INDEX. 



Dnipacese, i. xxxviii. 

 Duct, i. xi. 



Durmast Oak, i. 58 ; ii. 22. 



Eddj'stone Lightliouse, i. 20. 

 Edinburgh, Chestnut timber in, ii. 5. 

 Eglantine, ii. 2/2. 

 Eo'vpt, Willows in, ii. 259. 

 Elah, i. 7. 



Elder, i. xlvii ; described, ii. 264 ; 

 Evehm's praises of, ih. ; why 

 called Bore-tree, 265 ; uses of, 



266 ; emblematical of sorrow, 



267 ; tradition respecting, 268 ; 

 medicinal virtues, 268. 



Elijah, the Juniper of, ii. 43. 



Electricity, conducting power of 

 Firs, ii. 323. 



Elm, i. Ixv ; described, ii. 99 ; early 

 in ripening their seeds, 101 ; 

 small-leaved, 102; Cornish, 103; 

 Wych, 105 ; Cork-barked, 106 ; 

 ancient history, 107 ; v;hat spe- 

 cies are indigenous, 108 ; pic- 

 turesque character, 109 ; poetical 

 allusions, 111 ; propagation,! 12; 

 uses of, 113 ; treatment of by 

 the Chinese, 114 ; insects which 

 prey on, ib. ; decay of leaf, 116; 

 remarkable specimens, 117 ; 

 Wych Elm described, ii. 121. 



Elm- worts, i. Ixv. 



Endogenous trees, i. xii, xvi ; ii. 67. 



Engelhardtia, i. Ixvii. 



Enys,Holly at,ii. 64; Elmat,ii.l23. 



Ericaceae, ii. 189. 



Ermine-moth, i. 308. 



Etna, Mount, Chestnuts on, ii. 29. 



Euonj-mus, see Spinale-tree. 



Euphorbia, i. Ivii. 



Euphorbiaceae, i. Ivii, 161. 



Euphorbium, i. lix. 



Evaporation, effects of, i. 331. 



Evelyn, derivation of the name, ii. 

 135. 



Evergreen Oak, see Ilex. 

 Exogynous trees, i. xii, xvi, xxiv. 



Fagopyrus, i. 338. 



Fagus, i. Ixxi, 313; see Beech, ii. 10. 



Fairlop Oak, i. 73. 



Farley, Cedar at, ii. 409. 



Fasces, ii. 77. 



Faust, John, i. 314 note. 



Feast of Cherries, i. 263. 



Filament, i. xxiii. 



Filbert, ii. 149. 



Finhaven, Chestnut at, ii. 27. 



Fir, i. Ixxiii. 



Fir tribe, general remarks, ii. 317 ; 

 habit and place of growth, 318, 

 320 ; why said to attract mois- 

 ture, 320 ; effects of snow, 321 ; 

 terminal buds, 322 ; electrical 

 agency, 323; flowers, cones, and 

 seeds, 324 ; geographical distri- 

 bution, 326 ; notice in Scripture, 



327 ; and in profane history, 



328 ; Pine forests in the north 

 of Europe, 329 ; eifects of fire 

 on Pine forests, 330 ; ice-storm 

 in a Pine forest, 332 ; methods 

 of conveying timber, 334 ; slide 

 of Alpnach, 336 ; timber in 

 Russia, 338 ; rafts on the Rhine, 



340 ; insects which prey on, 



341 ; see Scotch Fir, Pinaster, 

 Silver Fir, &c. 



Flower, parts of, i. xxi. 



Folio, etymologyof the word, i. 338. 



Forest of Dean, i. 65 ; ii. 9. 



Forest, New, i. 65. 



Fortingal Yew, ii. 313. 



Fountain's Abbey, Ivy at, ii. 294 ; 



Yew at, 312. 

 Fowlers' Service-tree, i. 278. 

 France, Chestnuts as food injii. 18. 

 Frangula, see Buckthorn. 

 ' Fraxinus, see Ash. 

 French Revolutions, i. 354. 

 French berries, ii. 221. 

 Fuego, Tierra del, edible fungus in, 



i. 534. 



Fulham, Lombardy Poplars at, i. 

 372. 



