NAMING ANT> NUMBERING PLANTS. 



WaLpLas.ra.ic. Wallich (Nath.). Planta* rariores 

 Asiaticae. 2parts,foL London, 1830. 



Wal. res. Id. Asiatic Researches, or Trans. 



actions of the Society instituted 

 in Bengal. 4to. 1788. 



Walt. ca. Walter (Thorn.). Flora Caroliniana. 



8vo. London, 1788. 



Walt. h. Walther(Aug.Frid). Designatio Plan- 



tar urn Horti ejus 8vo. Lips. 1735. 



W. & K. Waldstein (Franc.) et Kitaibel (Paul). 



Descriptiones et Icones Plantarum 

 rariorum Hungarian. 3 vols. fol. 

 Vienn. 1802—1812. 



Wang. Von Wangenheim (Fried Ad. Jul.). 



Anpflanzung North Amerikani- 

 scher Holzarten. 1 vol. folio. 

 Gottinga?, 1787. 



W. ar. Willdenow (Car. Lud.). Historia Ama- 



ranthorum. Fol. Turici, 1790. 



W. b. m. Id. In Berlinisches Magazin oder Ge- 



sammlete Schriften, &c. 4to. 1765 

 -1767. 



Weig. obs. Weigel (Christ. Ehrenb.). Observa- 

 tiones Botanica?. 4to. Gryphiaj, 

 1772. 



Wein. Weinmann (J. Gul.). Phytanthoza 



Iconographica. 4 vols. fol. Regemb. 

 1737—1745. 



Wen. c. Wendland (Joh. Christ). Collectio 



Plantarum tam exoticarum quam 

 indigenarum. 4to. Hanoveras, 

 1805, &c. 



Wen. er. Wendland (Joh. Christ). Ericarum 

 Icones et Descriptiones. 4to. 1798, 

 &c. 



Wen. han. Id. Sertum Hanoveranum. 4 fasc. Fol. 

 Wen. her. Id. Hortus Herrenhusanus. Fol 

 1798, &c. 



Wen. ob. Id. Botanische Beobachtungen. 1 vol. 



4to. Hanover, 1798. 



W. erf. Willdenow (Car. Lud.), in Acta Aca- 



demise electoralis Moguntinee Sci- 

 entiarum utilium quse Erfordia?. 



2 vols. 8vo. Erford et Gotha?, 1757 

 —1761 ; the rest in 4to, 1775 and 

 1776. 



Wern.tr. Transactions or Memoirs of the Wer- 

 nerian Society. 8vo. Edinburgh, 

 1809, to the present time. 



W. h. b. Willdenow (Car. Lud.). Hortus Bero- 



linensis. Fol. Berlin, 1806— 1810. 



W. n. ber. Id. in Newen Schriften des Berlin- 

 isches Gesellschaft naturforschun- 

 den freunde. 6 vols. 8vo. Berlin, 

 1780—1785. 



Wood. Woodville (William). Medical Botany. 



3 vols. 4to. 1790. 



W. ph. Willdenow (Car. Lud.). Phytographia. 



Fol. Erlangee, 1797. 

 Za. Zanon (Antonio). Istoria Botanical 



Fol. Bologna, 1675. 

 Zo. ic. Zorn (Barthol.). Icones Plantarum 



Medicinalium. 8vo. Nuremb. 1779 



—1784. 



METHODS OF NAMING AND NUMBERING PLANTS. 



In gardens or garden scenery where accuracy and intelligence are aimed at, all the less 

 common plants, ligneous and herbaceous, and all the varieties of fruits, should have their 

 names affixed to them ; with the addition of their native country, year of introduction if 

 exotic, and natural order. Larch, oak, and yew are the most durable timbers for forming 

 tallies on which to write or paint these names. The cheapest and best description of cast- 

 iron tally is that of Mr. Stuart Murray (Gard. Mag. vol. iii. p. 29.), the next best tha 

 used in the garden of the Horticultural Society. (Gard. Mag. vol. vi. p. 407.) For trees, 

 shrubs, and large plants, the names may be painted on the ends of bricks, as in Messrs. 

 Loddiges's arboretum ; or, what is better, there are panelled bricks in imitation of Stuart 

 Murray's tally, and earthenware tallies with panels, and with the names impressed by types 

 on the clay before burning, manufactured by Peake of Tunstall near Newcastle under Lyne, 

 and by Allardyce of Clay Hills near Aberdeen. (Gard. Mag. vol. vi. p. 399.) 



Where plants cannot be named, they should have numbers affixed to them referring to a 

 catalogue ; and that these numbers may be generally understood, the common numerals 

 should be made use of. These may be painted on wood, iron, or earthenware tallies. But 

 as the common numerals require the use of the pen or pencil, gardeners have devised signs 

 for them which may be readily cut with the knife on sticks. 



seton's mode of cutting numbers on sticks 

 Is much the simplest, and at the same time the most, comprehensive. The signs made 

 use of are as under : — 



1 23 45 67 890 



The advantages of these marks over»those in common use are, that they are shorter and 

 more easily made by single distinct cuts ; and that no number, however high, requires more 

 marks than it would require figures written with a pen. The only way in which the me- 

 mory is apt to misgive, in this scheme, is by confounding / and \ , ^ and K, A ana< V » 

 with each other, as a child would confound the figures 6 and 9 ; but this slight incon- 

 venience will be remedied by the following key, which may be easily borne in the mind. 

 Let us recollect that, in writing, we naturally draw a stroke from the right at top, to the 

 left at bottom, thus /, and not in the opposite direction, thus \ : now, in all the above 

 numbers which differ from each other in the direction of the diagonal line, that which is 

 in the direction usual in writing precedes the other, thus I \ s\ Is. /i i\; the other two, 



236789 



A and V 3 will not be confounded, on recollecting that V is * the usual numeral letter for five. 

 4 s 



