INDEX. 



447 



24; appearance in winter, 2o; 

 Lammas-shoots, 27; Cadenham 

 Oak, 27; civic crown, 29; Kmg 

 Charles's Oak, 29, 82 ; insects 

 which feed on Oak, 33; gall- 

 flies, 38; apples of Sodom, 4/; 

 flower and fruit of Oak, ih ; 

 rooks, 49; Quercus Ballota, ^1 ; 

 Q. ^gilops, 52; timher, ; 

 Westminster Abbey, 53; shrine 

 of Edward the Confessor, ih. ; 

 Arthur's round table, ih. ; Brun- 

 dusium, 54 ; ancient ship, ihr, uses 

 of timber, 56; old English or Dur- 

 mast Oak, 58 ; ii. 22 ; old Lon- 

 don Bridge, i. 59; ground Oak, 

 60; Oak copse, ihr, picturesq.ue 

 character of, 61 ; barkmg, 64 ; 

 timber for the navy, 65; Forest 

 of Dean, 66 ; New Forest, ^6.; 

 Death of William Rufus, 68 ; 

 ancient Oak, 69; at Oxford, /O; 

 in Windsor Forest, 72; Fairlop 

 Oak, 75; Chapel Oak, 76; Co w- 

 thorpe Oak, 76; large, 7 9 ; ^ al- 

 lace's, 8] ; Queen Elizabeth s, 

 26.; Boscobel, 82; value ot 

 timber, 89 ; Gelonos Oak, 90 ; 

 Gospel Oak, 91; succeeded by 

 Beech, 339; Evergreen Oak, 

 see Ilex. 

 Oakweb, i. 35. 



Occidental Plane,ii. 212 ; see Plane. 

 (Ecidium, i. 213, 299. 

 Old style, i. 181. 

 Oleace^, i. lii, 131; u- 223. 

 Olive, i.liii.^ 

 Olive worts, i. Hi. 

 Ononis, see Manna. 

 Ontario Poplar, i. 372. 

 Opegrapha scripta, ii. 55. 

 Opulus, ii. 275. 



Order, Linnaean, i. xxni; natural, v 

 Oriental Plane, see Plane. 

 Ornus, i. Iv. 



Osier, ii. 252; see Willow. 

 Ostrya,ii. 132. 



Ovary, i. xxiii. 

 Oxford, ancient Oak at, i. 70. 

 Oxyacantha, see Hawthorn. 

 Oxygen given out by leaves, i. xvii. 



Padus, see Cherry, Bird. 

 Paliurus, i. xxxvii. 

 Palma Christi, i. Ixiv. 

 Palms, i. xvi ; ii. 245, 270, 299. 

 Palm Sunday, ii. 245, 299. 

 Panax, i. xliii. 

 Paper, i. 338. 

 Paper Birch, ii. 82. 

 Papyrus, i. 338. ^ 

 Paraguay tea, see Mate, ii. 69. 

 Parenchpna, i. xvii. 

 Parliament Oak, i. 81. 

 Parr, Dr. his love of May-day, i. 

 193. 



Paulinia, i. xxxiii. 

 PauPs, St., Cathedral, carving m, u. 

 173. 



Peach, i. xxxviii. 

 Pear-fly, i. 298. 



Pear-tree described, i. 291; cha- 

 racter of wild, 295; varieties, 

 296 ; remarkable tree, 297 ; in- 

 sects, 298; fungus, 299. 

 Pedicel, i. xxi. ^ 

 Peduncle, i. xxi. 

 Pegwood, ii. 195. 

 Pencil-cedar, ii. 409, 436. 

 Penrose, Hawthorns at, i. 207- 

 Periclymenum, ii. 271-273. 

 Persia, Plane-trees in, ii. 207. 

 Persicon, see Walnut. 

 Peter the Great, ii. 61. 

 Petiole, i. xvii. 

 Peziza, ii. 148. 

 Phaeton, story of, i. 362. 

 Philyra, see Lime. 

 Pickled walnuts, ii. 160. 

 Pine, see Fir, Scotch Fir. 

 Pinaster described, ii. 365 ; geo- 

 graphical distribution, 367 ; use 

 on sandhills near the sea, ih. ; 

 resin and lampblack, 369. 



