
          95

Bradley, Richard (cont.)

(Historia plantarum succulentarum) The history of
succulent plants: containing, the aloes, ficoid's
(or fig-marygolds) torch-thistles, melon-thistles,
and such others as are not capable of an hortus-
siccus ... With their descriptions, and manner of
culture. London, Printed for the author (Dec. 2-5
for William Mears), 1716-27. 5 pts. in 1 vol.
50 pl. (Dept. Agr.; N. Y. Bot. Gard.; Mass.
Hort. Soc.; Mo. Bot. Gard.; Arn. Arb.; Brit. Mus.)

Latin and English in parallel columns.

-----  The 2d ed., cor. London, Printed for J.
Hodges, 1739. 5 pts. in 1 vol. 50 pl. (Dept. Agr.;
Bib. Nat. Paris)

Kalendarium universale, or The gardener's universal
calendar. London, 1726. See Whitmill, Benjamin

The monthly register of experiments and observations 
in husbandry and gardening. [1722? et seq.]
See his A general treatise of husbandry and gardening.

New experiments and observations, relating to the
generation of plants, occasioned by a letter publish'd
in the Phil. Transactions by Patrick Blair, M. D.
Together with an account of the extraordinary vegetation 
of peaches, abricots,[apricots] nectarines, plums, cherries,
figs, vines, goose—berries, currans, &c. as they were
artificially cultivated this spring 1724. London,
Printed for T. Corbett, 1724. 32 p. (Brit. Mus.;
Martyn, p.xxvii; Seguier, p.343; Miltitz, col. 299)
        