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diff --git a/10852-h/10852-h.htm b/10852-h/10852-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..588efba --- /dev/null +++ b/10852-h/10852-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,8648 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" +"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> +<html lang="en"> +<head> +<meta content= +"HTML Tidy for Mac OS X (vers 1st March 2003), see www.w3.org" + name="generator"> +<meta http-equiv="content-type" content= +"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> +<title>Hardy Ornamental Flowering Trees and Shrubs by +A.D.Webster</title> +<style type="text/css"> + <!-- + + p + {text-align:justify; + margin-left:5%; + margin-right:5%; + text-indent: 0em; + vertical-align: baseline; + white-space: normal;} + + .indent + {text-indent: 1em; + text-align: justify; + vertical-align: baseline; + white-space: normal;} + + h1,h2,h3,h4 {text-align: center;} + + dl {margin-left: 5%;} + + table {margin-left: 5%;} + +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hardy Ornamental Flowering Trees and Shrubs +by A. D. Webster + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Hardy Ornamental Flowering Trees and Shrubs + +Author: A. D. Webster + +Release Date: January 28, 2004 [EBook #10852] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLOWERING TREES AND SHRUBS *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Beth Trapaga and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. + + + + + + +</pre> + +<h1 align="center">HARDY ORNAMENTAL<br> +FLOWERING TREES AND SHRUBS.</h1> +<h2 align="center">By</h2> +<h2 align="center">A.D. WEBSTER,</h2> +<center><i>Author of "Practical Forestry,"<br> +"Hardy Coniferous Trees," "British Orchids," &c., +&c.</i></center> +<p> </p> +<h3 align="center">SECOND AND CHEAP EDITION.</h3> +<center><img src="Images/Decoration.jpg" alt="Decoration" + width="111" height="50" hspace="4" vspace="8"></center> +<center><i><b>London:</b></i><br> +"GARDENING WORLD" OFFICE,<br> +1, Clement's Inn, Strand, W.C.</center> +<br> + +<center>Printed by Hicks, Wilkinson & Sears,<br> +4, Dorset Buildings, Salisbury Square, London, E.C.</center> +<br> + +<hr align="center" size="3" width="70%"> +<p> </p> +<h2 align="center">PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION, 1893.</h2> +<p class="indent">This book has been written and is published with +the distinct object in view of bringing home to the minds of +planters of Hardy Trees and Shrubs, the fact that the monotonous +repetition, in at least nine-tenths of our Parks and Gardens, of +such Trees as the Elm, the Lime, and the Oak, and such Shrubs as +the Cherry Laurel and the Privet, is neither necessary nor +desirable. There is quite a host of choice and beautiful flowering +species, which, though at present not generally known are yet +perfectly hardy, of the simplest culture, and equally well adapted +for the ornamentation of our Public and Private Parks and +Gardens.</p> +<p class="indent">Of late years, with the marked decline in the +cultivation of Coniferous Trees, many of which are ill adapted for +the climate of this country, the interest in our lovely flowering +Trees and Shrubs has been greatly revived. This fact has been well +exemplified in the numerous enquiries after these subjects, and the +space devoted to their description and modes of cultivation in the +Horticultural Press.</p> +<p class="indent">In the hope, too, of helping to establish a +much-desired standard of nomenclature, I have followed the generic +names adopted by the authors of <i>The Genera Plantarum</i>, and +the specific names and orthography, as far as I have been able, of +the <i>Index Kewensis</i>; and where possible I have given the +synonyms, the date of introduction, and the native country. The +alphabetical arrangement that has been adopted, both with regard to +the genera and species, it is hoped, will greatly facilitate the +work of reference to its pages. The descriptive notes and hints on +cultivation, the selected lists of Trees and Shrubs for various +special purposes, and the calendarial list which indicates the +flowering season of the different species, may be considered all +the more valuable for being concisely written, and made readily +accessible by means of the Index.</p> +<p class="indent">No work written on a similar plan and treating +solely of Hardy Ornamental Flowering Trees and Shrubs has hitherto +been published; and it is not supposed for a moment that the +present one will entirely supply the deficiency; but should it meet +with any measure of public approval, it may be the means of paving +the way towards the publication of a more elaborate work—and +one altogether more worthy of the interesting and beautiful +Flowering Trees and Shrubs that have been found suitable for +planting in the climate of the British Isles.</p> +<p class="indent">Of the fully thirteen hundred species and +varieties of Trees and Shrubs enumerated, all may be depended upon +as being hardy in some part of the country. Several of them, and +particularly those introduced from China and Japan, have not before +been included in a book of this character. Trials for the special +purpose of testing the hardiness of the more tender kinds have been +instituted and carried out in several favoured parts of England and +Ireland.</p> +<p>A.D.W.<br> +HOLLYDALE, WOBURN.</p> +<p> </p> +<h2 align="center">PREFACE TO SECOND<br> +AND CHEAP EDITION, 1897.</h2> +<p class="indent">The First Edition of Hardy Ornamental Flowering +Trees and Shrubs having been sold out, it has been considered +desirable to run off a second and cheap edition on exactly similar +lines to the first, and previous to the more elaborate illustrated +edition which is now in hand.</p> +<p>A.D.W.<br> +BOXMOOR, HERTS,<br> +1897.</p> +<hr align="center" size="3" width="70%"> +<p> </p> +<h3 align="center">HARDY ORNAMENTAL<br> +FLOWERING TREES & SHRUBS.</h3> +<p> </p> +<h4>ABELIA.</h4> +<p>ABELIA CHINENSIS (<i>syn A. rupestris</i>).—The Rock +Abelia China, 1844. This is a neat, twiggy shrub, growing from 2 +ft. to 3 ft. high, with slender shoots, and very pleasing, shining +green serrated leaves. The tubular, sweet-scented flowers are +produced in clusters at the ends of the shoots, even the smallest, +and are of a very delicate shade of pink—indeed, almost +white. It makes an excellent wall plant, but by no means refuses to +grow and flower freely without either shelter or protection, +provided a fairly rich and well drained soil is provided. From +August to October is the flowering period of this handsome +deciduous shrub. This is the only really hardy species of the +genus, for though the rosy-purple flowered A. floribunda from +Mexico has stood for several years uninjured in the South of +England, it is not to be relied upon. Both species are readily +propagated from cuttings.</p> +<p>A. TRIFLORA.—Himalayan regions, 1847. A half-hardy and +beautiful species with small lanceolate, entire leaves, and pretty +star-shaped flowers that are white and flushed with pink. The long, +narrow, and hairy calyx-lobes give a light and feathery appearance +to the flowers, which are produced continuously from May to +November. It does best as a wall plant, and several beautiful +examples may be seen in and around London, as also at Exeter, and +in the South of Ireland.</p> +<h4>ADENOCARPUS.</h4> +<p>ADENOCARPUS DECORTICANS (<i>syn A. Boissieri</i>).—Spain, +1883. This little known hardy shrub, a native of the Sierra Nevada +mountains, in Spain, is one of great beauty, and well worthy of +extended culture. The flowers are produced abundantly, and are of a +bright yellow colour, resembling those of our common Broom, to +which family it is nearly allied. Peaty soil suits it well, and +repeated trials have clearly proved that it is hardy, at least in +the South of England.</p> +<h4>AESCULUS.</h4> +<p>AESCULUS CALIFORNICA (<i>syn Pavia +californica</i>).—California. This is one of the handsomest +species, of low, spreading habit, and blooming freely about +midsummer.</p> +<p>AE. GLABRA (<i>syn Ae. rubicunda</i>).—Red-flowered Horse +Chestnut. North America, 1820. If only for its neat and moderate +growth, and attractive spikes of brightly-coloured flowers, this +species must be considered as one of the handsomest and most +valuable of small growing trees. Being of moderate size, for we +rarely meet with specimens of greater height than 30 feet, and of +very compact habit, it is rendered peculiarly suitable for planting +in confined spots, and where larger growing and more straggling +subjects would be out of place. It withstands soot and smoke well, +and is therefore much valued for suburban planting. The long spikes +of pretty red flowers are usually produced in great abundance, and +as they stand well above the foliage, and are of firm lasting +substance, they have a most pleasing and attractive appearance. As +there are numerous forms of the red-flowered Horse Chestnut, +differing much in the depth of flower colouring, it may be well to +warn planters, for some of these have but a faint tinge of pink +overlying a dirty yellowish-green groundwork, while the finest and +most desirable tree has the flowers of a decided pinky-red. There +is a double-flowered variety Ae. glabra flore-pleno (<i>syn Ae. +rubicunda flore-pleno</i>) and one of particular merit named Ae. +rubicunda Briotii.</p> +<p>AE. HIPPOCASTANUM.—The Common Horse Chestnut. Asia, 1629. +A fine hardy free-flowering tree, supposed to have been introduced +from Asia, and of which there are several varieties, including a +double-flowered, a variegated, and several lobed and cut-leaved +forms. The tree needs no description, the spikes of pinky-white +flowers, which are produced in great abundance, and ample foliage +rendering it one of, if not the handsomest tree of our +acquaintance. It gives a pleasing shade, and forms an imposing and +picturesque object in the landscape, especially where the +conditions of soil—a rich free loam—are provided. Ae. +Hippocastanum alba flore-pleno (the double white Horse Chestnut), +has a decidedly pyramidal habit of growth, and the flowers, which +are larger than those of the species, are perfectly double. It is a +very distinct and desirable large growing tree. Ae. Hippocastanum +laciniata and Ae. Hippocastanum digitalis are valuable for their +divided leaves; while Ae. Hippocastanum foliis variegatis has the +foliage rather irregularly variegated.</p> +<p>AE. PARVIFLORA (<i>syn Pavia macrostachya</i>).—Buckeye. +North America, 1820. This is very distinct, and possesses feature +which are shared by no other hardy tree or shrub in cultivation. +Rarely exceeding 12 feet in height, and with a spread of often as +much as 20 feet, this shrub forms a perfect hemisphere of foliage, +and which, when tipped with the pretty fragrant flowers, renders it +one of the most effective and handsome. The foliage is large, and +resembles that of the common Horse Chestnut, while the pure white +flowers, with their long projecting stamens and red-tipped anthers, +are very pretty and imposing when at their best in July. It +succeeds well in rich, dampish loam, and as a shrub for standing +alone in any conspicuous position it has, indeed, few equals.</p> +<p>AE. PAVIA (<i>syn Pavia rubra</i>).—Red Buckeye. North +America, 1711. A small growing and slender-branched tree or shrub, +which bears an abundance of brownish-scarlet flowers. There are +several good varieties, two of the best being Ae. Pavia +atrosanguinea, and Ae. Pavia Whittleyana, with small, brilliant red +flowers.</p> +<p>There are several other species, such as Ae. Pavia humilis +(<i>syn Pavia humilis</i>) of trailing habit; Ae. flava (<i>syn +Pavia flava</i>) bearing pretty yellow flowers; Ae. Pavia +macrocarpa (<i>syn Pavia macrocarpa</i>) an open-headed and +graceful tree; Ae. flava discolor (<i>syn Pavia discolor</i>); and +Ae. chinensis; but they have not been found very amenable to +cultivation, except in very favoured parts of the South of England +and Ireland.</p> +<h4>AILANTHUS.</h4> +<p>AILANTHUS GLANDULOSA.—Tree of Heaven. China, 1751. A +handsome, fast-growing tree, with large pinnate leaves that are +often fully three feet long, and terminal erect clusters of not +very showy greenish-white flowers that exhale a rather disagreeable +odour. It is one of the most distinct and imposing of +pinnate-leaved trees, and forms a neat specimen for the lawn or +park. Light loam or a gravelly subsoil suits it well.</p> +<h4>AKEBIA.</h4> +<p>AKEBIA QUINATA.—Chinese Akebia. China, 1845. This, with +its peculiarly-formed and curiously-coloured flowers, though +usually treated as a cool greenhouse plant, is yet sufficiently +hardy to grow and flower well in many of the southern and western +English counties, where it has stood uninjured for many years. It +is a pretty twining evergreen, with the leaves placed on long +slender petioles, and palmately divided into usually five leaflets. +The sweet-scented flowers, particularly so in the evening, are of a +purplish-brown or scarlet-purple, and produced in axillary racemes +of from ten to a dozen in each. For covering trellis-work, using as +a wall plant, or to clamber over some loose-growing specimen shrub, +from which a slight protection will also be afforded, the Akebia is +peculiarly suitable, and soon ascends to a height of 10 feet or 12 +feet. Any ordinary garden soil suits it, and propagation by +cuttings is readily affected.</p> +<h4>AMELANCHIER.</h4> +<p>AMELANCHIER ALNIFOLIA.—Dwarf June Berry. N.W. America, +1888. This is a shrub of great beauty, growing about 8 feet high, +and a native of the mountains from British America to California. +This differs from A. canadensis in having much larger and more +brilliant-tinted fruit, and in its shorter and more compact flower +racemes. The shape of the leaves cannot be depended on as a point +of recognition, those before me, collected in the native habitat of +the plant, differing to a wide extent in size and shape, some being +coarsely serrated while others are almost entire.