espalier rail, 

 1556. to 1582. 



Structures, permanent, 1583 ; hot-house, acumi- 

 nated semi-globe, acuminated semi-dome, semi- 

 ellipse, parallelogram with curved roof and ends, 

 with ridge and iurrow roof, poly|)rosopic hot- 

 house, mushroom-houses, flued mushroom-houses, 

 German mushroom-house, cold-houses, 1584. to 

 1627. 



Structures, their further improvement, 1850. 



Strumaria, hexan. monog. and amaryllides, G. pe- 

 ren. C. B. S. bulbs whicii thrive in sandy loam and 

 decayed leaves, require little water when not in 



a growing state, and are mcreased by oftsets or 

 seeds. 



Struthiola, tetrandria monogynia and thyme- 

 lea3, G. tr. C. B. S. which grow in sandy peat, 

 and young cuttings root freely in sand under a 

 bell-glass. 



Strychnos, pentan. monog. and apocynese, S. tr. E. 

 Ind. which grow in sand and peat, and cuttings 

 root in sand under a bell-glass. 



Stuartia, monad, polyan. and tiliaceje, H. tr. N 

 Amer. handsome plants which thrive in peat soil 

 or very sandy loam ; they flower after attain- 

 ing a good size, and are increased by layers ii> 

 peat. 



Stub House, Durham, 7584. 

 Sludley Royal, Yorkshire, 7582. 

 Stutthorpe, Yorkshire, 7582. 



Stylidium, gynan. dian. and stylidese, a G. tr and 

 peren. Austral, which grow in sandy loam and 

 peat, and are increased by seeds or parting at the 

 root: the' shrubby species by cuttings under a 

 hand-glass. 



Styphelia, pentand. monogyn. and epacidese, G. tr. 



N. S. W. beautiful plants which grow in sandy 



loam and peat, and young cuttings root in sand 



under a bell-glass. 

 Styrax, storax, decan. monogyn. and ebenaceae, H. 



tr. Italy and N. Amer. which thrive and flower 



freely in light sandy loam, and are increased by 



layers or seeds. 

 Subularia, awlwort, tetrad, silic. and crucifereae, a 



H. an. Br'it. an aquatic of easy culture. 

 Suburban villa, 7285 ; suburban house, 7286 ; their 



management; 7430. 

 Succisce repuUulant (from succido, Lat. to cut down, 



and repullulo, Lat. to bud or sprout), trees which 



stole, or which being cut over spring again. 

 Succory, — see Cichorium. 



Succowia, tetrad, silic. and crucifercEe, a H. ap. Mi- 

 norca, of common culture. 



Suckers to propagate by, 1992. 



Sudborne Hall, Suffolk, 7552. 



Suffocation, a disease of plants, 893. 



Suftblk, gardens and residences of, 7552. 



Sufton Court, Herefordshire, 7568. 



Sugar-cane, — see Saccharum. 



Suir Castle, a seat in Tipperary, 7667. 



Sulphur-wort, — see Peucedanum. 



Sultan's garden at Constantinople, 308." 



Sumach, — see Rhus. 



Summer Hill, a seat in Kent, 7538. 



Sun-dew, — see Drosera. 



Sun-dials, as garden-decorations, 1834. 



Sun-fern, polypodium phegopteris. 



Sun-flower, — see Helianthus. 



Sun-rose, — see Helianthemum. ' 



Supple-jack, pauUinia polyphylla. 



Surrey, gardens and residences of, 7524. 



Surveyor of trees and timber, 7401. 



Sussex, gardens and residences of, 7530. 



Sutherlandia, diadel. decan. and leguminoseae, C.B.S. 

 which thrives in loam and peat, and is readily in- 

 creased by seeds. 



Sutherlandshire, gardens of, 7646. 



Swallow-wort, — see Asclepias. 



Sweet, Robert, F. L. S., his writings on gardeninir. 

 page 1114. A. D. 1818. f JS. 



Sweet flag, acorus calamus. 



Sweet gale, myrica gale. 



Sweet gum tree, liquidambar styraciflua. 



Sweet herbs, 4131. 



Sweet pea, lathyrus odoratus. 



Sweeping, 1877. 



Swertia, felwort, pentan. dig. and gentianese, a H. 

 peren. Eng. a marsh plant which prefers a peat 

 soil. 



Swietenia, mahogany-tree, decan. monog. and me- 

 leacca;, S. tr. W. and E. Ind. which grow in loam 

 and peat, and ripe cuttings, with their leaves not 

 shortened, root freely in sand under a hand-glass 

 in moist heat. 



Swinden,^^., his work on gardening, page 1108. 



Swine s succory, — see Hyoseris. 



Swings as garden decorations, 1821. 



Switzer, Stephen, his works on gardenine. nase 

 1102. A. D. 1715. V 



Symphoria, St. Peter's wort, pentan. monog. and ca- 

 prifoleffi, a H. tr. N. Amer. a dwarf shrub which 

 grows in the shade of other trees in any soil, and is 

 increased by cuttings in the open ground. 



Symphytum, comfrey, pentan. monog. and boragi- 

 iieK, H. peren. Eur. of easy culture. 



