123S 



GENERAL INDEX. 



Westwood House, Worcestershire, 7566. 

 Wetxkausen, Von Truchsess, his work on cherries, 



page 1117. A. D. 1820. 

 Wexford, county of, as to gardening, 765. 

 Wheat, — see Triticum. 



Wlieatletj or Whateley, Thomas, Esq., his writings 



on gardening, page 1108. A. D. 1770. 

 Wheatley Hall, Yorkshire, 7582. 

 Wheelbarrow, different sorts of, 1441. 

 Wheeler, James, his writings on gardenine. paee 



1106. A. D. 1763. 



Whim, a seat near Edinburgh, 362. 

 W'hitby Court, Worcestershire, 7566 

 Whitby Hall, Warwickshire, 7571. 

 Whitcombe Park, Gloucestershire, 7565. 

 White cedar, cupressus thyoides. 

 White Knights, a seat near Reading, 7561. 

 Whitethorn, mespilus oxj'acantha. 

 Whitfield Hall, Northumberland, 7586. 

 Wliitley, a seat in Essex, 7542. 

 Whitlow-grass, — see Draba. 



Whitmill, Benedict, his works on gardening, naee 

 1103. A. D. 1726. ^' ^ ^ 



Whitton Place, Middlesex, 7520. 



Whortleberry, — see Vaccinium. 



Wiborgia, diadelphia decandria and leguminoseje, 

 a G. tr. C. B. S. which grows well in loam and 

 peat, and young cuttings root under a bell-glass 

 in sand. 



Wicklow, county of, as to gardening, 7654. 



Widow-wail, cneorum tricoccum. 



Wigtonshire, gardens of, 7626. 



Wild basil, — see Clinopodiura. 



Wild bugloss, — see Lycopsis. 



Wild cumin, lagoecia curainoides. 



Wild licorice, abrus precatorius. 



Wild plants, fit for culinary purposes, 4283, 



Wilderness, a seat in Kent, 4888. 



Wilderness, — see Labyrinth. 



JVildman, , his writings on gardening, page 



1107. A. D. 1768. 



Willdenovia, dioec. trian. and restiacese, a G. peren. 



C. B. S. which grows in sandy loam and peat, and 



is increased by dividing at the root. 

 Willdenow, C. L., his works on gardening, page 1127 



A. D. 1810. . 

 Willersby Castle, Derbyshire, 7574. 

 W^iiliamstrip, a seat in "Gloucestershire, 7565. 

 Willow, — see Salix. 

 Wilna, botanic garden of, 284. 

 Wilson, William, his writings on gardening, page 



1108. A. D. 1777. 



Wilton House, Wiltshire, 7597. 

 Wiltshire, gardens and residences of, 7596. 

 Wimbledon House, Surrey, 7528. 

 Wind, its influence on plants, and artificial pro- 

 duction of in hot-houses, 6181. 

 Windsor Castle, Btrkshire, 7562. 

 Windt, L. G., his work on gardening, page 1127. 



A. U. i8oa 



Wingerworth, a seat in Derbyshire, 7574. 



Winter aconite, eranthis hyemalis. 



Winter berry, — see Prinos. 



Winter cherry, — see Physalis. 



Winter cress, — see Barbarea. 



Winter green, — see Trientalis. 



Winterdyne, a seat in Worcestershire, 7566. 



Winthorpe Hall, Nottinghamshire, 7576. 



Winyard, a seat in Durham, 7584. 



Witch hazel, haraamelis virginica. 



Witlieringta, tetrandria monogynia and solana- 

 ce£e, a S. peren. S. Amer. which grows in loam 



, and peat, and cuttings root in sand under a bell- 

 glass. 



Witsesia, trian. monog. and iridece, a G. peren. 

 C. B. S. a bulb which requires the same treatment 

 as ixia. 



Woburn Abbej-, in Bedfordshire, 7549. 

 Woburn Farm, Surrey, 7527. 

 Woburn perennial kale, 3529. 

 Wolfsbane, — see Aconitum. 

 Woo-ywen, gardens of, in China, 475. 

 Wooburn Farm, Buckinghamshire, 7547. 

 Wood, — see Isatis. 



Wood, how to operate with in landscape-gardening, 



7203. 



Woodbine, lonicera periclymenura. 

 Wooden walls, 1565. 



Woodhouselee, a seat in Midlothian, 7618. 

 Woodlands, a seat in Kent, 7.537. 

 Woodlands, a seat in Durham, 7584. 

