his evidence respecting 



his account of 



Dahlia, i. 84, 85. 



species of the 



Hernandia sonora, 

 Heron, Sir Robert, vi. 161. 

 Herriot, Thomas, his account of the Openawk 

 plant, i. 9. 



Hertford, Marquis of, iii. 118; v. 206. 



Hervy, M., Director of the Luxembourg Gar- 

 den at Paris, v. 125, 128 ; 2 S. i. 63, 289, 

 330. 



— account of pears received from, 



v. 126. 



Hesketh, Robert, Esq., vi. 274, 279 ; vii. 65. 

 Hesperanthus tenuifolius, i. 321. 



radiatus, 7, i. 321. 



Hesperis matronalis, ii. 155. 



~ produce of oil, v. 41. 



Hetherington, Thomas Wilson, Esq., vii. 



153. 1 

 Hewitt, Rev. Augustus, 2 S. ii. 234. 

 Hexaglottis longifolia, i. 313, 314. 

 Hibbert, George, Esq., i. 262, 268, 288, 



305, 311, 312, 315, 335; vi. 476, 477, 



478. 



~- j account of some 



plants introduced by him, i. 267, 268, 288, 

 305,335. J 

 Hibiscus esculentus, vi. 53. 



' militaris, 2 S. ii. 302. 



" Rosa sinensis, 2 S. ii. 302, 304. 



~ - syriacus, vii. 41 ; 2 S. ii. 275. 

 Wick, Charles William, Esq., apples exhi- 

 bited by, iii. 312. 

 Uildyard, Mr. Elias, description of a mode 



of destroying the onion grub, vii. 93. 

 *»ll, Daniel, Esq., his remarks on the utility 

 ^o^oxygen in promoting vegetation, i. 203. 

 Dr., account of his successful application 

 •range tree, iv. 134. 

 ved from, 2 S. ii. 416. 

 ^lasalicifolia, 2 S. ii. 284. 

 d^Ppophae conferta, 2 S. ii. 265. 

 f* IR D, Mrs., i. 299. 

 gttSCHFELD, iv. 523. 



Hit t, 2S. i. 59, 329. 



^T— his directions for training trees, i. 171. 



Hodgson, Thomas, a garden labourer, pressed 

 for a sailor, sent home wounded from the 

 siege of Carthagena, brought with him the 

 Hymenocallis littoralis, i. 338. 



Hodson, Mr., vii. 438. 



Hoe, Chinese, v. 51. 



Hoffman, Martin, Esq., vi. 410. 



Hog-plums, v. 90, 450, 451. 



Hog-plum of the West Indies, v. 99. 



Hogan, Mr. William, v. 308. 



vating the i 

 Hogg, Mr., 2 S. i. 536, 542, 543. 

 Mr. Thomas, ii. 361. 



large pine-apple plants, iv. 555. 

 Holden, Robert, Esq., iii. 329 ; 



of treating 



protecting wall trees, iv. 93. 

 Holford, Charles, Esq., vi. 570. 

 his mode of fastening trees 



g, vi. 485. 

 oapt. Geoi 



, 120. 



- description of a pine-house 



Holland, Right Hon. Lady, species of 

 Dahlias introduced by her, i. 92, 97. 



iii. 224. 



Lancelot, Esq., 2 S. ii. 231. 



Hollist, Hasler, Esq., 2 S. ii. 160. 

 Holly, 2 S. ii. 226, 243, 261. 



eligible for garden fences, ii. 355. 



season for transplanting, ii. 357. 



berries of the, not ripe till March or 



April, ii. 357. 



time and manner of sowing, ii. 357. 



Holly-hedges and trees in Scotland, account of 



some remarkable, vii. 194 

 Home, Sir Everard, vi. 59. 

 Holmes, Mr. Joseph, observations made by 

 the growth of plants at different pe- 

 ^- J iy, 2 S. iii. 247. 



Villiam, notice of a seedling 

 peach raised by him, vi. 393. 

 Homer, vi. 35. 

 Homeria collina, i. 307. 



ochroleuca, i. 308.^ 



Homoglossum praecox, i. 325. 

 Honey-dew, iii. 56. 

 Honey-gift, ii. 157. 

 Honeysuckles (Passiflora), in. 102. 

 Hood, Mr. C, 2 S. ii. 372. 



riods of the day, 2 I 