</p> +<p>A. CANADENSIS.—June Berry. Canada, 1746. Unquestionably +this is one of the most beautiful and showy of early flowering +trees. During the month of April the profusion of snow-white +flowers, with which even young specimens are mantled, render the +plant conspicuous for a long way off, while in autumn the golden +yellow of the dying-off foliage is quite as remarkable. Being +perfectly hardy, of free growth, and with no particular desire for +certain classes of soils, the June Berry should be widely planted +for ornamental effect. In this country it attains to a height of 40 +feet, and bears globose crimson fruit. There are several varieties, +including A. canadensis rotundifolia, A. canadensis oblongifolia, +and A. canadensis oligocarpa, the latter being by some botanists +ranked as a species.</p> +<p>A. VULGARIS.—Common Amelanchier. South of Europe, 1596. +This is the only European species, and grows about 16 feet in +height. It has been in cultivation in this country for nearly 300 +years. Generally this species flowers earlier than the American +ones, has rounder and less deeply serrated leaves, but the flowers +are much alike. A. vulgaris cretica, from Crete and Dalmatia, is +readily distinguished by the soft white hairs with which the under +sides of the leaves are thickly covered. To successfully cultivate +the Amelanchiers a good rich soil is a necessity, while shelter +from cutting winds must be afforded if the sheets of flowers are to +be seen in their best form.</p> +<h4>AMORPHA.</h4> +<p>AMORPHA CANESCENS.—Lead Plant. Missouri, 1812. This is of +much smaller growth than A. fruticosa, with neat pinnate foliage, +whitened with hoary down, and bearing panicles of bluish-purple +flowers, with conspicuous orange anthers. It is a charming shrub, +and all the more valuable as it flowers at the end of summer, when +few hardy plants are in bloom. To grow it satisfactorily a dry, +sandy soil is a necessity.</p> +<p>A. FRUTICOSA.—False Indigo. Carolina, 1724. This is a fast +growing shrub of fully 6 feet high, of loose, upright habit, and +with pretty pinnate leaves. The flowers are borne in densely packed +spikes, and are of a purplish tint with bright yellow protruding +anthers and produced at the end of summer. It prefers a dry, warm +soil of a sandy or chalky nature, and may readily be increased from +cuttings or suckers, the latter being freely produced. Hard cutting +back when full size has been attained would seem to throw fresh +vigour into the Amorpha, and the flowering is greatly enhanced by +such a mode of treatment. A native of Carolina, and perfectly hardy +in most parts of the country. Of this species there are several +varieties, amongst others, A. fruticosa nana, a dwarf, twiggy +plant; A. fruticosa dealbata, with lighter green foliage than the +type; and others differing only in the size and width of the +leaves.</p> +<h4>ANDROMEDA.</h4> +<p>ANDROMEDA POLIFOLIA.—An indigenous shrub of low growth, +with lanceolate shining leaves, and pretty globose pinky-white +flowers. Of it there are two varieties. A. polifolia major and A. +polifolia angustifolia, both well worthy of culture for their neat +habit and pretty flowers.</p> +<p>See CASSANDRA, CASSIOPE, LEUCOTHOË, OXYDENDRUM, PIERIS, and +ZENOBIA.</p> +<h4>ARALIA.</h4> +<p>ARALIA MANDSHURICA (<i>syn Dimorphanthus +mandschuricus</i>).—Manchuria, 1866. There is not much beauty +about this Chinese tree, for it is but a big spiny stake, with no +branches, and a tuft of palm-like foliage at the top. The flowers, +however, are both large and conspicuous, and impart to the tree an +interesting and novel appearance. They are individually small, of a +creamy-white colour, and produced in long, umbellate racemes, and +which when fully developed, from their weight and terminal +position, are tilted gracefully to one side. Usually the stem is +spiny, with Horse Chestnut-like bark, while the terminal bud, from +its large size, as if all the energy of the plant was concentrated +in the tip, imparts a curious and somewhat ungainly appearance to +the tree. From its curious tropical appearance this species is well +worthy of a place in the shrubbery. It is unmindful of soil, if +that is of at all fair quality, and may be said to be perfectly +hardy over the greater part of the country.</p> +<p>A. SPINOSA.—Angelica Tree. Virginia, 1688. Amongst +autumn-flowering shrubs this takes a high place, for in mild +seasons it blooms well into October. It grows about 12 feet high, +with large tri-pinnate leaves, composed of numerous serrulate +leaflets. The individual flowers are small and whitish, but being +borne in large branched panicles have a very imposing appearance. +It is of free growth, and produces suckers abundantly.</p> +<p>See also FATSIA.</p> +<h4>ARBUTUS.</h4> +<p>ARBUTUS ANDRACHNE.—Levant, 1724. This Mediterranean +species is of stout growth, with narrow Laurel-like leaves, reddish +deciduous bark, and greenish-white flowers that are produced freely +in May. A hybrid form, said to have originated between this species +and A. Unedo, partakes in part of the nature of both shrubs, but +the flowers are larger than those of A. Unedo.</p> +<p>A. MENZIESII (<i>syn A. procera</i>).—Tall Strawberry +Tree. North-west America, 1827. This is hardy in many parts of +these islands, particularly maritime districts, and is worthy of +culture if only for the large racemose panicles of +deliciously-scented white flowers, and peculiar metallic-green +leaves. The fruit is orange-red, and only about half the size of +those of our commonly cultivated species.</p> +<p>A. UNEDO.—Strawberry Tree. Ireland. This is a beautiful +evergreen shrub or small-growing tree, sometimes fully 20 feet +high, with ovate-lanceolate leaves, and clusters of pure white or +yellowish-tinged flowers appearing in September and October. The +bright scarlet fruit, about the size of and resembling a +Strawberry, is highly ornamental, and when borne in quantity +imparts to the plant an unusual and very attractive appearance. +Generally speaking, the Arbutus is hardy, although in inland +situations it is sometimes killed to the ground in severe winters, +but, springing freely from the root, the plant soon becomes +re-established. In a young state it suffers too, but after becoming +established and a few feet high, the chances of injury are greatly +minimised. Three well-marked varieties are A. Unedo coccinea and A. +Unedo rubra, bearing scarlet and deep-red flowers, and A. Unedo +microphylla, with much smaller leaves than those of the parent +plant.</p> +<p>A. UNEDO CROOMEI differs considerably from the former, in having +larger foliage, larger clusters of reddish-pink flowers, and the +bark of the young shoots of an enticing ruddy, or rather +brownish-red colour. It is a very desirable and highly ornamental +plant, and one that is well worthy of extended culture.</p> +<p>There are several others, to wit A. photiniaefolia, A. +Rollissoni, A. Millerii, with large leaves, and pretty pink +flowers, and A. serratifolia, having deeply serrated leaves. Deep, +light loam, if on chalk all the better, and a fairly warm and +sheltered situation, would seem to suit the Arbutus best.</p> +<h4>ARCTOSTAPHYLOS.</h4> +<p>ARCTOSTAPHYLOS UVA-URSI.—Bearberry. Britain. A neat shrub +of trailing habit, and with flowers resembling those of the +Arbutus, but much smaller. The leaves are entire, dark green in +colour, and about an inch long, and obovate or oblong in shape. +Fruit globular, of a bright red, smooth and shining. This is a +native shrub, being found in Scotland, northern England and +Ireland.</p> +<p>A. ALPINA.—Black Bearberry. Scotland. This is confined to +the northern Highlands of Scotland, is of smaller growth, with +toothed deciduous leaves, and small drooping flowers of two or +three together.</p> +<h4>ARISTOLOCHIA.</h4> +<p>ARISTOLOCHIA SIPHO.—Dutchman's Pipe. North America, 1763. +A large-growing, deciduous climbing shrub, remarkable for its ample +foliage, and curiously formed yellow and purple streaked flowers. A +native of North America, it is perfectly hardy in this country, and +makes an excellent wall plant where plenty of space can be afforded +for the rambling branches. What a pity it is that so ornamental a +climber, whose big, dark-green leaves overlap each other as if +intended for keeping a house cool in warm weather, is not more +generally planted. It does well and grows fast in almost any +soil.</p> +<h4>ASIMINA.</h4> +<p>ASIMINA TRILOBA.—Virginian Papaw. Pennsylvania, 1736. This +is a curious and uncommon shrub that one rarely sees outside the +walls of a botanic garden. The flowers are dark purple or chocolate +brown, fully 2 inches across, and succeeded by a yellow, oblong, +pulpy fruit, that is relished by the natives, and from which the +name of North American Custard Apple has been derived. In this +country it is quite at home, growing around London to quite 12 feet +in height, but it wants a warm, dry soil, and sunny sheltered +situation. As a wall plant it does well.</p> +<h4>AZARA.</h4> +<p>AZARA MICROPHYLLA.—Chili, 1873. This is the only +recognised hardy species, and probably the best from an ornamental +point of view. In mild seaside districts it may succeed as a +standard in the open ground, but generally it is cultivated as a +wall plant, and for which it is peculiarly suitable. The small dark +green, glossy leaves are thickly arranged on the nearly horizontal +branches, while the flowers, if they lack in point of showiness, +are deliciously fragrant and plentifully produced. For +wall-covering, especially in an eastern aspect, it is one of the +neatest of shrubs.</p> +<p>Other species in cultivation are A. serrata, A. lanceolata, and +A. integrifolia, but for general planting, and unless under the +most favoured conditions, they are not to be recommended. The +Azaras are by no means particular about the quality of soil in +which they are planted, and succeed well even in stiffish loam, +bordering on clay.</p> +<h4>BACCHARIS.</h4> +<p>BACCHARIS HALIMIFOLIA.—Groundsel Tree or Sea Purslane. +North America. For seaside planting this is an invaluable shrub, as +it succeeds well down even to high water mark, and where it is +almost lashed by the salt spray. The flowers are not very +ornamental, resembling somewhat those of the Groundsel, but white +with a tint of purple. Leaves obovate in shape, notched, and +thickly covered with a whitish powder, which imparts to them a +pleasing glaucous hue. Any light soil that is tolerably dry suits +well the wants of this shrub, but it is always seen in best +condition by the seaside. Under favourable conditions it attains to +a height of 12 feet, with a branch spread nearly as much in +diameter. A native of the North American coast from Maryland to +Florida.</p> +<p>B. PATAGONICA.—Megallan. This is a very distinct and quite +hardy species, with small deep green leaves and white flowers. It +succeeds under the same conditions as the latter.</p> +<h4>BERBERIDOPSIS.</h4> +<p>BERBERIDOPSIS CORALLINA.—Coral Barberry. Chili, 1862. This +handsome evergreen, half-climbing shrub is certainly not so well +known as its merits entitle it to be. Unfortunately it is not hardy +in every part of the country, though in the southern and western +English counties, but especially within the influence of the sea, +it succeeds well as a wall plant, and charms us with its globular, +waxy, crimson or coral-red flowers. The spiny-toothed leaves +approach very near those of some of the Barberries, and with which +the plant is nearly allied. It seems to do best in a partially +shady situation, and in rich light loam.</p> +<h4>BERBERIS.</h4> +<p>BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM (<i>syn Mahonia +Aquifolium</i>).—Holly-leaved Barberry. North America, 1823. +This justly ranks as one of the handsomest, most useful, and +easily-cultivated of all hardy shrubs. It will grow almost any +where, and in any class of soil, though preferring a fairly rich +loam. Growing under favourable conditions to a height of 6 feet, +this North American shrub forms a dense mass of almost impenetrable +foliage. The leaves are large, dark shining green, thickly beset +with spines, while the deliciously-scented yellow flowers, which +are produced at each branch tip, render the plant particularly +attractive in spring. It is still further valuable both on account +of the rich autumnal tint of the foliage, and pretty plum colour of +the plentifully produced fruit.</p> +<p>B. AQUIFOLIUM REPENS (<i>syn Mahonia repens</i>).—Creeping +Barberry. This is of altogether smaller growth than the preceding, +but otherwise they seem nearly allied. From its dense, dwarf +growth, rising as it rarely does more than a foot from the ground, +and neat foliage, this Barberry is particularly suitable for edging +beds, or forming a low evergreen covering for rocky ground or +mounds.</p> +<p>B. ARISTATA, a native of Nepaul, is a vigorous-growing species, +resembling somewhat our native plant, with deeply serrated leaves, +brightly tinted bark, and yellow flowers. It is of erect habit, +branchy, and in winter is rendered very conspicuous by reason of +the bright reddish colour of the leafless branches.</p> +<p>B. BEALEI (<i>syn Mahonia Bealli</i>).—Japan. This species +is one of the first to appear in bloom, often by the end of January +the plant being thickly studded with flowers. It is a handsome +shrub, of erect habit, the leaves of a yellowish-green tint, and +furnished with long, spiny teeth. The clusters of racemes of +deliciously fragrant yellow flowers are of particular value, being +produced so early in the season.