 Woodley Lodge, Berkshire, 7561. 

 Woodsage, teucrium scorodonia. 



Woodsia, cryptogam, filices and filicea?, H. peren. 



Brit, and Amer. of easy culture in pots of loam 



and peat. 

 Woodruff, — see Asperula. 

 Woodsorrel, — see Oxalis. 



Woodwardia, crj ptog. filices and filiceiE, H. peren. 



and a G. peren. N. Amer. and Madeira, of easy 



culture. 

 Wooton Court, Kent, 7537. 

 Wooton House, Surrey, 7528. 

 Woollaton Hall, Nottinghamshire, 7576. 

 Woolverton Hall, Suffolk, 7552. 

 Worcestershire, gardens and residences of, 7565. 

 Workington Hall, Cumberland, 7593. 

 Worlidge, John, gent, his work on gardening, page 



1101. A. D. 1668. 

 Worm, the common, lumbricus terrestris. Worms 



may either be destroyed by picking them up by 



hand very early in the morning, or late in the 



evening during moist weather, or by watering 



with lime or salt water. 

 Worm-grass, — see Spigelia. 

 Wormleybury, a seat in Hertfordshire, 7544. 

 Wormsley, a"seat in Oxfordshire, 7558. 

 Wormwood, — see Artemisia. 

 Wrightia, pentan. monog. and apocyneas, S. tr. E. 



Ind. which thrive in loam and peat, and cuttings 



root readily in sand under a hand-glass. 

 Wrotham Place, Middlesex, 7521. 

 W^roxton, a seat in Oxfordshire, 75.58. 

 Wulfenia, dian. monog. and scrophularincte, a H. 



an. Carinthia, of common culture. 

 Wynnestay, a seat in Denbighshire, 7605. 

 Wycombe Abbey, Buckinghamshire, 7547. 

 Wycombe Park, Buckinghamshire, 7547. 

 Wyke House, Middlesex, 7520. 



Xanthium, moncec. pentan. and corj-mbifereffi, H. 



an. Eur. and China, of common culture. 

 Xanthochymus, polyad. polyan. and guttifereje, a S. 



tr. E. Ind. a fine-looking plant, which thrives in 



light loam, and cuttings root in sand under a 



hand-glass in heat. 

 Xanthorrhasa, hexan. monog. and asphodelea?, G. 



peren. N. S. W. which thrive well in loam and 



peat, and are increased by offsets. 

 Xeranthemum, syngen. polyg. super, and corym- 



biferese, H. an. S. Eur. of common culture. 

 Ximenesia, syngen. poly, super, and corymbiferese, 



a G. bien. Mexico, of easy culture, and increased 



by cuttings. 



Xiphidium, triand. monogyn. and hemodoraceae, 

 S. tr. peren. W. Ind. which thrive in sandy loam 

 and peat, and are increased by divii^ing the 

 roots. 



Xylomelum, tetran. monog. and proteacese, a G. tr. 



N. S. W. which may be treated as banksia. 

 Xylophylla, pentan. trig, and euphorbiaceae, H. tr. 



Eur. which grow in common soil, and are in- 



crea€ed by layers, or ripened cuttings under a 



hand-glass. 



Xylopia, polj'an. polyg. and anoniacese, S. tr. W. 



Ind. which grow in sandy loam, and cuttings root 



in sand under a hand-glass. 

 Xyris, triand. monogyn. and restinceae, a G. peren. 



and H. peren. N. S. W. and Carol, pretty plants, 



which thrive in peat soil, and are readily increased 



by dividing at the root. 

 Xysmalobium, pentan. dig. and asclepiadcae, a G. 



tr. C. B. S. which grows in loam and peat, and 



cuttings root in sand under a hand-glass. 

 Xystus, or terrace, 41. 



Y. 



Yam, dioscorea sativa. 



Yarrow, achillea millefolium. 



Yellow bird's nest, monotropa hypopithys. 



Yellow rattle, rhinanthus cnsta-galli. 



Yellow root, zanthorhiza apiilolia. 



Yellow wort, chlora perfoliata, 



Yeo Vale, a seat in Devonshire, 7600. 



Yester House, a seal in East Lothian, 7619. 



Yew-tree, — see Taxus. 



Yorkshire, gardens and residences of, 75S1. 



Yucca, Adam's needle, hexan. monog. and liliacea?, 

 S. G. and H. tr. As. and S. Amer. which grow in 

 rich loam, and are increased by suckers from the 

 roots. 



