KnoLKohl, 18. 

 KohL-rabiof the Germans, 18. 



L. 



Lanseh fruit, description of, 1 10. 

 Lansium domesticum, 110. 

 Laurus Persea, 96. 

 Leonia Glycycarpa, 104. 

 Lindegaard, Mr. Peter, Gardener to H. M. 

 the King of Denmark, his account of the 

 methods of forcing Peaches in Denmark and 

 Holland, 321, et seqq. 



; on forcing Grapes 



in Denmark, 47 1 , et seqq. 



— on the cultivation 

 the Winter in Den- 



of Asparagi 

 mark, 509. 



Lindley, Mr. John, sketch by, of the princi- 

 pal Tropical Fruits which are likely to be 

 worth cultivating in England for the Des- 



. — Instructions by, for 



Tacking Living Plants in Foreign Countries, 

 especially within the Tropics; and J: 



treatment during the voyage to 



by, of certain 

 Seedling varieties of Amaryllis, which flow- 

 ered in the Society's Garden, 337. 

 - XT Mr - George, notices of speci- 

 mens of Nuts sent by him to the Society, 263. 

 ~ his Classification of 

 Peaches and Nectarines, 525, et seqq. 

 Linn ki Sp. PL, cited, 18, 26, 35. 

 Linschoten's Voyages, cited, 107- 

 Li-tcht, a Chinese fruit, described, 124. 

 Livingstone, John, Esq., on the state of 

 Chinese Horticulture and Agriculture; with 

 acc ount of several vegetables used in 



Loango, description of the Cazou of, 92. 

 Lob el, Adversaria, cited, 18. 

 Locust tree, 444. 



Longan or Long-yen, a Chinese fruit, des- 

 cribed, 12 1.— Ripened in England, 80. 



England I?4 ina ^ "P 6 " 6 * ' m 



Lote-tvee (Rhamnus Lotus) of Africa, 88.— 



\ annus appellations of, 88, 9. 

 Lyon s Travels, cited, 88. 



Mackenzie, Sir George Stewart, on the 

 construction of Hot-house Flues, 214. 



Madagascar, description of the Fruits of, 92, 

 3. 



Malpighia punicifolia, 98. 



Mammee fruit {Mammee Sapota), 97.—Ame- 



Mammee Apple of Sierra Leone, (Mammea 

 Africana,) 457- 



Mangifera Indica, 112. 



Mango fruit, description of, 112-114. 



Mangustin, description of the, 106. 



Mangostana celebica, 106. 



Mansfield, Earl of, his gardener's descrip- 

 tion of a Vinery at Scone, 495. 



Margate Nonpareil, 268. 



Marmalade Box, description of a fruit so 

 named, 101. 



Marryat, Mrs. and Joseph, Esq., plants of a 

 new Chrysanthemum presented by, to the 

 Society, 417. 



Marsden's Hist, of Sumatra, cited, 84, 87, 

 IOC, 7. 



Martin Sec Pear, 138. 



Martyn's Flora Rustica cited, 26, 31. 



Matthiolus Comm., cited, 29. 



Mayne, Capt. Charles Otway, services ren- 

 dered by him to the Society, 414. 



Mearns,Mi\ John, observations by, on Horti- 

 cultural Espalier Training, 44-49. 



— — his Pit for growing early 



Cucumbers, 493. 6 



Melon, Succado, instance of an intermixture 

 of character in, 65. 



Melon and Pine Pit, description of one, 223. 



Melon, on a new and improved method of cul- 

 tivating it, 239. 



Melons, on the cultivation of, in the open air, 

 349. 1 



— - description of an improved Pit for 



raising them, by the use of steam, 353. 



Memoires de I Academie Francoise, cited, 88. 



Meredoo, description of the fruit of the, 1 1 7. 



Mesembryanthemums, on thecultivationof,274 . 



Messire Jean Pear, 138. 



Mildew, observations on, 175. 



Miller's Gard. Diet, cited, 525. 