</p> +<p>B. BUXIFOLIA (<i>syn B. dulcis</i> and <i>B. +microphylla</i>).—Straits of Magellan, 1827. A neat and +erect-growing shrub of somewhat stiff and upright habit, and +bearing tiny yellow flowers. This is a good rockwork plant, and +being of neat habit, with small purplish leaves, is well worthy of +cultivation.</p> +<p>B. CONGESTIFLORA, from Chili, is not yet well-known, but +promises to become a general favourite with lovers of hardy shrubs. +It is of unusual appearance for a Barberry, with long, decumbent +branches, which are thickly covered with masses of orange-yellow +flowers. The branch-tips, being almost leafless and smothered with +flowers, impart to the plant a striking, but distinctly ornamental +appearance.</p> +<p>B. DARWINII.—Chili, 1849. This is, perhaps, the best known +and most ornamental of the family. It forms a dense bush, sometimes +10 feet high, with dark glossy leaves, and dense racemes of +orange-yellow flowers, produced in April and May, and often again +in the autumn.</p> +<p>B. EMPETRIFOLIA.—Straits of Magellan, 1827. This is a +neat-habited and dwarf evergreen species, that even under the best +cultivation rarely exceeds 2 feet in height. It is one of the +hardiest species, and bears, though rather sparsely, terminal +golden-yellow flowers, which are frequently produced both in spring +and autumn. For its compact growth and neat foliage it is alone +worthy of culture.</p> +<p>B. FORTUNEI (<i>syn Mahonia Fortunei</i>).—China, 1846. +This is rather a rare species in cultivation, with finely toothed +leaves, composed of about seven leaflets, and bearing in abundance +clustered racemes of individually small yellow flowers. A native of +China, and requiring a warm, sunny spot to do it justice.</p> +<p>B. GRACILIS (<i>syn Mahonia gracilis</i>).—Mexico. A +pretty, half-hardy species, growing about 6 feet high, with slender +branches, and shining-green leaves with bright red stalks. Flowers +small, in 3-inch long racemes, deep yellow with bright red +pedicels. Fruit globular, deep purple.</p> +<p>B. ILICIFOLIA (<i>syn B. Neumanii</i>).—South America, +1791. This is another handsome evergreen species from South +America, and requires protection in this country. The thick, +glossy-green leaves, beset with spines, and large orange-red +flowers, combine to make this species one of great interest and +beauty.</p> +<p>B. JAPONICA (<i>syn Mahonia japonica</i>).—Japan. This is +not a very satisfactory shrub in these isles, although in warm +seaside districts, and when planted in rich loam, on a gravelly +subsoil, it forms a handsome plant with noble foliage, and +deliciously fragrant yellow flowers.</p> +<p>B. NEPALENSIS (<i>syn Mahonia nepalensis</i>).—Nepaul +Barberry. This is a noble Himalayan species that one rarely sees in +good condition in this country, unless when protected by glass. The +long, chalky-white stems, often rising to 8 feet in height, are +surmounted by dense clusters of lemon-yellow flowers. Planted +outdoors, this handsome and partly evergreen Barberry must have the +protection of a wall.</p> +<p>B. NERVOSA (<i>syn Mahonia glumacea</i>).—North America, +1804. This, with its terminal clusters of reddish-yellow flowers +produced in spring, is a highly attractive North-west American +species. It is of neat and compact growth, perfectly hardy, but as +yet it is rare in cultivation. The autumnal leafage-tint is very +attractive.</p> +<p>B. PINNATA (<i>syn Mahonia facicularis</i>).—A native of +Mexico, this species is of stout growth, with long leaves, that are +thickly furnished with sharp spines. The yellow flowers are +produced abundantly, and being in large bunches render the plant +very conspicuous. It is, unfortunately, not very hardy, and +requires wall protection to do it justice.</p> +<p>B. SINENSIS.—China, 1815. This is a really handsome and +distinct species, with twiggy, deciduous branches, from the +undersides of the arching shoots of which the flowers hang in great +profusion. They are greenish-yellow inside, but of a dark +brownish-crimson without, while the leaves are small and round, and +die off crimson in autumn.</p> +<p>B. STENOPHYLLA, a hybrid between B. Darwinii and B. +empetrifolia, is one of the handsomest forms in cultivation, the +wealth of golden-yellow flowers being remarkable, as is also the +dark purple berries. It is very hardy, and of the freest +growth.</p> +<p>B. TRIFOLIOLATA (<i>syn Mahonia trifoliolata</i>).—Mexico, +1839. This is a very distinct and beautiful Mexican species that +will only succeed around London as a wall plant. It grows about a +yard high, with leaves fully 3 inches long, having three terminal +sessile leaflets, and slender leaf stalks often 2 inches long. The +ternate leaflets are of a glaucous blue colour, marbled with dull +green, and very delicately veined. Flowers small, bright yellow, +and produced in few-flowered axillary racemes on short peduncles. +The berries are small, globular, and light red.</p> +<p>B. TRIFURCA (<i>syn Mahonia trifurca</i>).—China, 1852. +This is a shrub of neat low growth, but it does not appear to be at +all plentiful.</p> +<p>B. VULGARIS.—Common Barberry. This is a native species, +with oblong leaves, and terminal, drooping racemes of yellow +flowers. It is chiefly valued for the great wealth of +orange-scarlet fruit. There are two very distinct forms, one +bearing silvery and the other black fruit, and named respectively +B. vulgaris fructo-albo and B. vulgaris fructo-nigro.</p> +<p>B. WALLICHIANA (<i>syn B. Hookeri</i>).—Nepaul, 1820. This +is exceedingly ornamental, whether as regards the foliage, flowers, +or fruit. It is of dense, bushy growth, with large, dark green +spiny leaves, and an abundance of clusters of clear yellow flowers. +The berries are deep violet-purple, and fully half-an-inch long. +Being perfectly hardy and of free growth it is well suited for +extensive planting.</p> +<h4>BERCHEMIA.</h4> +<p>BERCHEMIA VOLUBILIS.—Climbing Berchemia. Carolina, 1714. A +rarely seen, deciduous climber, bearing rather inconspicuous +greenish-yellow flowers, succeeded by attractive, violet-tinted +berries. The foliage is neat and pretty, the individual leaves +being ovate in shape and slightly undulated or wavy. It is a +twining shrub that in this country, even under favourable +circumstances, one rarely sees ascending to a greater height than +about 12 feet. Sandy peat and a shady site suits it best, and so +placed it will soon cover a low-growing tree or bush much in the +way that our common Honeysuckle does. It is propagated from layers +or cuttings.</p> +<h4>BIGNONIA.</h4> +<p>BIGNONIA CAPREOLATA—Virginia and other parts of America, +1710. This is not so hardy as to be depended upon throughout the +country generally, though in the milder parts of England and +Ireland it succeeds well as a wall plant. It is a handsome climbing +shrub, with long, heart-shaped leaves, usually terminating in +branched tendrils, and large orange flowers produced singly.</p> +<h4>BILLARDIERA.</h4> +<p>BILLARDIERA LONGIFLORA.—Blue Apple Berry. Van Diemen's +Land, 1810. If only for its rich, blue berries, as large as those +of a cherry, this otherwise elegant climbing shrub is well worthy +of a far greater share of attention than it has yet received, for +it must be admitted that it is far from common. The greenish +bell-shaped blossoms produced in May are, perhaps, not very +attractive, but this is more than compensated for by the highly +ornamental fruit, which renders the plant an object of great beauty +about mid-September. Leaves small and narrow, on slender, twining +stems, that clothe well the lower half of a garden wall in some +sunny favoured spot. Cuttings root freely if inserted in sharp sand +and placed in slight heat, while seeds germinate quickly.</p> +<h4>BRYANTHUS.</h4> +<p>BRYANTHUS ERECTUS.—Siberia. This is a pretty little +Ericaceous plant, nearly allied to Menziesia, and with a plentiful +supply of dark-green leaves. The flowers, which are borne in +crowded clusters at the points of the shoots, are bell-shaped, and +of a pleasing reddish-lilac colour. It wants a cool, moist peaty +soil, and is perfectly hardy. When in a flowering stage the +Bryanthus is one of the brightest occupants of the peat bed, and is +a very suitable companion for such dwarf plants as the Heaths, +Menziesias, and smaller growing Kalmias.</p> +<p>B. EMPETRIFORMIS (<i>syn Menziesia +empetrifolia</i>).—North America, 1829. This is a compact, +neat species, and well suited for alpine gardening. The flowers are +rosy-purple, and produced abundantly.</p> +<h4>BUDDLEIA.</h4> +<p>BUDDLEIA GLOBOSA.—Orange Ball Tree. Chili, 1774. A shrubby +species, ranging in height from 12 feet to 20 feet, and the only +one at all common in gardens. Favoured spots in Southern England +would seem to suit the plant fairly well, but to see it at its best +one must visit some of the maritime gardens of North Wales, where +it grows stout and strong, and flowers with amazing luxuriance. +Where it thrives it must be ranked amongst the most beautiful of +wall plants, for few, indeed, are the standard specimens that are +to be met with, the protection afforded by a wall being almost a +necessity in its cultivation. The leaves are linear-lanceolate, and +covered with a dense silvery tomentum on the under side, somewhat +rugose above, and partially deciduous. Flowers in small globular +heads, bright orange or yellow, and being plentifully produced are +very showy in early summer. It succeeds well in rich moist loam on +gravel.</p> +<p>B. LINDLEYANA.—China, 1844. This has purplish-red flowers +and angular twigs, but it cannot be relied upon unless in very +sheltered and mild parts of the country.</p> +<p>B. PANICULATA (<i>syn B. crispa</i>).—Nepaul, 1823. This +may at once be distinguished by its curly, woolly leaves, and +fragrant lilac flowers. It is a desirable species, but suffers from +our climate.</p> +<h4>BUPLEURUM.</h4> +<p>BUPLEURUM FRUTICOSUM.—Hare's Ear. South Europe, 1596. A +small-growing, branching shrub, with obovate-lanceolate leaves, and +compound umbels of yellowish flowers. It is more curious than +beautiful.</p> +<h4>CAESALPINIA.</h4> +<p>CAESALPINIA SEPIARIA (<i>syn C. japonica</i>).—India, +1857. This is as yet a comparatively little known shrub, but one +that from its beauty and hardihood is sure to become a general +favourite. Planted out in a light, sandy, peaty soil, and where +fully exposed, this shrub has done well, and proved itself a +suitable subject for the climate of England at least. The hard +prickles with which both stem and branches are provided renders the +shrub of rather formidable appearance, while the leaves are of a +peculiarly pleasing soft-green tint. For the flowers, too, it is +well worthy of attention, the pinky anthers contrasting so markedly +with the deep yellow of the other portions of the flower. They are +arranged in long racemes, and show well above the foliage.</p> +<h4>CALLUNA.</h4> +<p>CALLUNA VULGARIS (<i>syn Erica vulgaris</i>).—Common Ling +on Heather. This is the commonest native species, with +purplish-pink flowers on small pedicels. There are many very +distinct and beautiful-flowering forms, the following being some of +the best: C. vulgaris alba, white-flowered; C. vulgaris Hammondi, +C. vulgaris minor, and C. vulgaris pilosa, all white-flowered +forms; C. vulgaris Alportii, and C. vulgaris Alportii variegata, +the former bearing rich crimson flowers, and the latter with +distinctly variegated foliage; C. vulgaris argentea, and C. +vulgaris aurea, with silvery-variegated and golden foliage; C. +vulgaris flore-pleno, a most beautiful and free-growing variety, +with double flowers; C. vulgaris Foxii, a dwarf plant that does not +flower freely; and C. vulgaris pumila, and C. vulgaris dumosa, +which are of small cushion-like growth.</p> +<h4>CALOPHACA.</h4> +<p>CALOPHACA WOLGARICA.—Siberia, 1786. This member of the Pea +family is of dwarf, branching growth, thickly clothed with +glandular hairs, and bears yellow flowers, succeeded by +reddish-purple pods. It is of no special importance as an +ornamental shrub, and is most frequently seen grafted on the +Laburnum, though its natural easy habit of growth is far +preferable. Hailing from Siberia, it may be considered as fairly +hardy at least.</p> +<h4>CALYCANTHUS.</h4> +<p>CALYCANTHUS FLORIDUS.—Carolina Allspice. Carolina, 1726. +If only for the purplish-red, pleasantly-scented flowers, this +North American shrub is worthy of extensive culture. The hardiness, +accommodating nature, and delicious perfume of its +brightly-coloured flowers render this shrub one of the choicest +subjects for the shrubbery or edges of the woodland path. It is of +easy though compact growth, reaching in favourable situations a +height of 12 feet, and with ovate leaves that are slightly +pubescent. Growing best in good fairly moist loam, where partial +shade is afforded, the sides of woodland drives and paths will suit +this Allspice well; but it wants plenty of room for +branch-development. There are several nursery forms of this shrub, +such as C. floridus glaucus, C. floridus asplenifolia, and C. +floridus nanus, all probably distinct enough, but of no superior +ornamental value to the parent plant.</p> +<p>C. OCCIDENTALIS.—Californian or Western Allspice. +California, 1831. This is larger in all its parts than the former, +and for decorative purposes is even preferable to that species. The +flowers are dark crimson, and nearly twice as large as those of C. +floridus, but rather more sparsely produced. This is a very +distinct and desirable species, and one that can be recommended for +lawn and park planting, but, like the former, it delights to grow +in a rather moist and shady situation.</p> +<h4>CARAGANA.</h4> +<p>CARAGANA ARBORESCENS.