Gardeners' Chronicle, Part 1Haymarket Publishing, 1875 - Gardening |
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Page 15
... matter of course for new Rose books , and new editions of old Rose books , to appear , and we cannot wonder at it , for while the popular homage to the Rose seems to grow by what it feeds on , the books which aid in this matter are each ...
... matter of course for new Rose books , and new editions of old Rose books , to appear , and we cannot wonder at it , for while the popular homage to the Rose seems to grow by what it feeds on , the books which aid in this matter are each ...
Page 16
... matter in a new light , and affords a justification for re - opening the question . The main advocate of the theory that varieties do degenerate and die out was no less a person than THOMAS ANDREW KNIGHT . He , as LINDLEY records in his ...
... matter in a new light , and affords a justification for re - opening the question . The main advocate of the theory that varieties do degenerate and die out was no less a person than THOMAS ANDREW KNIGHT . He , as LINDLEY records in his ...
Page 23
... matter is not attended to the hens ' health will pro- bably suffer , but the chickens certainly will , from the accumulations of foul matter , and the necessarily accompanying foul smells . Whether in the chickens ' pens or the sheds ...
... matter is not attended to the hens ' health will pro- bably suffer , but the chickens certainly will , from the accumulations of foul matter , and the necessarily accompanying foul smells . Whether in the chickens ' pens or the sheds ...
Page 42
... matter of business , when a curator or a gardener is inducted into his office or situation , for the money . value of the collection of plants entrusted to him to be taken by some competent professional ; and the same to be done again ...
... matter of business , when a curator or a gardener is inducted into his office or situation , for the money . value of the collection of plants entrusted to him to be taken by some competent professional ; and the same to be done again ...
Page 50
... matter of engineering , the work is perfectly satisfactory , the trees being absolutely immovable , no matter how strongly the stormy winds may blow . But from another point of view the case is worse than we thought it ; for , if the ...
... matter of engineering , the work is perfectly satisfactory , the trees being absolutely immovable , no matter how strongly the stormy winds may blow . But from another point of view the case is worse than we thought it ; for , if the ...
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Common terms and phrases
12 sprays amongst appearance autumn average Azaleas beautiful bloom Botanic Bouvardias buds bulbs bunch Catalogue Chimæra colour Commissioners Conifers Council crop cultivation dwarf early exhibition favourable feet Ferns Floral flowers foliage forests fronds frost Fuchsia garden Grapes grass green greenhouse ground growing grown growth hardy heat horticulturists inches insects JAMES GLAISHER larvæ late leaves London manure matter mean Meeting of Fruit Messrs Nursery Orchids packet Pears Peas Pelargoniums plants Potatos pots present Primula produced pruning quantity Regent's Park remarkable require Rhododendrons roots Roses Royal Horticultural Society Seakale season seed seedlings seen sepals shoots shrubs soil sorts South Kensington species specimens spring stems Street summer temperature tion Tree Ferns tubers varieties vegetation Vines weather week winter wood Wycombe Abbey young
Popular passages
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Page 114 - God in the creation, or on the certainty of the resurrection of the dead proved by certain changes of the animal and vegetable parts of the creation.
Page 302 - ... to thirty-six hours after they were imprisoned. In about twelve hours, as nearly as I could make out, they lost the power of drawing their feet back, and could only move the brush-like appendages. There was some variation with different bladders as to the time when maceration or digestion began to take place, but usually, on a growing spray in less than two days after a large larva was captured, the fluid contents' of the bladders began to assume a cloudy or muddy appearance, and often became...
Page 306 - Christians are men and women, too; both are surely human beings, and it is quite likely that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, but time and chance happeneth to them all.
Page 270 - To-day, my lord of Amiens and myself Did steal behind him, as he lay along Under an oak, whose antique root peeps out Upon the brook that brawls along this wood...
Page 272 - Spain, enclosing a present for lady Suffolk. Mr. Pope was in company when the covering was taken off; he observed that the pieces of stick appeared as if they had some vegetation; and added, ' Perhaps they may produce something we have not in England.
Page 270 - Oak is its longevity, which extends beyond that of any other tree ; perhaps the Yew may be an exception. I mention the circumstance of its longevity, as it is that which renders it so singularly picturesque. It is through age that the Oak acquires its greatest beauty, which often continues increasing even into decay, if any proportion exist between the stem and the branches. When the branches rot away, and the forlorn trunk is left alone, the tree is in its decrepitude in the last stage of life,...
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Page 16 - ... that we cannot say that any particular grist has been actually ground out under human observation. If it be asked how the asserted principle is proved or made probable, we can here merely say that the proof is wholly inferential. But the inference is drawn from such a vast array of facts that it is well nigh irresistible. It is the legitimate explanation of those arrangements in nature to secure cross-fertilization in the species, either constantly or occasionally, which are so general, so varied...
Page 45 - I've lost in wooing, In watching and pursuing The light that lies In woman's eyes, Has been my heart's undoing. Though Wisdom oft has sought me, I scorn'd the lore she brought me, My only books Were woman's looks, And folly's all they've taught me.