EVERGREEN TREES AND SHRUBS. 533 
form of park tree than any evergreen that will grow in this country. 
We believe the finest specimen in this country is in the Parsons 
nursery at Flushing, L. I. It is now about forty feet across the 
spread of its branches, which almost rest upon the ground. The 
form is rather globular than pyramidal; the height not being equal 
to the breadth. Most other specimens are broad ovate-pyramidal. 
Trees not more than twelve years planted in the New York Cen¬ 
tral Park, are now upwards of twenty feet high, about the same 
diameter of branches, and perfect in every way. It does well at 
Rochester, N. Y., for six or eight years after planting, and then 
gives indications of weakness and disease. 
An impression gains ground that this pine is not quite hardy in 
the northern States. It is not possible to speak with certainty on 
this point. It is hardy to resist cold, but it seems to be weak, and 
to develop disease in the summer. The tree not being a native of 
our country, may not adapt itself to our varied soils or climates so 
readily as natives. But we still hope that, with care, when young, 
it may be rooted in most parts of this country, so as to grow 
healthily. 
The following remarks by H. W. Sargent in his Appendix to Down¬ 
ing’s Landscape Gardening, are interesting: “ It is universally re¬ 
turned to us as hardy from all parts of the country, though some¬ 
times suffering from sun in summer. Near Boston this is the case, 
and at Natchez, where plants have to be shaded from the summer 
sun. Mr. Barry writes from Rochester it is hardy there, but will 
not make an old tree. Our own trees at Wodenethe, sixteen and 
eighteen feet high, certainly suffer from sun, and not cold. The 
winter of 1855 and 1856, which destroyed some and damaged many 
other white pines here, and even road-side cedars, produced no 
effect upon this tree, which was entirely unprotected and uninjured; 
and yet, often in midsummer, it will become ruptured in its leading 
shoots, and die back. This may be on the principle of the frozen 
sap-blight in fruit-trees, where the damage done in winter does not 
develop the injury before the succeeding summer; but we are more 
inclined to believe that the tree, if planted in rich holes, overgrows, 
and a sort of apoplexy supervenes. We form this theory from ob¬ 
serving that, where a great growth has taken place, and the leading 