—Siberian Pea Tree. Siberia, 1752. On +account of its great hardihood, this is a very desirable garden +shrub or small-growing tree. The bright-yellow, pea-shaped flowers +are very attractive, while the deep-green, pinnate foliage imparts +to the tree a somewhat unusual but taking appearance. Soil would +not seem to be of much moment in the cultivation of this, as, +indeed, the other species of Caragana, for it thrives well either +on dry, sunny banks, where the soil is light and thin, or in good +stiff, yellow loam.</p> +<p>C. FRUTESCENS.—Siberia, 1852. Flowers in May, and is of +partially upright habit; while C. Chamlagii, from China, has +greenish-yellow flowers, faintly tinted with pinky-purple.</p> +<p>C. MICROPHYLLA (<i>syn C. Altagana</i>), also from Siberia, is +smaller of growth than the foregoing, but the flowers are +individually larger. It is readily distinguished by the more +numerous and hairy leaflets and thorny nature.</p> +<p>C. SPINOSA.—Siberia, 1775. This, as the name indicates, is +of spiny growth, and is a beautiful and distinct member of the +family. They are all hardy, and readily propagated from seed.</p> +<h4>CARDIANDRA.</h4> +<p>CARDIANDRA ALTERNIFOLIA.—Japan, 1866. With its neat habit, +and pretty purple-and-white, plentifully-produced flowers, this is +worthy of the small amount of care and coddling required to insure +its growth in this country. Hailing from Japan, it cannot be +reckoned as very hardy, but treated as a wall plant this pretty +evergreen does well and flowers freely. It can, however, be said +that it is equally hardy with some of the finer kinds of Hydrangea, +to which genus it is nearly allied.</p> +<h4>CARPENTERIA.</h4> +<p>CARPENTERIA CALIFORNICA.—Sierra Nevada, California, 1880. +This is undoubtedly one of the most distinct and beautiful of hardy +shrubs. That it is perfectly hardy in England and Ireland +recently-conducted experiments conclusively prove, as plants have +stood unprotected through the past unusually severe winters with +which this country has been visited. When in full bloom the +pure-white flowers, resembling those of the Japanese Anemone, +render it of great beauty, while the light gray leaves are of +themselves sufficient to make the shrub one of particular +attraction. The Carpenteria is nearly related to the Mock Orange +(Philadelphus), grows about 10 feet in height, with lithe and +slender branches, and light gray leaves. The flowers, which are +pure white with a bunch of yellow stamens, and sweet-scented, are +produced usually in fives at the branch-tips, and contrast markedly +with the long and light green foliage. It grows and flowers with +freedom almost anywhere, but is all the better for wall protection. +From cuttings or suckers it is readily increased.</p> +<h4>CARYOPTERIS.</h4> +<p>CARYOPTERIS MASTACANTHUS.—China and Japan, 1844. This is a +neat-growing Chinese shrub, and of value for its pretty flowers +that are produced late in the autumn. It must be ranked as fairly +hardy, having stood through the winters of Southern England +unprotected; but it is just as well to give so choice a shrub the +slight protection afforded by a wall. The leaves are neat, +thickly-arranged, and hoary, while the whole plant is twiggy and of +strict though by no means formal growth. Flowers lavender-blue, +borne at the tips of the shoots, and appearing in succession for a +considerable length of time. Light, sandy peat would seem to suit +it well, at least in such it grows and flowers freely.</p> +<h4>CASSANDRA.</h4> +<p>CASSANDRA CALYCULATA (<i>syn Andromeda +calyculata</i>).—North America, 1748. This is a handsome +species from the Virginian swamps, but one that is rarely seen in a +very satisfactory condition in this country. It grows about 18 +inches high, with lanceolate dull-green leaves, and pretty +pinky-white flowers, individually large and produced abundantly. +For the banks of a pond or lake it is a capital shrub and very +effective, particularly if massed in groups of from a dozen to +twenty plants in each. There are several nursery forms, of which A. +calyculata minor is the best and most distinct.</p> +<h4>CASSINIA.</h4> +<p>CASSINIA FULVIDA (<i>syn Diplopappus +chrysophyllus</i>).—New Zealand. This is a neat-growing and +beautiful shrub, the rich yellow stems and under sides of the +leaves imparting quite a tint of gold to the whole plant. The +flowers are individually small, but the whole head, which is +creamy-white, is very effective, and contrasts strangely with the +golden sheen of this beautiful shrub. It is inclined to be of +rather upright growth, is stout and bushy, and is readily increased +from cuttings planted in sandy soil in the open border. Probably in +the colder parts of the country this charming shrub might not prove +perfectly hardy, but all over England and Ireland it seems to be +quite at home. The flowers are produced for several months of the +year, but are at their best about mid-November, thus rendering the +shrub of still further value. It grows freely in sandy peaty soil +of a light nature.</p> +<h4>CASSIOPE.</h4> +<p>CASSIOPE FASTIGIATA (<i>syn Andromeda fastigiata</i>) and C. +TETRAGONA (<i>syn Andromeda tetragona</i>) are small-growing +species, only suitable for rock gardening—the former of neat +upright habit, with large pinky-white bells all along the stems; +and the latter of bushy growth, with square stems and small white +flowers.</p> +<h4>CASTANEA.</h4> +<p>CASTANEA SATIVA (<i>syn C. vesca</i> and <i>C. +vulgaris</i>).—Sweet Spanish Chestnut. Asia Minor. Few +persons who have seen this tree as an isolated specimen and when in +full flower would feel inclined to exclude it from our list. The +long, cylindrical catkins, of a yellowish-green colour, are usually +borne in such abundance that the tree is, during the month of June, +one of particular interest and beauty. So common a tree needs no +description, but it may be well to mention that there are several +worthy varieties, and which flower almost equally well with the +parent tree.</p> +<h4>CATALPA.</h4> +<p>CATALPA BIGNONIOIDES.—Indian Bean. North America, 1798. +When in full bloom this is a remarkable and highly ornamental tree, +the curiously-marked flowers and unusually large, bronzy-tinted +foliage being distinct from those of almost any other in +cultivation. That it is not, perhaps, perfectly hardy in every part +of the country is to be regretted, but the numerous fine old +specimens that are to be met with all over the country point out +that there need be little to fear when assigning this pretty and +uncommon tree a position in our parks and gardens. The flowers, +produced in spikes at the branch-tips, are white, tinged with +violet and speckled with purple and yellow in the throat. +Individually the flowers are of large size and very ornamental, +and, being produced freely, give the tree a bright and pleasing +appearance when at their best. Usually the tree attains to a height +of 30 feet in this country, with rather crooked and ungainly +branches, and large heart-shaped leaves that are downy beneath. It +flourishes well on any free soil, and is an excellent +smoke-resisting tree. C. bignonioides aurea is a decided variety, +that differs mainly in the leaves being of a desirable golden +tint.</p> +<p>C. BUNGEI and C. KAEMPFERI, natives of China and Japan, are +hardly to be relied upon, being of tender growth, and, unless in +the most favoured situations, suffer from our severe winters. They +resemble our commonly cultivated tree.</p> +<p>C. SPECIOSA.—United States, 1879. The Western Catalpa is +more erect and taller of growth than C. bignonioides. The flowers +too are larger, and of purer white, and with the throat markings of +purple and yellow more distinct and not inclined to run into each +other. Leaves large, heart-shaped, tapering to a point, of a light +pleasing green and soft to the touch. It flowers earlier, and is +more hardy than the former.</p> +<h4>CEANOTHUS.</h4> +<p>CEANOTHUS AMERICANUS.—New Jersey Tea. North America, 1713. +A shrub of 4 feet in height, with deep green serrated leaves, that +are 2 inches long and pubescent on the under sides. Flowers white, +in axillary panicles, and produced in great abundance. This is one +of the hardiest species, but succeeds best when afforded wall +protection.</p> +<p>C. AZUREUS.—Mexico, 1818. This species, though not hardy +enough for every situation, is yet sufficiently so to stand +unharmed as a wall plant. It grows from 10 feet to 12 feet high, +with deep-green leaves that are hoary on the under sides. The +flowers, which are borne in large, axillary panicles, are bright +blue, and produced in June and the following months. In a light, +dry soil and sunny position this shrub does well as a wall plant, +for which purpose it is one of the most ornamental. There are +several good nursery forms, of which the following are amongst the +best:—C. azureus Albert Pettitt, C. azureus albidus, C. +azureus Arnddii, one of the best, C. azureus Gloire de Versailles, +and C. azureus Marie Simon.</p> +<p>C. CUNEATUS (<i>syn C. verrucosus</i>).—California, 1848. +This is another half-hardy species that requires wall protection, +which may also be said of C. Veitchianus, one of the most beautiful +of the family, with dense clusters of rich blue flowers and a neat +habit of growth.</p> +<p>C. DENTATUS.—California, 1848. With deeply-toothed, +shining-green leaves, and deep blue, abundantly-produced flowers, +this is a well-known wall plant that succeeds in many parts of the +country, particularly within the influence of the sea. It commences +flowering in May, and frequently continues until frosts set in. It +is a very desirable species, that in favoured situations will grow +to fully 10 feet high, and with a spread laterally of nearly the +same dimensions.</p> +<p>C. PAPILLOSUS.—California, 1848. This is a straggling +bush, with small, blunt leaves, and panicles of pale blue flowers +on long footstalks. A native of California and requiring wall +protection.</p> +<p>C. RIGIDUS.—Another Californian species, is of upright, +stiff growth, a sub-evergreen, with deep purple flowers produced in +April and May.</p> +<p>There are other less hardy kinds, including C. floribundus, C. +integerrimus, C. velutinus, and C. divaricatus.</p> +<h4>CEDRELA.</h4> +<p>CEDRELA SINENSIS (<i>syn Ailanthus flavescens</i>).—China, +1875. This is a fast growing tree, closely resembling the +Ailanthus, and evidently quite as hardy. It has a great advantage +over that tree, in that the flowers have an agreeable odour, those +of the Ailanthus being somewhat sickly and unpleasant. The flowers +are individually small, but arranged in immense hanging bunches +like those of Koelreuteria paniculata, and being pleasantly scented +are rendered still the more valuable. The whole plant has a yellow +hue, and the roots have a peculiar reddish colour, and very unlike +those of the Ailanthus, which are white.</p> +<h4>CELASTRUS.</h4> +<p>CELASTRUS SCANDENS.—Climbing Waxwork, or Bitter Sweet. +North America, 1736. When planted in rich, moist soil, this soon +forms an attractive mass of twisting and twining growths, with +distinct glossy foliage in summer and brilliant scarlet fruit in +autumn. The flowers are inconspicuous, the chief beauty of the +shrub being the show of fruit, which resembles somewhat those of +the Spindle Tree (Euonymus), and to which it is nearly allied. A +native of North America, it grows from 12 feet to 15 feet high, and +is useful in this country for covering arches or tree stems, or for +allowing to run about at will on a mound of earth or on +rockwork.</p> +<h4>CELTIS.</h4> +<p>CELTIS AUSTRALIS.—South Europe, 1796. This species is much +like C. occidentalis, with black edible fruit. It is not of so tall +growth as the American species.</p> +<p>C. OCCIDENTALIS.—Nettle tree. North America, 1656. In +general appearance this tree resembles the Elm, to which family it +belongs. It has reticulated, cordate-ovate, serrated leaves, with +small greenish flowers on slender stalks, and succeeded by +blackish-purple fruit about the size of a pea. A not very +ornamental tree, at least so far as flowers are concerned, but +valuable for lawn planting. It varies very much in the size and +shape of the leaves.</p> +<h4>CERCIS.</h4> +<p>CERCIS CANADENSIS.—North America, 1730. This species +resembles C. Siliquastrum, but is of much smaller growth, and bears +paler flowers; while C. CHINENSIS, which is not hardy, has large, +rosy-pink flowers.</p> +<p>C. SILIQUASTRUM.—Judas Tree. South Europe, 1596. A +small-growing tree of some 15 feet in height, and with usually a +rather ungainly and crooked mode of growth. It is, however, one of +our choicest subjects for ornamental planting, the handsome +reniform leaves and rosy-purple flowers produced along the branches +and before the leaves appear rendering it a great favourite with +planters. There are three distinct forms of this shrub—the +first, C. Siliquastrum alba, having pure white flowers; C. +Siliquastrum carnea, with beautiful deep pink flowers; and C. +Siliquastrum variegata, with neatly variegated foliage, though +rather inconstant of character. Natives of South Europe, and +amongst the oldest trees of our gardens.</p> +<p>They all succeed best when planted in rather damp loam, and do +not object to partial shade, the common species growing well even +beneath the drip of large standard trees.</p> +<h4>CHIMONANTHUS.</h4> +<p>CHIMONANTHUS FRAGRANS.—Winter Flower. Japan, 1766. This +Japanese shrub is certainly one of the most remarkable that could +be brought under notice, the deliciously fragrant flowers being +produced in abundance during the winter months, and while the plant +is yet leafless. Being of slender growth, it is best suited for +planting against a wall, the protection thus afforded being just +what is wanted for the perfect development of the pretty flowers. +C. fragrans grandiflora has larger and less fragrant flowers than +the species, and is more common in cultivation.