INDEX. 



759 



Lusor's, ib. — Austin's stone-coloured, ib. — 

 Anson's, ib. — Water, ib.— DihPs water, ib. — 

 Mrs Marshall's antonica, ib. — oropholite, ib.— 

 Calderwood, Broxburn, and Borrowstownness, 

 ib. — employment of it for the construction of 

 edgings in gardens, 591 — qualities and prices 

 of the different kinds of, 744. 

 Cenotaphs, introduction of, into the flower-gar- 

 den, 654. 



Chairs, kinds of, suited to the gardenesque gar- 

 den, 691. 



Chamber flues, Loudon's, 148 — the Dalkeith, ib. 



Chambers, Sir William, the gardens at Kew 

 originally laid out by, 621 — on Chinese gar- 

 dening and gardens, 649. 



Chambers's Journal, extract from, on rockwork, 

 704. 



Chanter's smoke-consuming furnace, 255. 



Charlotte, the princess, the mausoleum to, at 

 Claremont, 654. 



Chatsworth, size of the gardens at, 12 — their 

 situation, 20 — conservative walls at, 101 — in- 

 sufficient ventilation of the large conservatory 

 at, 130— description of the large conservatory, 

 374— ridge-and-furrow greenhouse at, 395 — 

 the tropical aquarium at, 419 — melon-house 

 at, 462 — appropriateness of the Italian garden 

 at, 605 — the Emperor fountain at, 632, 636 — 

 history of the waterworks at, 636 — vases in 

 the gardens of, 637 — the rockwork at, 701. 



Cherry, Mr, pinery designed by, 340. 



Cherry-houses, construction of, 355 — span-roofed 

 one, 356 — those at Frogmore, ib. — forcing by 

 temporary coverings, 357. 



Chevreul, M., views of, regarding the harmony 

 of colours, 596. 



Chimney-tops, kinds, &c. of, 561. 



Chinese, the, invention of heating by hot-air 



. flues by, 145 — their mode of preparing ice 

 and constructing ice-houses, 504 — their intro- 

 duction of statues, busts, &c, into gardens, 

 649 — invention and employment of the wire 

 fence by them, 696 — their system of construct- 

 ing garden walks, ib. 



Chiswick, the Italian flower-garden at, 619, and 

 Plate xxvi. 



Chiswick Horticultural Society, fruit-room of 

 the, 493. 



Circles, various modes of drawing, on the ground, 

 719,720 — modes of determining their centres, 

 720. 



Circular flower-beds, employment of, in the gar- 

 denesque style, 661. 



Circular flower-garden, design for a, 629. 



Circular flues, construction of, 149. 



Circulation of hot water, see Hot water. 



Cisterns, mode of connecting, with boilers, 267 

 — mode of constructing them in gardens, 520. 

 See also Tanks. 



Claremont, situation of the garden at, 19 — the 

 architectural walls at, 92 — the mausoleum to 

 the Princess Charlotte at, 654. 



Clarence Lodge, conservatory at, 371. 



Clay walls, construction of, 98. 



Climbing plants, trainers for, 686. 



Clinker walls, construction of, 99. 



Clive, the Hon. Robert, his method of tank-heat- 

 ing, 194 — his improved mode, 201. 



Close-topped boilers, pressure, &c. on, 265. 



Closers, what, in bricklaying, 106. 



Coal tar, employment of, as a paint, 562. 



Coalbrookdale Company, vase executed by the, 

 643 — and iron garden seats, 650. 



Cob walls, on the construction of, 98. 



Cobbett, William, on the construction of ice- 

 houses, 505 — his plan of one, 506. 



Cockerell, C. R., Esq., conservatory at the 

 Grange designed by, 361. 



Cockling, what, in glass, 533. 



Cold Pits, see Conservative Pits. 



Coldridge's system of heating by hot water, 

 175. 



Collinson, Mr G., chair designed, &c. by, 691. 



Colosseum, rockwork at the, 701. 



Colour, suitable, for garden walls, 77. 



Colours, harmony of, in relation to the laying 

 out of flower-gardens, 593 — designs illustrat- 

 ing it, 603, Plates xxvii., xxviii. 



Columella, description of Roman gardening by, 

 2 — mode of preserving grapes after gathering 

 employed by, 491. 



Combustion, imperfect, on, 258 — insensible, 259. 



Complementary colours, what, 596. 



Concrete, employment of, for the foundations of 

 walls, 67. 



Concrete walls, construction of, 98. 



Concreting, application of, to fruit-tree borders, 

 30. 



Conduction, diffusion of heat by, 191, 212. 

 Cone joint, the, 247. 



Coniferse, kinds of, suited to the suburban gar- 

 den, 736. 



Connecting-joints, forms of, for hot-water pipes, 

 246. 



Conservative pits, different kinds of, 471 — with 

 solid walls, ib. — with hollow walls, ib. — with 

 bottom ventilation, 47 2 — span- roofed cold one. 

 ib. — cold one for preserving vegetables, 473 — 

 span-roofed vegetable one, ib. 



Conservative walls, construction of, 101. 



Conservatories, evils of too lofty ones, 129 — the 

 erection and arrangement of them, 360 — im- 

 portance of the subject, ib. — style in which 

 they should be erected, ib. — corridors to them, 

 ib. — that of Lady Ashburton at the Grange, 

 361 — distinction between them and green- 

 houses, 362 — different modes in which the 

 plants may be grown in them, ib. — remarks 

 on their size, 363 — that formerly existing at 

 Bretton Hall, ib. — the circular one at Dalkeith 

 Palace, 364, and Plate xv. — that at Alton 

 Towers, 366 — the detached one at Kew, 367 

 — that at Sion House, 368, and Plate xvi. — the 

 Botanical Society's in the Regent's Park, ib. — 

 Mr Marnock on their construction, 369 — that 

 at the Deepdene, 371 — that at Dunnemarle, 

 ib. 373 — one in connection with town man- 

 sion, 372, and Plate xvii. — that at Biel, 373 — 

 the large one at Chatsworth, 374 — one for first- 

 class residence, by R. Turner, Esq., 375 and 

 Plate xix. — one, with fruit-houses attached at 

 Killikee, 376, and Plate xx.— domical one de- 

 signed by R. Turner, Esq., 377, and Plate xxi. 

 —that of Mr Butts at Grovefield, 378— the 

 arrangement of the plants in them, 380 — their 

 floors, 381 — Mr Llewellyn's, ib. — proposed 

 suspension ridge-and-furrow roofs for them, 

 382. 



