190 



CASSELL'S POPULAR GARDENING. 



A suitable soil is a matter of great importance. 

 The best is a light compost made up of soft fibrous 

 loam, with a little peat and silver sand added. It 

 will be observed that we do not recommend the 

 addition of manure ; it is best to water with some 

 weak manure- water, twice a week, at the flowering 

 season. This adds to the size and intensifies the 

 colours of the flowers. And let it not be forgotten 

 that the plants love shade. Many plants are spoiled 

 by permitting the sun to shine upon them ; they 

 must have a moist atmosphere if they are to be 

 healthy and flower well. We have seen not a few 

 plants destroyed by keeping them in too dry an at- 

 mosphere ; they soon become covered with red spider, 

 and the leaves turn yellow. A moist atmosphere, 

 with a temperature of about 60^ to 65^, suits the 

 plants, but on no account must they be allowed to 

 suffer for want of water. We not long since saw in 

 Messrs. Sutton and Sons' nursery, at Reading, many 

 hundreds of plants, in small forty- eight-sized pots, 

 about five or six months from seed, and carrying 

 from six to fifteen beautiful flowers, some of them of 

 enormous size, and finely proportioned. 



The Gloxinia being a stove perennial, the leaves 

 die away at the end of the summer, the roots resting 

 during autumn and winter. How they can best be 

 preserved during the dead season of the year, is a 

 desirable inquiry. It must be carefully done, as 

 losses frequently occur during the winter. It is im- 

 portant that the plants should not be " dried off " too 

 quickly ; they should be placed in a light airy posi- 

 tion, and then, by a gradual reduction of moisture, 

 the leaves will fall off naturally. When the leaves 

 have withered, and the soil become pretty dry, the 

 roots should be turned out of the pots, and placed in 

 boxes or large flower-pots, in a mixture of cocoa- 

 nut fibre and peat in equal parts, keeping them on 

 a shelf in a dry shed, in an even temperature of 

 about 50°. Excessive dryness must be guarded 

 against, while too much damp is equally objection- 

 able. It will be necessary to pot these in early 

 spring. The' bulbs should be taken out of the 

 boxes, and placed on a cocoa-fibre bed, in a brisk 

 moist heat ; those that are the quickest in showing 

 signs of growth should be potted first into small 

 pots, treated much as one would seedlings, be care- 

 fully shifted into other pots, and be kept near the 

 glass, as, with warmth and moisture, light is essen- 

 tial to a rapid and luxuriant growth. 



A neighbour of ours makes a rare display every 

 summer by planting out a bed of Gloxinias in a 

 stove-house. He states that the plants grow so 

 much more luxuriantly, and flower so much more 

 freely, than they do in pots, lasting also much 

 longer in flower. This is a very happy idea. One 

 result is, he is able to cut a large number of flowers 



for decorative purposes within-doors ; and, to adopt 

 his own phrase, he " can cut and come again." 



The following and other choice varieties, though 

 everywhere known in gardens as Gloxinias, are 

 strictly all forms of Sinningia speciosa : — 



Erect-fl jwering Varieties. 



Avalanche. 

 Boule de Fen. 

 Brunette. 

 Crassifolia alba. 

 Comet. 

 Diadem. 



Duchess of Connaught. 



Fahiola. 



Flambeau. 



Lady Mu^grave. 

 Lord Derby. 

 Louis van Houtte. 

 Mr. Gladstone. 

 Mrs. Bause. 

 Ne Plus Ultra. 

 Purity. 

 Vesta. 



"William Goldrirg. 



Erect Varieties, avith Spotted Flowi 

 (a very beautiful section). 



Argnf, 



Ariadne. 



Clytis. 



Cordelia. 



Corrnet. 



Jubilee. 



L'id.v Marriott. 

 Madame Hugo. 

 Marian. 

 Mrs. Atkinson. 

 Mrs. Peploe. 

 Eob Eoy. 



Varieties with Drooping Flowers. 



Duohess of Teck. 

 Gamos. 

 Insulaire. 

 James Barber. 



Marquis of Lome. 

 Miss H. de Ecitbschild. 

 Prince Leopold. 

 Sir John Lubbock. 



The Hollyhock.— The botanical name of this 

 noble plant is AUhea rosea, and it belongs to the 

 natural order Malvacec^. In the botanical catalogues 

 it is described as a hardy biennial with red flowers, 

 blooming in August, indigenous to China, first 

 known in England in 1573. But how did it come 

 to acquire the common name of Hollyhock ? The old 

 English writers spelt the word Hollihocke, Holyoak, 

 and Holyock, whence it is supposed to have been 

 derived from the Saxon Eolihoc. The word seems 

 somewhat difiicult to explain. The originally intro- 

 duced Hollyhock was, no doubt, a single form ; but 

 it was soon taken in hand and cultivated. Gerarde 

 states that at the end of the sixteenth century it 

 was sown in gardens almost everywhere. About 

 1724 it is described in Miller's " Gardener's Dic- 

 tionary " as a plant of considerable variety, bearing 

 red, white, purple, black, and other coloured flowers ; 

 and there were double varieties in those days. One 

 of the first of English florists to take in hand and 

 improve the Hollyhock was Charles Baron of Saffron 

 Walden, a shoemaker by trade, unversed in garden 

 literature, but with a great liking for the flower. 

 By concentrating his attention on this plant alone, 

 he soon distanced all competitors, and originated 

 flowers of more perfect form, greater substance, 

 closer arrangement of petals, and greater proximity 

 of flowers on the spike. Later on, the Pauls of 

 Cheshunt, Chater of Saffron Walden, and others, 

 took up the work of improvement, and were so 