</p> +<h4>CHIONANTHUS.</h4> +<p>CHIONANTHUS RETUSA.—China, 1852. This is not a very hardy +species, and, being less ornamental than the American form, is not +to be recommended for general planting.</p> +<p>C. VIRGINICA.—Fringe Tree. North America, 1736. A very +ornamental, small-growing tree, with large deciduous leaves and +pendent clusters of pure white flowers with long fringe-like +petals, and from which the popular name has arisen. It is a +charming tree, or rather shrub, in this country, for one rarely +sees it more than 10 feet high, and one that, to do it justice, +must have a cool and rather damp soil and a somewhat shady +situation.</p> +<h4>CHOISYA.</h4> +<p>CHOISYA TERNATA.—Mexican Orange Flower. Mexico, 1825. A +beautiful and distinct shrub that succeeds well in the south and +west of England. The evergreen leaves are always fresh and +beautiful, and of a dark shining green, while the sweetly-fragrant +flowers are produced freely on the apices of last year's wood. They +have a singular resemblance to those of the orange, and on the +Continent are commonly grown as a substitute for that popular +flower. The plant succeeds well in any light, rich soil, and soon +grows into a goodly-sized shrub of 4 feet or 5 feet in height. As a +wall plant it succeeds well, but in warm, maritime situations it +may be planted as a standard without fear of harm. Cuttings root +freely if placed in slight heat.</p> +<h4>CISTUS.</h4> +<p>CISTUS CRISPUS.—Portugal, 1656. This is a distinct +species, with curled leaves, and large reddish-purple flowers. It +is a valuable ornamental shrub, but, like the others, suffers from +the effects of frost.</p> +<p>C. LADANIFERUS.—Gum Cistus. Spain, 1629. A pretty but +rather tender shrub, growing in favourable situations to about 4 +feet in height. It has lanceolate leaves that are glutinous above, +and thickly covered with a whitish tomentum on the under sides, and +large and showy vhite flowers with a conspicuous purple blotch at +the base of each petal. Unless in southern and western England, but +particularly on the sea-coast, this handsome Portuguese shrub is +not to be depended on, in so far as hardihood is concerned.</p> +<p>C. LAURIFOLIUS.—Laurel-leaved Cistus. Spain, 1731. This is +the hardiest species in cultivation, but, like the latter, is +favourable to the milder parts of these islands, and especially +maritime districts. Frequently it rises to 7 feet in height, and is +then an object of great beauty, the large yellowish-white flowers +showing well above the deep green Laurel-like leaves.</p> +<p>C. MONSPELIENSIS (South of Europe, 1656), and its variety C. +monspeliensis florentinus, the former with white, and the latter +with white and yellow flowers, are fairly hardy in the milder parts +of Britain, but cannot be recommended for general planting.</p> +<p>C. PURPUREUS.—Purple-flowered Cistas. In this species, +which may rank next to the latter in point of hardihood, the +flowers are of a deep reddish-purple, and with a darker blotch at +the base of each petal.</p> +<p>C. SALVIFOLIUS is of loose and rather untidy growth, with rugose +leaves and white flowers. It is very variable in character, and the +form generally cultivated grows about 4 feet high, and has +ovate-lanceolate, almost glabrous leaves.</p> +<p>Other species that are occasionally to be found in collections +are C. creticus, with yellow and purple flowers; C. hirsutus, white +with yellow blotches at the base of the petals; and C. Clusii, with +very large pure-white flowers. All the species of Gum Cistus, or +Rock Rose as they are very appropriately named, will be found to +succeed best when planted in exalted positions, and among light, +though rich, strong soil. They are easy of propagation.</p> +<h4>CITRUS.</h4> +<p>CITRUS TRIFOLIATA.—Japan, 1869. This is a singular +low-growing shrub, with ternate leaves, spiny branches, and +fragrant white flowers. It is hardy in many English situations, but +does not fruit freely, although the orange-blossom-like flowers are +produced very abundantly. A pretty little glossy-leaved shrub that +is well worthy of attention, particularly where a cosy corner can +be put aside for its cultivation.</p> +<h4>CLADRASTIS.</h4> +<p>CLADRASTIS AMURENSIS.—Amoor Yellow Wood. Amur, 1880. This +is a shrub that is sure to be extensively cultivated when better +known, and more readily procured. It has stood uninjured for +several years in various parts of England, so that its hardihood +may be taken for granted. The pretty olive-green of the bark, and +the greyish-green of the leathery leaves, render the shrub one of +interest even in a flowerless state. In July and August the dense +spikes of white, or rather yellowish-white flowers are produced +freely, and that, too, even before the shrub has attained to a +height of 2 feet. It is well worthy of extended culture.</p> +<p>C. TINCTORIA (<i>syn C. lutea</i> and <i>Virgilia +lutea</i>).—Yellow Wood. North America, 1812. This is a +handsome deciduous tree that does well in many parts of the +country, and is valued for the rich profusion of white flowers +produced, and which are well set-off by the finely-cut pinnate +leaves. It is a valuable tree for park and lawn planting, requiring +a warm, dry soil, and sunny situation—conditions under which +the wood becomes well-ripened, and the flowers more freely +produced.</p> +<h4>CLEMATIS.</h4> +<p>CLEMATIS ALPINA (<i>syn Atragene alpina, A. austriaca</i> and +<i>A. siberica</i>).—Europe and North America. This is a +climbing species with bi-ternately divided leaves, and large +flowers with four blue sepals and ten to twelve small flattened +organs, which are usually termed petals.</p> +<p>C. CIRRHOSA.—Evergreen Virgin's Bower. Spain, 1596. An +interesting, early-flowering species. The flowers, which are +greenish-white, are produced in bunches and very effective. It is +an evergreen species, of comparative hardihood, and flowers well in +sheltered situations.</p> +<p>C. FLAMMULA.—Virgin's Bower. France, 1596. This old and +well-known plant is quite hardy in this country. The leaves are +pinnate, and the flowers white and fragrant. C. Flammula +rubro-marginata is a worthy and beautiful-leaved variety.</p> +<p>C. FLORIDA.—Japan, 1776. This is a beautiful species, and +an old inhabitant of English gardens. Leaves composed of usually +three oval-shaped leaflets, and unusually bright of tint. The +flowers are very large, and pure white. It should be planted in a +warm sheltered corner against a wall.</p> +<p>C. GRAVEOLENS.—This is a dwarf shrub, with neatly +tripinnate leaves, and solitary, strongly-scented yellow flowers of +medium size. A native of Chinese Tartary, and quite hardy.</p> +<p>C. LANUGINOSA.—China, 1851. A handsome species, with large +purple leaves that are hairy on the under sides. Flowers pale blue +or lilac, very large, and composed of six or eight spreading +sepals. C. lanuginosa pallida has immense flowers, often fully half +a foot in diameter. Flowers in June.</p> +<p>C. MONTANA.—Nepaul, 1831. This is valuable on account of +its flowering in May. It is a free-growing species, with +trifoliolate leaves on long footstalks, and large white flowers. C. +montana grandiflora is a beautiful variety, having large white +flowers so abundantly produced as to hide the foliage. It is quite +hardy and of rampant growth.</p> +<p>C. PATENS (<i>syns C. caerulea</i> and <i>C. azurea +grandiflora</i>).—Japan, 1836. This has large, pale-violet +flowers, and is the parent of many single and double flowered +forms. The typical form is, however, very deserving of cultivation, +on account of the freedom with which it blooms during June and July +from the wood of the previous year. It is perfectly hardy even in +the far north.</p> +<p>C. VIORNA.—Leather Flower. United States. This is a showy, +small-flowered species, the flowers being campanulate, +greenish-white within and purplish without. C. Viorna coccinea is +not yet well known, but is one of the prettiest of the +small-flowered section. The flowers, which are leathery as in the +species, are of a beautiful vermilion on the outside and yellow +within.</p> +<p>C. VITALBA.—Lady's Bower, or Old Man's Beard. A handsome +native climbing shrub, common in limestone or chalky districts, and +unusually abundant in the southern English counties. Clambering +over some neglected fence, often to nearly 20 feet in height, this +vigorous-growing plant is seen to best advantage, the three or +five-lobed leaves and festoons of greenish-white, fragrant flowers, +succeeded by the curious and attractive feathery carpels, render +the plant one of the most distinct and desirable of our native +wildlings flowering in August.</p> +<p>C. VITICELLA.—Spain, 1569. This is a well-known species of +not too rampant growth, and a native of Spain and Italy. The +flowers vary a good deal in colour, but in the typical plant they +are reddish-purple and produced throughout the summer. Crossed with +C. lanuginosa, this species has produced many ornamental and +beautiful hybrids, one of the finest and most popular being C. +Jackmanii.</p> +<p>C. WILLIAMSI (<i>syn C. Fortunei</i>).—Japan, 1863. The +fragrant, white flowers of this species are semi-double, and +consist of about 100 oblong-lanceolate sepals narrowed to the base. +The leathery leaves are trifoliolate with heart-shaped leaflets. It +proves quite hardy, and has several varieties.</p> +<p>GARDEN VARIETIES.—As well as the above there are many +beautiful garden hybrids, some of which in point of floral +colouring far outvie the parent forms. Included in the following +list are a few of the most beautiful kinds:—</p> +<p>Alba Victor. Alexandra. Beauty of Worcester. Belle of Woking. +Blue Gem. Duchess of Edinburgh. Edith Jackman. Fairy Queen. John +Gould Veitch. Lady Bovill. Lord Beaconsfield. Lucie Lemoine. Madame +Baron Veillard. Miss Bateman. Mrs. A. Jackman. Othello. Prince of +Wales. Rubella. Star of India. Stella. Venus Victrix. William +Kennett.</p> +<h4>CLERODENDRON.</h4> +<p>CLERODENDRON TRICHOTOMUM.—Japan, 1800. This is at once one +of the most beautiful and distinct of hardy shrubs. It is of stout, +nearly erect growth, 8 feet high, and nearly as much through, with +large, dark-green, ovate leaves, and deliciously fragrant white +flowers, with a purplish calyx, and which are at their best in +September. Thriving well in any light soil, being of vigorous +constitution, and extremely handsome of flower, are qualities which +combine to render this shrub one of particular importance in our +gardens.</p> +<p>C. FOETIDUM, a native of China, is only hardy in southern and +seaside situations, where it forms a bush 5 feet high, with +heart-shaped leaves, and large clusters of rosy-pink flowers.</p> +<h4>CLETHRA.</h4> +<p>CLETHRA ACUMINATA.—Pointed-leaved Pepper Tree. Carolina, +1806. This is not so hardy as C. alnifolia, hailing from the +Southern States of North America, but with a little protection is +able to do battle with our average English winter. It resembles C. +alnifolia, except in the leaves, which are sharp pointed, and like +that species delights to grow in damp positions. The flowers are +white and drooping, and the growth more robust than is that of C. +alnifolia generally. For planting by the pond or lake-side, the +Pepper Trees are almost invaluable.</p> +<p>C. ALNIFOLIA.—Alder-leaved Pepper Tree. North America, +1831. A rather stiff-growing shrub of about 5 feet in height, with +leaves resembling those of our common Alder, and bearing towards +the end of July spikes of almost oppressively fragrant dull-white +flowers at the tips of the branches. It is a valuable shrub, not +only in an ornamental way, but on account of it thriving in damp, +swampy ground, where few others could exist, while at the same time +it will succeed and flower freely in almost any good garden +soil.</p> +<h4>COCCULUS.</h4> +<p>COCCULUS CAROLINUS.—This is a half hardy, twining shrub, +of free growth when planted by a tree stem in a sheltered wood, but +with by no means showy flowers; indeed, it may be described in few +words as a shrub of no great beauty nor value.</p> +<p>C. LAURIFOLIUS, from the Himalayas and Japan, is even less hardy +than the above, although, used as a wall plant, it has survived for +many years in the south and west of England. The foliage of this +species is neat and ornamental, but liable to injury from cold +easterly winds.</p> +<h4>COLLETIA.</h4> +<p>COLLETIA CRUCIATA (<i>syn C. bictonensis</i>).—Chili, +1824. With flattened woody branches, and sharp-pointed spines which +take the place of leaves, this is at once one of the most singular +of hardy flowering shrubs. It forms a stout dense bush about 4 feet +high, and bears quantities of small white flowers, which render the +plant one of great beauty during the summer months.</p> +<p>C. SPINOSA.—Peru, 1823. This species grows fairly well in +some parts of England and Ireland, and is a curious shrub with +awl-shaped leaves, and, like the other members of the family, an +abundant producer of flowers. It thrives best as a wall plant, and +when favourably situated a height of 12 feet is sometimes +attained.</p> +<h4>COLUTEA.</h4> +<p>COLUTEA ARBORESCENS.—Bladder Senna. France, 1548. This is +a common plant in English gardens, bearing yellow Pea-shaped +flowers, that are succeeded by curious reddish bladder-like seed +pods. It grows to 10 feet or 12 feet in height, and is usually of +lax and slender growth, but perfectly hardy.</p> +<p>C. CRUENTA (<i>syn C. orientalis</i> and <i>C. +sanguine</i>).