The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volumul 6Longman, Rees, Orome, Brown and Green, Paternoster-Row and and A. and C. Black, Edinburgh, 1830 |
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Pagina 9
... objects in architecture is left to chance . The true remedy for this evil will be found in the high cultivation of the taste of the mid- dling and lower orders of society . If every young person were taught to draw , and persevered in ...
... objects in architecture is left to chance . The true remedy for this evil will be found in the high cultivation of the taste of the mid- dling and lower orders of society . If every young person were taught to draw , and persevered in ...
Pagina 45
... object , and for which no proprietor would willingly accept a hundred pounds , but for which an auctioneer might find it difficult , after it had attained its full natural shape and size , to obtain as many pence : but every thing is ...
... object , and for which no proprietor would willingly accept a hundred pounds , but for which an auctioneer might find it difficult , after it had attained its full natural shape and size , to obtain as many pence : but every thing is ...
Pagina 53
... object gardeners have generally in view is first to make fine , handsome , well trained trees , either in the fan or horizontal form . To attain this object , the knife must be very judiciously used for a few years , without paying much ...
... object gardeners have generally in view is first to make fine , handsome , well trained trees , either in the fan or horizontal form . To attain this object , the knife must be very judiciously used for a few years , without paying much ...
Pagina 73
... object cannot be properly said to be introduced from one country to another , unless it is afterwards dis- seminated by such means as the introducer possesses ; a practice which is adopted in every establishment in the world , save in ...
... object cannot be properly said to be introduced from one country to another , unless it is afterwards dis- seminated by such means as the introducer possesses ; a practice which is adopted in every establishment in the world , save in ...
Pagina 76
... respect and affection , but more particularly of grati- tude , for the warm attachment which has contributed so much to the happiness of her life . The object of the work is 76 Botanic Garden . - Floral Illustrations .
... respect and affection , but more particularly of grati- tude , for the warm attachment which has contributed so much to the happiness of her life . The object of the work is 76 Botanic Garden . - Floral Illustrations .
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volumul 11 Vizualizare completă - 1835 |
The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volumul 4 Vizualizare completă - 1828 |
The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural & Domestic Improvement, Volumul 3 Vizualizare completă - 1828 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
acre álbo appear Apples April Asparagus Auriculas Azalea beautiful Black botanic garden branches Broccoli bunches bushel cabbage Calceolaria Camellia Cauliflowers Chasselas collection colour Cond corn cottage crop Cucumbers Culinary Vegetables cultivated culture dwts early exhibited favourable flowers fruit gallic acid Georginas Gooseberries Grapes green green-house ground grow grown hardy heat herbaceous Horticultural Society James John June labour land leaves lettuce Loddiges London manure Melon Messrs Muscadine nature Nectarines nursery observed peach Pears peas Pelargoniums Picotees pine Pine-apples Pippin plants potatoes pots prizes produce pruning quantity raised remarks ripen Robert Purvis roots Rose Sea-kale season Seedling seeds sent shoots shrubs soil sorts species specimens stem stove Strawberries succory summer thing trees turnips variety vessels vine wall White William winter wood wurzel Yellow young
Pasaje populare
Pagina 416 - prove all things, and to hold fast that which is good
Pagina 125 - It has been truly said that he who causes two blades of grass to grow where only one grew before is a public benefactor...
Pagina 79 - And one went out into the field to gather herbs, and found a wild vine, and gathered thereof wild gourds his lap full, and came and shred them into the pot of pottage: for they knew them not.
Pagina 571 - So very exciting to the nervous system in many individuals, is this Fungus, that the effects are often very ludicrous. If a person under its influence wishes to step over a straw or small stick, he takes a stride or a jump sufficient to clear the trunk of a tree ; a talkative person cannot keep silence or secrets ; and one fond of music is perpetually singing.
Pagina 94 - ... the naval dockyards, where, we understand, the distinction was not even suspected. It may thus be discriminated from the true old English oak: the acorn-stalks of the Robur are long' and its leaves short, whereas the Sessiliflora has the acornstalks short and the leaves long ; the acorns of the former grow singly, or seldom two on the same footstalk: those of the latter in clusters of two or three, close to the stem of the branch.
Pagina 556 - Britain. To which are. added, Directions for the management of the Greenhouse, Hothouse, and Conservatory ; with the different modes of raising and propagating Exotic Plants. Interspersed with many new physiological observations, and various useful lists. By JAMES MAIN, ALS The Second Edition, in foolscap 8vo.
Pagina 79 - So they poured out for the men to eat. And it came to pass, as they were eating of the pottage, that they cried out, and said, O thou man of God, there is death in the pot.
Pagina 572 - The intoxicating property of the urine is capable of being propagated ; for every one who partakes of it has his urine similarly affected. Thus, with a very few amanitas, a party of drunkards may keep up their debauch for a week.
Pagina 571 - It renders some remarkably active, and proves highly stimulant to muscular exertion : with too large a dose, violent spasmodic effects are produced. So very exciting to the nervous system, in many individuals, is this fungus, that the effects are often very ludicrous. If a person under its influence wishes to step over a straw or...
Pagina 305 - ... several impressions in a very short time. The principal excellence of this method is, that the paper receives the impression of the most minute veins and hairs ; you may thus also obtain the general character of most flowers in a way much superior to any engraving.