INDEX. 



Gilpin's Forest Scenery, citation from, 334,5. 

 Globe Onion, 373. 



Gloriosa superba, on its proper treatment, 



G nirf} a .simplex, notice of a mode of treating it 

 as an out door shrub, 362. 



Golden Knob Apple, 313, 325. 



Goodricke, Sir Henry, Bart, an account com- 

 municated by, of the original tree of the 

 Ribston Pippin growing on his estate, 141. 



Gooseberie, the red beyond sea, of Dodoens, 

 noticed, 86, note. 



Gourd, notice of several specimens of, sent to 

 the Society, 364. 



Go wen, Robert James, Esq. observations by, 

 upon the glazing of hot-houses and conserva- 

 tories, 2 14.— Account of a method of con- 

 structing flues for hot-houses, 252. 



Gratuulilla, 99. 



Grange, Mr. James, Apples exhibited by, 

 312. 



Grange Apple, 321. 



Grape, Esperione, some account of, 93. — 

 Hamburgh, 11/. — Pitmaston white Cluster 

 seedling, 249. — Auverna, or small black 

 cluster, ib.— Old Dutch Sweetwater, ib. 



Grapes, on a method of retarding their -ripen- 

 ing in hot-houses, so as to obtain a supply 

 in winter, 95. — Notice of the Royal Musca- 

 dine, grown on standard Vines, 365. 



Griffin, Mr. William, Apples exhibited by, 

 313. 



Gronovius's Flora Virginica, cited 1 10. 

 Guernsey Lily, on the culture of, 399, 447-— 



Effects of very high temperature on, 469. 

 Gymnogramma Peruviana, 341. 



H. 



Hare, Thomas, Esq. Apples exhibited by, 

 316. 



Harewood, Lord, a fruiting Passiflora qua- 



drangularis in his garden, 1 00. 

 Harrison, Mr. C. gardener to J. S. Wortley, 



Esq. his mode of treating fruit trees, 37- — 



Some observations on his mode of treating 



Pear trees, 150. 

 Hatch, Mrs. notice of a Dahlia raised in her 



garden, 234. 



Hawkins, Abraham, Esq. note by, on his 

 mode of treating the Gnidia simplex as an 

 out door shrub, 362. 



Hawthorndean Apple, 320. 



Hedges, Mr. William, account of experi- 

 ments for the production of blue flowers on 

 the Hydrangea 1 ' lortcnsi.s. with some notes 

 on the propagation and management of the 

 plant, 173. 



Hemionitis, three species, 341. 



Herbert, Hon. and Rev. William, informa- 

 tion collected by, respecting the original tree 

 of the Ribston Pippin, 14 1 ,2.— Instruction 

 for the treatment of the. Inmryllis bwgifolia. 

 as a hardy aquatic, with some observations 

 on the productiou of Hybrid plants, and the 

 treatment of the bulbs of the genera Crinum 

 and Amaryllis, I 87— The flues in his hot- 

 houses noticed, 254. 



Hernandez' Hist, of Mexico, cited 343. 



Herefordshire Queening, 316. 



Hertford, Marquis of, notice of a Queen Pine 

 grown by his gardener at Ragley, 118. 



Hick, Charles William, Esq. Apples exhi- 

 bited by, 312. 



Holden, Robert, Esq. Apples exhibited by, 

 315. 



Holland, Lady, Dahlia sent to England by, 

 224. 



Hoflhigbifr// Apple, 328. 



Honey dew, its origin, 56. 



Honeysuckles, or Passiflora laurifolia, 102. 



Hooker, Mr. drawing by, of the fruit of the 

 Me-spilus Japonica. 304. — Account and de- 

 scription of Wilmofs new early Plum, 392. 

 — Description of the Downton Strawberrv, 

 397- 



Hooker, William Jackson, Esq. 339. 



Horticultural Society, notices of subjects com- 

 municated to, of which separate Papers have 

 not been published, 1 15, 357- 



Hosack, Dr. David, some account of the Sec- 

 He Pear, 256. 



Hot-houses, notice of an economical plan for 

 heating, 121. — Observations on the glazing 

 of, 24 i. — Account of a method of construct- 

 ing flues of, 252.— Directions for the de- 

 struction of insects in, 289. 



Hume, Sir Abraham, his Crinum, noticed, 

 195. 