—Oriental Bladder Senna. Levant, 1710. This is +a free-growing, round-headed, deciduous bush, of from 6 feet to 8 +feet high when fully grown. The leaves are pinnate and glaucous, +smooth, and bright green above, and downy beneath. Flowers +individually large, of a reddish-copper colour, with a yellow spot +at the base of the upper petal. The fruit is an inflated +boat-shaped reddish pod. The Bladder Sennas are of very free +growth, even in poor, sandy soil, and being highly ornamental, +whether in flower or fruit, are to be recommended for extensive +cultivation.</p> +<h4>CORIARIA.</h4> +<p>CORIARIA MYRTIFOLIA.—South Europe, 1629. A deciduous shrub +growing to about 4 feet in height, with Myrtle-like leaves, and +upright terminal racemes of not very showy flowers, produced about +mid-summer—generally from May to August. For its pretty +foliage and the frond-like arrangement of its branches it is +principally worthy of culture. From southern Europe and the north +of Africa, where it is an occupant of waste ground and hedges, but +still rare in our gardens.</p> +<h4>CORNUS.</h4> +<p>CORNUS ALBA.—White-fruited Dogwood. Siberia, 1741. This is +a native of northern Asia and Siberia, not of America as Loudon +stated. For the slender, red-barked branches and white or creamy +flowers, this species is well worthy of notice, while the white +fruit renders it very distinct and effective. It grows to about 10 +feet in height. C. alba Spathi is one of the most ornamental of +shrubs bearing coloured leaves, these in spring being of a +beautiful bronzy tint, and changing towards summer to a mixture of +gold and green, or rather an irregular margin of deep gold +surrounds each leaf. It was first sent out by the famous Berlin +nurseryman whose name it bears. C. alba Gouchaulti is another +variegated leaved variety, but has no particular merit, and +originated in one of the French nurseries.</p> +<p>C. ALTERNIFOLIA.—North America, 1760. This species is a +lover of damp ground, and grows from 20 feet to nearly 30 feet +high, with clusters of pale yellow flowers, succeeded by +bluish-black berries that render the plant highly ornamental. It is +still rare in British gardens.</p> +<p>C. AMOMUM (<i>syn C. sericea</i>).—From the eastern United +States. It is a low-growing, damp-loving shrub, with +yellowish-white flowers, borne abundantly in small clusters. It +grows about 8 feet in height, and has a graceful habit, owing to +the long and lithe branches spreading regularly over the ground. +The fruit is pale blue, and the bark a conspicuous purple.</p> +<p>C. ASPERIFOLIA is another showy American species, with +reddish-brown bark, hairy leaves, of small size, and rather small +flowers that are succeeded by pearly-white berries borne on +conspicuous reddish stalks.</p> +<p>C. BAILEYI resembles somewhat the better-known C. stolonifera, +but it is of more erect habit, is not stoloniferous, has rather +woolly leaves, at least on the under side, and bears +yellowish-white fruit. It grows in sandy soil, and is a native of +Canada.</p> +<p>C. CALIFORNICA (<i>syn C. pubescens</i>) grows fully 10 feet +high, with smooth branches, hairy branchlets, and cymes of pretty +white flowers, succeeded by white fruit. It occurs from southern +California to British Columbia.</p> +<p>C. CANADENSIS.—Dwarf Cornel or Birchberry. Canada, 1774. +This is of herbaceous growth, and remarkable for the large +cream-coloured flower bracts, and showy red fruit.</p> +<p>C. CANDIDISSIMA (<i>syn C. paniculata</i>) is a beautiful +American species, with panicled clusters of almost pure white +flowers, that are succeeded by pale blue fruit. It is a small +growing tree, with narrow, pointed leaves, and greyish coloured, +smooth bark. Like many of its fellows, this species likes rather +moist ground.</p> +<p>C. CIRCINATA, from the eastern United States, is readily +distinguished by its large, round leaves, these sometimes measuring +6 inches long by 3-1/2 inches wide. The yellowish-white flowers are +individually small, and succeeded by bright blue fruits, each as +large as a pea.</p> +<p>C. CAPITATA (<i>syn Benthamia fragifera</i>).—Nepaul, +1825. An evergreen shrub, with oblong, light green leaves and +terminal inconspicuous greenish flowers, surrounded by an involucre +of four large, pinky-yellow bracts. It is this latter that renders +the shrub so very conspicuous when in full flower. Unfortunately, +the Benthamia is not hardy throughout the country, the south and +west of England, especially Cornwall, and the southern parts of +Ireland being the favoured spots where this handsome shrub or small +growing tree—for in Cornwall it has attained to fully 45 feet +in height, and in Cork nearly 30 feet—may be found in a +really thriving condition. Around London it does well enough for a +time, but with severe frost it gets cut back to the ground, and +though it quickly recovers and grows rapidly afterwards, before it +is large enough to flower freely it usually suffers again. The +fruits are as large and resemble Strawberries, and of a rich +scarlet or reddish hue, and though ripe in October they frequently +remain on the trees throughout the winter. Both for its flowers and +fruit, this Nepaul shrub-tree is well worthy of a great amount of +trouble to get it established in a cosy corner of the garden. Rich, +well-drained loam is all it wants, while propagation by seed is +readily effected.</p> +<p>C. FLORIDA, the Florida Dogwood, is not always very satisfactory +when grown in this country, our climate in some way or other being +unsuitable for its perfect development. It is a handsome shrub or +small-growing tree, with small flowers surrounded by a large and +conspicuous white involucre. The leaves are ovate-oblong, and +pubescent on the undersides. It is a valuable as well as ornamental +little tree, and is worthy of a great amount of coddling and +coaxing to get it established.</p> +<p>C. KOUSA (<i>syn Benthamia japonica</i>).—Japan. This is a +very distinct and beautiful flowering shrub. Flowers very small +individually, but borne in large clusters, and yellow, the showy +part being the four large, pure white bracts which subtend each +cluster of blossoms, much like those in Cornus florida, only the +bracts are more pointed than those of the latter species. Being +quite hardy, and a plant of great interest and beauty, this little +known Cornus is sure to be widely planted when better known.</p> +<p>C. MACROPHYLLA (<i>syn C. brachypoda</i>).—Himalayas, +China and Japan, 1827. This is an exceedingly handsome species, of +tabulated appearance, occasioned by the branches being arranged +almost horizontally. The leaves are of large size, elliptic-ovate, +and are remarkable for their autumnal tints. The elder-like flowers +appear in June. They are pure white and arranged in large cymes. C. +macrophylla variegata is a distinct and very ornamental form of the +above, in which the leaf margins are bordered with white.</p> +<p>C. MAS.—Cornelian Cherry. Austria, 1596. One of our +earliest flowering trees, the clusters of yellow blooms being +produced in mild seasons by the middle of February. It is not at +all fastidious about soil, thriving well in that of very opposite +description. It deserves to be extensively cultivated, if only for +the profusion of brightly-tinted flowers, which completely cover +the shoots before the leaves have appeared. C. Mas +aurea-elegantissima, the tricolor-leaved Dogwood, is a strikingly +ornamental shrub, with green leaves encircled with a golden band, +the whole being suffused with a faint pinky tinge. It is of more +slender growth than the species, and a very desirable acquisition +to any collection of hardy ornamental shrubs. C. Mas +argenteo-variegata is another pretty shrub, the leaves being +margined with clear white.</p> +<p>C. NUTTALLII grows to fully 50 feet in height, and is one of the +most beautiful of the Oregon and Californian forest trees. The +flower bracts are of large size, often 6 inches across, the +individual bracts being broad and white, and fully 2-1/2 inches +long.</p> +<p>C. OFFICINALIS is a Japanese species, that is, however, quite +hardy in this country, and nearly resembles the better known C. +Mas, but from which it may at once be known by the tufts of +brownish hairs that are present in the axils of the principal leaf +veins.</p> +<p>C. STOLONIFERA.—Red Osier Dogwood. North America, 1741. +This has rather inconspicuous flowers, that are succeeded by +whitish fruit, and is of greatest value for the ruddy tint of the +young shoots. It grows fully 6 feet high, and increases rapidly by +underground suckers. The species is quite hardy.</p> +<p>C. TARTARICA (<i>syn C. siberica</i>).—Siberia, 1824. This +has much brighter coloured bark, and is of neater and dwarfer +habit, than the typical C. alba. It is a very beautiful and +valuable shrub, of which there is a variegated leaved form.</p> +<h4>COROKIA.</h4> +<p>COROKIA COTONEASTER.—New Zealand, 1876. A curious, +dwarf-growing shrub, with small, bright yellow, starry flowers +produced in June. The hardiness of the shrub is rather +doubtful.</p> +<h4>CORONILLA.</h4> +<p>CORONILLA EMERUS.—Scorpion Senna. France, 1596. This +shrub, a native of the middle and southern parts of Europe, forms +an elegant loose bush about 5 feet high, with smooth, pinnate, +sub-evergreen leaves, and Pea-shaped flowers, that are reddish in +the bud state, but bright yellow when fully expanded. It is an +elegant plant, and on account of its bearing hard cutting back, is +well suited for ornamental hedge formation; but however used the +effect is good, the distinct foliage and showy flowers making it a +general favourite with planters. It will thrive in very poor soil, +but prefers a light rich loam.</p> +<h4>CORYLOPSIS.</h4> +<p>CORYLOPSIS HIMALAYANA.—E. Himalayas, 1879. This is a +stronger growing species than C. pauciflora and C. spicata, with +large leaves averaging 4 inches long, that are light green above +and silky on the under sides. The parallel veins of the leaves are +very pronounced, while the leaf-stalks, as indeed the young twigs +too, are covered with a hairy pubescence.</p> +<p>C. PAUCIFLORA is readily distinguished from the former by its +more slender growth, smaller leaves, and fewer flowered spikes. +Flowers primrose-yellow.</p> +<p>C. SPICATA.—Japan, 1864. This Japanese shrub is of very +distinct appearance, having leaves like those of our common Hazel, +and drooping spikes of showy-yellowish, fragrant flowers that are +produced before the leaves. There is a variegated form in +cultivation.</p> +<p>The various species of Corylopsis are very ornamental garden +plants, and to be recommended, on account of their early flowering, +for prominent positions in the shrubbery or by the woodland walk. +Light, rich loam seems to suit them well.</p> +<h4>CORYLUS.</h4> +<p>CORYLUS AVELLANA PURPUREA.—Purple Hazel. This has large +leaves of a rich purple colour, resembling those of the purple +Beech, and is a very distinct plant for the shrubbery border. +Should be cut down annually if large leaves are desired.</p> +<p>C. COLURNA.—Constantinople Hazel. Turkey, 1665. This is +the largest and most ornamental of the family, and is mentioned +here on account of the showy catkins with which the tree is usually +well supplied. When thickly produced, as they usually are on +established specimens, these long catkins have a most effective and +pleasing appearance, and tend to render the tree one of the most +distinct in cultivation. Under favourable circumstances, such as +when growing in a sweet and rather rich brown loam, it attains to +fully 60 feet in height, and of a neat shape, from the branches +being arranged horizontally, or nearly so. Even in a young state +the Constantinople Hazel is readily distinguished from the common +English species, by the softer and more angular leaves, and by the +whitish bark which comes off in long strips. The stipules, too, +form an unerring guide to its identity, they being long, linear, +and recurved.</p> +<h4>COTONEASTER.</h4> +<p>COTONEASTER BACILLARIS.—Nepaul, 1841. A large-growing +species, and one of the few members of the family that is more +ornamental in flower than in fruit. It is of bold, portly, upright +growth, and sends up shoots from the base of the plant. The pretty +white flowers are borne in clusters for some distance along the +slender shoots, and have a very effective and pleasing appearance; +indeed, the upper portion of the plant has the appearance of a mass +of white blossoms.</p> +<p>C. FRIGIDA.—Nepaul, 1824. The species forms a large shrub +or low tree with oblong, elliptical, sub-evergreen leaves. The +flowers are white and borne in large corymbs, which are followed by +scarlet berries in September.</p> +<p>C. MICROPHYLLA.—Small-leaved Cotoneaster. Nepaul, 1825. +This is, from a flowering point of view, probably the most useful +of any member of this rather large genus. Its numerous pretty white +flowers, dark, almost Yew-green leaves, and abundance of the +showiest red berries in winter, will ever make this dwarf, +clambering plant a favourite with those who are at all interested +in beautiful shrubs. All, or nearly all, the species of Cotoneaster +are remarkable and highly valued for their showy berries, but, +except the above, and perhaps C. buxifolia (Box-leaved +Cotoneaster), few others are worthy of consideration from a purely +flowering point of view.</p> +<p>C. SIMONSII.—Khasia, 1868. The stems of this species +usually grow from 4 feet to 6 feet high, with sub-erect habit. The +leaves are roundly-elliptic and slightly silky beneath. The small +flowers are succeeded by a profusion of scarlet berries that ripen +in autumn. This is generally considered the best for garden +purposes.</p> +<h4>CRATAEGUS.</h4> +<p>CRATAEGUS AZAROLUS.—South Europe, 1640. This is a very +vigorous-growing species, with a wide, spreading head of rather +upright-growing branches. The flowers are showy and the fruit large +and of a pleasing red colour.</p> +<p>C. AZAROLUS ARONIA (<i>syn C. Aronia</i>).—Aronia Thorn. +South Europe, 1810. This tree attains to a height of 20 feet, has +deeply lobed leaves that are wedge-shaped at the base, and slightly +pubescent on the under sides. The flowers, which usually are at +their best in June, are white and showy, and succeeded by large +yellow fruit. Generally the Aronia Thorn forms a rather upright and +branchy specimen of neat proportions, and when studded with its +milk-white flowers may be included amongst the most distinct and +ornamental of the family.</p> +<p>C. COCCINEA.—Scarlet-fruited Thorn. North America, 1683. +If only for its lovely white flowers, with bright, pinky anthers, +it is well worthy of a place even in a selection of ornamental +flowering trees and shrubs. It is, however, rendered doubly +valuable in that the cordate-ovate leaves turn of a warm brick +colour in the autumn, while the fruit, and which is usually +produced abundantly, is of the brightest red.</p> +<p>C. COCCINEA MACRANTHA.—North America, 1819. This bears +some resemblance to the Cockspur Thorn, but has very long, curved +spines—longer, perhaps, than those of any other species.</p> +<p>C. CORDATA is one of the latest flowering species, in which +respect it is even more hardy than the well-known C. +tanace-tifolia. It forms a small compact tree, of neat and regular +outline, with dark green shining leaves, and berries about the same +size as those of the common species, and deep red.</p> +<p>C. CRUS-GALLI.—Cockspur Thorn. North America, 1691. This +has large and showy white flowers that are succeeded by deep red +berries. It is readily distinguished by the long, curved spines +with which the whole tree is beset. Of this species there are +numerous worthy forms, including C. Crus-galli Carrierii, which +opens at first white, and then turns a showy flesh colour; C. +Crus-galli Layi, C. Crus-galli splendens, C. Crus-galli prunifolia, +C. Crus-galli pyracanthifolia, and C. Crus-galli salicifolia, all +forms of great beauty—whether for their foliage, or beautiful +and usually plentifully-produced flowers.</p> +<p>C. DOUGLASII.—North America, 1830. This is peculiar in +having dark purple or almost black fruit. It is of stout growth, +often reaching to 20 feet in height, and belongs to the +early-flowering section.</p> +<p>C. NIGRA (<i>syn C. Celsiana</i>).—A tree 20 feet high, +with stout branches, and downy, spineless shoots. Leaves large, +ovate-acute, deeply incised, glossy green above and downy beneath. +Flowers large and fragrant, pure white, and produced in close heads +in June. Fruit large, oval, downy, and yellow when fully ripe. A +native of Sicily, and known under the names of C. incisa and C. +Leeana. This species must not be confused with a variety of our +common Thorn bearing a similar name.</p> +<p>C. OXYACANTHA.—Common Hawthorn. This is, perhaps, the most +ornamental species in cultivation, and certainly the commonest. The +common wild species needs no description, the fragrant flowers +varying in colour from pure white to pink, being produced in the +richest profusion. Under cultivation, however, it has produced some +very distinct and desirable forms, far superior to the parent, +including amongst others those with double-white, pink, and scarlet +flowers.</p> +<p>C. OXYACANTHA PUNICEA flore-pleno (Paul's double-scarlet Thorn), +is one of, if not the handsomest variety, with large double flowers +that are of the richest crimson. Other good flowering kinds include +C. Oxyacantha praecox (Glastonbury Thorn); C. Oxyacantha +Oliveriana; C. Oxyacantha punicea, with deep scarlet flowers; C. +Oxyacantha rosea, rose-coloured and abundantly-produced flowers; C. +Oxyacantha foliis aureis, with yellow fruit; C. Oxyacantha +laciniata, cut leaves; C. Oxyacantha multiplex, double-white +flowers; C. Oxyacantha foliis argenteis, having silvery-variegated +leaves: C. Oxyacantha pendula, of semi-weeping habit; C. Oxyacantha +stricta, with an upright and stiff habit of growth; C. Oxyacantha +Leeana, a good form; and C. Oxyacantha leucocarpa.</p> +<p>C. PARVIFOLIA.—North America, 1704. This is a miniature +Thorn, of slow growth, with leaves about an inch long, and solitary +pure-white flowers of large size. The flowers open late in the +season, and are succeeded by yellowish-green fruit.</p> +<p>C. PYRACANTHA.—Fiery Thorn. South Europe, 1629. This is a +very distinct species, with lanceolate serrated leaves, and pinkish +or nearly white flowers. The berries of this species are, however, +the principal attraction, being orange-scarlet, and produced in +dense clusters. C. Pyracantha crenulata and C. Pyracantha Lelandi +are worthy varieties of the above, the latter especially being one +of the most ornamental-berried shrubs in cultivation.</p> +<p>C. TANACETIFOLIA.—Tansy-leaved Thorn. Greece, 1789. This +is a very late-flowering species, and remarkable for its Tansy-like +foliage. It is of unusually free growth, and in almost any class of +soil, and is undoubtedly, in so far at least as neatly divided +leaves and wealth of fruit are concerned, one of the most distinct +and desirable species of Thorn.</p> +<p>Other good species and varieties that may just be mentioned as +being worthy of cultivation are C. apiifolia, C. Crus-galli +horrida, C. orientalis, and C. tomentosum (<i>syn C. punctata</i>). +To a lesser or greater extent, the various species and varieties of +Thorn are of great value for the wealth and beauty of flowers they +produce, but the above are, perhaps, the most desirable in that +particular respect. They are all of free growth, and, except in +waterlogged soils, thrive well and flower freely.</p> +<h4>CYTISUS.</h4> +<p>CYTISUS ALBUS.—White Spanish Broom. Portugal, 1752. This +is a large-growing shrub of often 10 feet in height, with wiry, +somewhat straggling branches, and remarkable for the wealth of +pure-white flowers it produces. In May and June, if favourably +situated, every branch is wreathed with small white flowers, and +often to such an extent that at a short distance away the plant +looks like a sheet of white. Being perfectly hardy and of very free +growth in any light soil, and abundantly floriferous, this handsome +shrub is one of particular value in ornamental planting. By placing +three or five plants in clump-fashion, the beauty of this Broom is +greatly enhanced.</p> +<p>C. ALDUS INCARNATUS (<i>syn C. incarnatus</i>) resembles C. +purpureus in its leaves and general appearance, but it is of larger +growth. The flowers, which are at their best in May, are of a +vinous-rose colour, and produced plentifully.</p> +<p>C. BIFLORUS (<i>syn C. elongatus</i>).—Hungary, 1804. This +is a dwarf, spreading, twiggy bush, of fully a yard high. Leaves +trifoliolate, clothed beneath with closely adpressed hairs, and +bright yellow, somewhat tubular flowers, usually produced in +fours.</p> +<p>C. DECUMBENS.—A charming alpine species, of low, spreading +growth, bright-green three-parted leaves, and bearing axillary +bunches of large yellow, brownish-purple tinted flowers. A native +of the French and Italian Alps, and quite hardy.</p> +<p>C. NIGRICANS.—Austria, 1730. Another beautiful species, +with long, erect racemes of golden-yellow flowers, and one whose +general hardihood is undoubted. On its own roots, and allowed to +roam at will, this pretty, small-growing Broom is of far greater +interest than when it is grafted mop-high on a Laburnum stem, and +pruned into artificial shapes, as is, unfortunately, too often the +case.</p> +<p>C. PURPUREUS.—Purple Broom. Austria, 1792. Alow, spreading +shrub, with long wiry shoots, clothed with neat trifoliolate +leaves, and bearing an abundance of its purple, Pea-shaped flowers. +There is a white-flowered form, C. purpureus albus, and another +named C. purpureus ratis-bonensis, with pretty yellow flowers, +produced on long and slender shoots.</p> +<p>C. SCOPARIUS.—Yellow Broom. This is a well-known native +shrub, with silky, angular branches, and bright yellow flowers in +summer. There are several varieties, but the most remarkable and +handsome is C. scoparius Andreanus, in which the wings of the +flowers are of a rich golden brown. It is one of the showiest +shrubs in cultivation.</p> +<p>For ornamental planting the above are about the best forms of +Broom, but others might include C. austriacus, C. Ardoini, and C. +capitatus, the latter being unusually hardy, and bearing dense +heads of flowers. In so far as soil is concerned, the Brooms are +readily accommodated, while either from seeds or cuttings they are +easily propagated.</p> +<h4>DABOËCIA.</h4> +<p>DABOËCIA POLIFOLIA (<i>syn Menziesia polifolia</i>).—St. +Dabeoc's Heath. South Western Europe, Ireland and the Azores. A +dwarf, and rather straggling, viscid shrub, with linear-ovate +leaves that are silvery beneath. The flowers are pink, and +abundantly produced. D. polifolia alba has white flowers; and D. +polifolia atro-purpurea, purplish flowers.</p> +<h4>DANAË.</h4> +<p>DANAË LAURUS (<i>syn D. racemosa</i> and <i>Ruscus +racemosus</i>).—Alexandrian Laurel. A native of Portugal +(1739), with glossy-green leaf substitutes, and racemes of small, +not very showy, greenish-yellow flowers.</p> +<h4>DAPHNE.</h4> +<p>DAPHNE ALPINA.—Italy, 1759. A deciduous species, which has +white or rosy-white, sweet-scented flowers. It is a pretty, but +rare shrub, that grows well in light sandy leaf soil.</p> +<p>D. ALTAICA.—Siberia, 1796. Though rare in gardens, this is +a pretty and neat-foliaged species, and bears white flowers in +abundance. It wants a warm corner and dry soil.</p> +<p>D. BLAGAYANA.—Styria, 1872. This is still rare in +cultivation, but it is a very desirable species, bearing +ivory-white highly-fragrant flowers. For the alpine garden it is +particularly suitable, and though growing rather slowly thrives +well in good light soil.</p> +<p>D. CHAMPIONI (<i>syn D. Fortunei</i>), from China, is a rare and +pretty species, bearing lilac flowers in winter, and whilst the +shrub is leafless. It does best in a warm situation, such as +planted against a wall facing south.</p> +<p>D. CNEORUM.—Garland Flower. South Europe, 1752. This is a +charming rock shrub, of dwarf, trailing habit, with small +glossy-green leaves, and dense clusters of deep pink, +deliciously-fragrant flowers.</p> +<p>D. FIONIANA is of neat growth, with small, glossy, dark leaves, +and pale rose-coloured flowers. Its sturdy, dwarf habit, constant +verdure, and pretty sweet-scented flowers, should make this species +a favourite with cultivators. Known also as D. hyemalis.</p> +<p>D. GENKWA.—Japanese Lilac. Japan, 1866. This is a rare and +beautiful species, of recent introduction, with large lilac-tinted, +sweetly-scently flowers.</p> +<p>D. LAUREOLA.—Spurge Laurel. This is not, in so far at +least as flowers are concerned, a showy species, but the ample +foliage and sturdy habit of the plant will always render this +native species of value for the shrubbery. It is of value, too, as +growing and flowering freely in the shade. The flowers are +sweetly-scented and of a greenish-yellow colour, and appear about +February.</p> +<p>D. MEZEREUM.—The Mezereon. Europe (England). One of the +commonest and most popular of hardy garden shrubs. It is of stout, +strict growth, and produces clusters of pinky, rose, or purplish +flowers before winter is past, and while the branches are yet +leafless. Few perfectly hardy flowering shrubs are so popular as +the Mezereon, and rightly so, for a more beautiful plant could not +be mentioned, wreathed as every branch is, and almost back to the +main stem, with the showiest of flowers. It likes good, rich, +dampish soil, and delights to grow in a quiet, shady nook, or even +beneath the spread of our larger forest trees. There are several +very distinct varieties, of which the white-flowered D. Mezereum +flore albo is one of the most valuable. The fruit of this variety +is bright golden-yellow. D. Mezereum autumnale and D. Mezereum +atro-rubrum are likewise interesting and beautiful forms.</p> +<p>D. PETRAEA (<i>syn D. rupestris</i>).—Rock Daphne. Tyrol. +This is quite hardy in the more sheltered corners of the rock +garden, with neat, shining foliage and pretty rosy flowers, +produced so thickly all over the plant as almost to hide the +foliage from view. At Kew it thrives well in peaty loam and +limestone, and although it does not increase very quickly is yet +happy and contented. It is a charming rock shrub.</p> +<p>D. PONTICA.—Pontic Daphne. Asia Minor, 1759. This is much +like D. lauriola, but has shorter and more oval leaves, and the +flowers, instead of being borne in fives like that species, are +produced in pairs. They are also of a richer yellow, and more +sweetly scented.</p> +<p>D. SERICEA (<i>syn D. collina</i>).—Italy and Asia Minor, +1820. This forms a bush fully 2 feet high, with evergreen, oblong, +shining leaves, and clusters of rose-coloured flowers that are +pleasantly scented. It is quite hardy, and an interesting species +that is well worthy of more extended culture. There is a variety of +this with broader foliage than the species, and named D. sericea +latifolia (<i>syn D. collina latifolia</i>).</p> +<h4>DAPHNIPHYLLUM.</h4> +<p>DAPHNIPHYLLUM GLAUCESCENS.—East Indies, Java and Corea. A +handsome Japanese shrub that will be valued for its neat +Rhododendron-like foliage, compact habit of growth, and for the +conspicuous bark which is of a warm reddish hue. The leaves are +large and elliptic, six inches long, and are rendered strangely +conspicuous from the foot-stalks and midrib being dull crimson, +this affording a striking contrast to the delicate green of the +leaves. It grows freely in light sandy peat. There are two +well-marked forms, one named D. glaucescens viridis, in which the +red markings of the leaves are absent; and D. glaucescens +jezoensis, a pretty and uncommon variety.</p> +<h4>DESFONTAINEA.</h4> +<p>DESFONTAINEA SPINOSA.—Andes from Chili to New Grenada, +1853. This is a desirable shrub, and one that is perfectly hardy in +most parts of the country. It is a charming shrub of bold, bushy +habit, with prickly holly-like foliage, and scarlet and yellow, +trumpet-shaped pendent flowers, borne in quantity. The shelter of a +wall favours the growth and flowering of this handsome shrub, but +it also succeeds well in the open if planted in rich, light soil, +and in positions that are not exposed to cold and cutting +winds.</p> +<h4>DEUTZIA.</h4> +<p>DEUTZIA CRENATA (<i>syn D. scabra</i> and <i>D. +Fortunei</i>).—Japan 1863. This is of stout, bushy growth, +often reaching a height of 8 feet, and lateral spread of nearly as +much. The ovate-lanceolate leaves are rough to the touch, and its +slender, but wiry stems, are wreathed for a considerable distance +along with racemes of pure white flowers. It is a very distinct +shrub, of noble port, and when in full flower is certainly one of +the most ornamental of hardy shrubs. The double-flowered form, D. +crenata flore-pleno, is one of the prettiest flowering shrubs in +cultivation, the wealth of double flowers, not white as in the +species, but tinged with reddish-purple being highly attractive. D. +crenata, Pride of Rochester, is another form with double-white +flowers, and a most distinct and beautiful shrub. Two other very +beautiful varieties are those known as D. crenata Watererii and D. +crenata Wellsii.</p> +<p>D. GRACILIS is a somewhat tender shrub of fully 18 inches high, +with smooth leaves and pure-white flowers produced in the greatest +freedom. It does well in warm, sheltered sites, but is most +frequently seen as a greenhouse plant. A native of Japan.</p> +<h4>DIERVILLA.</h4> +<p>DIERVILLA FLORIBUNDA (<i>syn D. multiflora</i> and <i>Weigelia +floribunda</i>), from Japan, 1864, has narrow, tubular, +purplish-coloured corollas, that are only slightly opened out at +the mouth. The Diervillas are valuable decorative shrubs, of free +growth in good rich loam, and bearing a great abundance of the +showiest of flowers. For shrubbery planting they must ever rank +high, the beautiful flowers and rich green ample leafage rendering +them distinct and attractive.</p> +<p>D. GRANDIFLORA (<i>syn D. amabilis</i> and <i>Weigelia +amabilis</i>).—Japan. This is of larger growth than D. rosea, +with strongly reticulated leaves, that are prominently veined on +the under sides, and much larger, almost white flowers. It is a +distinct and worthy species. There are some beautiful varieties of +this species, named Isolinae, Van Houttei, and Striata.</p> +<p>D. ROSEA (<i>syn Weigelia rosea</i>).—China, 1844. This is +a handsome hardy shrub of small stature, with ovate-lanceolate +leaves, and clusters of showy pink, or sometimes white flowers, +that are produced in April and May. There are many good varieties +of this shrub, of which the following are the most +popular:—D. rosea arborescens grandiflora; D. rosea Lavallii, +with an abundance of crimson-red flowers; D. rosea Stelzneri, with +an abundance of deep red flowers; D. rosea hortensis nivea, large +foliage, and large, pure-white flowers; D. rosea candida, much like +the latter, but bearing pure-white flowers; and D. rosea Looymansii +aurea has beautiful golden leaves.</p> +<h4>DISCARIA.</h4> +<p>DISCARIA LONGISPINA.—This is at once a curious and +beautiful shrub, of low, creeping growth, and poorly furnished with +leaves, which, however, are amply made up for by the deep green of +the shoots and stems, and which give to the plant almost the +appearance of an evergreen. The flowers, which are bell-shaped and +white, are almost lavishly produced, and as they last for a very +long time, with only the pure white assuming a pinky tinge when +subjected to excessive sunshine, the value of the shrub is still +further enhanced. For planting against a mound of rock this +scrambling shrub is of value, but the position should not be +exposed to cold winds, for the plant is somewhat tender. From South +America, and allied to the better known Colletias.</p> +<p>D. SERRATIFOLIA (<i>syn Colletia serratifolia</i>), is even a +handsomer plant than the former, with minute serrated foliage, and +sheets of small white flowers in June.</p> +<h4>DIOSPYROS.</h4> +<p>DIOSPYROS KAKI COSTATA.—The Date Plum. China, 1789. Fruit +as big as a small apple; leaves leathery, entire, and broadly +ovate; flowers and fruits in this country when afforded the +protection of a wall. The fruit is superior to that of D. +virginiana (Persimmon).</p> +<p>D. LOTUS, the common Date Plum, is a European species, with +purplish flowers, and oblong leaves that are reddish on the under +sides. Both species want a light, warm soil, and sheltered +situation.</p> +<p>D. VIRGINIANA.—The Persimmon, or Virginian Date Plum. +North America, 1629. A small-growing tree, with coriaceous leaves, +and greenish-yellow flowers. In southern situations and by the +seaside it is perfectly hardy, and succeeds well, but in other +districts it is rather tender. The fruit is edible, yellow in +colour, and about an inch in diameter.</p> +<h4>DIRCA.</h4> +<p>DIRCA PALUSTRIS.—Leather Wood. North America, 1750. A +much-branched bush, of quite a tree-like character, but rarely more +than 3 feet high. To the Daphnes it is nearly allied, and is close +in resemblance; but there is a curious yellowish hue pervading the +whole plant. The flowers are produced on the naked shoots in April, +and are rendered conspicuous by reason of the pendent yellow +stamens. They are borne in terminal clusters of three or four +together. It delights to grow in a cool, moist soil, indeed it is +only when so situated that the Leather Wood can be seen in a really +thriving condition.</p> +<h4>DRIMYS.</h4> +<p>DRIMYS AROMATICA (<i>syn Tasmannia +aromatica</i>).—Tasmanian Pepper Plant. Tasmania, 1843. This +is, if we might say so, a more refined plant than D. Winteri, with +smaller and narrower leaves, and smaller flowers. The plant, too, +has altogether a faint reddish tinge, and is of upright growth. A +native of Tasmania, and called by the natives the Pepper Plant, the +fruit being used as a substitute for that condiment. Like the other +species the present plant is only hardy in warm, maritime places, +and when afforded the protection of a wall.</p> +<p>D. WINTERI (<i>syn Winter a aromatica</i>).—Winter's Bark. +South America, 1827. The fine evergreen character is the chief +attraction of this American shrub, so far at least as garden +ornamentation is concerned. With some persons even the +greenish-white flowers are held in esteem, and it cannot be denied +that a well flowered plant has its own attractions. The long, +narrow leaves are pale green above and glaucous beneath, and make +the shrub of interest, both on account of their evergreen nature +and brightness of tint. Unfortunately it is not very hardy, +requiring even in southern England a sunny wall to do it +justice.</p> +<h4>ELAEAGNUS.</h4> +<p>ELAEAGNUS ARGENTEA.—Silver Berry. North America, 1813. A +spreading shrub 8 feet or 10 feet high, with lanceolate leaves +clothed with silvery scales. The flowers are axillary and +clustered, and are succeeded by pretty, silvery-ribbed berries.</p> +<p>E. GLABRA (<i>syn E. reflexus</i>).—From Japan. This is +one of the handsomest species, forming bushes of delightful green, +leathery leaves, and with a neat and rather compact habit of +growth. It grows with great freedom when planted in light, sandy +soil, big globose bushes being the result of a few years' growth. +Being perfectly hardy it is to be recommended if only for the ample +leathery, deep green foliage. The flowers are inconspicuous. There +is a form having the leaves margined with pale yellow, and known +under the name of E. glabra variegata.</p> +<p>E. LONGIPES (<i>syn E. edulis</i> and <i>E. crisp +a</i>).—Japan, 1873. This species, is also worthy of culture, +whether for the ornamental flowers or fruit. It is a shrub 6 feet +high, bearing an abundance of spotted, oval red berries on long +footstalks. Quite hardy.</p> +<p>E. MACROPHYLLA.—Japan. This is of robust growth, with +handsome, dark green leaves, and purplish branch tips. The leaves +are thick of texture, often fully 3 inches long, glossy-green +above, and silvery beneath. The latter is all the more remarkable, +as the leaves have the habit of curling up their edges, and thus +revealing the light, silvery tint of the under sides. It thrives +well in light, sandy peat, and may be relied upon as one of the +hardiest of shrubs.</p> +<p>E. ROTUNDIFOLIA.—An interesting and perfectly hardy +species, growing about five feet high, and remarkable for the great +wealth of pretty scarlet and amber-coloured berries. The flowers +are not very showy, but this is made up by the beautiful silvery +leaves, most pronounced on the under sides, and wealth of fruit, +which hangs on long stalks like Cherries.</p> +<p>Other species of less interest are E. pungens, of which there is +a variegated variety; E. Simoni, a neat Chinese shrub; and E. +latifolia, of good habit and with large leaves. The various species +and varieties of Elaeagnus may all be cultivated in light, free +soil, and from experiments that were recently made, they have been +found of great value for planting by the seaside. They are +popularly known as the Wild Olives and Evergreen Oleasters.</p> +<h4>EMBOTHRIUM.</h4> +<p>EMBOTHRIUM COCCINEUM.—Fire Bush. South America, 1851. This +is a beautiful shrub, of tall growth, with flowers of great +interest and beauty. Except in warm and favoured situations, it is +not very hardy, and should always be grown as a wall plant. The +fiery scarlet, orange-tinted flowers, resembling somewhat those of +the Honeysuckle, are very beautiful by the first weeks of May. It +grows to about 6 feet in height in southern England, and is, when +in full flower, a shrub of unusual beauty.</p> +<h4>EPHEDRA.</h4> +<p>EPHEDRA VULGARIS (<i>syn Ephedra monastachya</i>), from Siberia, +1772, is a half-hardy shrub of trailing habit, with inconspicuous +flowers. Thriving in very poor soil, or on rocky situations, is the +only reason why it is introduced here.</p> +<h4>EPIGAEA.</h4> +<p>EPIGAEA REPENS.—Ground Laurel, or New England Mayflower. +Northern United States, 1736. This is, perhaps, in so far as +stature is concerned, hardly worthy of a place in our list, yet it +is such a pretty and useful shrub, though rarely rising more than 6 +inches from the ground, that we cannot well pass it over. For +planting beneath Pine or other trees, where it can spread about at +will, this prostrate shrub is most at home. There it enlivens the +spot with its pretty evergreen foliage, and sweet-scented, white or +pinky flowers. It is quite hardy.</p> +<h4>ERCILLA.</h4> +<p>ERCILLA SPICATA (<i>syn Bridgesia spicata</i>).—Chili, +1840. A small-growing, half-climbing shrub, with leathery, deep +green leaves, and inconspicuous flowers. Hailing from Chili, it is +not very hardy, but given the protection of a wall, or planted +against a tree-stump, it soon forms a neat mass of evergreen +foliage.</p> +<h4>ERICA.</h4> +<p>ERICA CARNEA.—South Europe, 1763. This is one of the most +beautiful and desirable of hardy Heaths, on account of the +richly-coloured flowers and early season at which they are +produced. In the typical species the flowers are pink or +flesh-coloured, and produced in January and February. It is a +dwarf, compact growing species, with bright green foliage. There is +a form with pure white flowers, named E. carnea alba, or E. +herbacea, but although distinct and beautiful, it is not of so +robust growth as the parent.</p> +<p>E. CILIARIS.—A pretty native species, with ciliate +glandular leaves, and racemes of highly-coloured, rosy flowers. +Found in Dorsetshire and Cornwall.</p> +<p>E. CINEREA,—Gray-leaved Heath. In this species, also a +native of Britain, the flowers are of a reddish-purple colour, and +borne in dense terminal racemes. There are numerous varieties, +including a white-flowered E. cinerea alba; E. cinerea +atro-purpurea, bearing dark purple flowers; E. cinerea +atro-sanguinea, dark red flowers; E. cinerea coccinea, scarlet; E. +cinerea purpurea, purple flowers; and E. cinerea rosea, with deep +rose-coloured flowers.</p> +<p>E. MEDITERRANEA.—Mediterranean Heath. Portugal, 1648. This +is a robust-growing species, of rather erect habit, and often +attaining to fully a yard in height. Flowers abundantly produced, +and of a pretty pinky hue. Of this there are several varieties, the +following being best known: E. mediterranea hibernica, found in +Ireland; E. mediterranea alba, with white flowers; E. mediterranea +nana, of very dwarf growth; and E. mediterranea rubra, with showy, +deep red flowers.</p> +<p>E. SCOPARIA and E. ERECTA are desirable species, the former +bearing greenish flowers, and the latter of decidedly upright +growth.</p> +<p>E. TETRALIX.—Cross-leaved Heath. A native species of low, +and bushy growth, with close umbels or terminal clusters of pretty +pinky flowers. The varieties of this most worthy of notice are E. +Tetralix alba, white flowered; E. Tetralix Mackiana, crimson +flowered; E. Tetralix rubra, deep red flowers; and E. +Tetralixbicolor, with parti-coloured flowers.</p> +<p>E. VAGANS..—Cornish Heath. A native species, bearing +pinky-white flowers, but there are forms with white and red +flowers, named E. vagans alba and E. vagans rubra.</p> +<p>The various kinds of Heath succeed best either in peaty soil, or +that composed for the greater part of light, sandy loam, but many +will grow and flower freely if planted in rich yellow loam. They +are very desirable plants, either for bed formation, for rockwork +ornamentation, or for planting around the shrubbery margins. +Propagation is effected either by cuttings or sub-divisions, but +seedlings of several species spring up freely under favourable +conditions.</p> +<h4>ESCALLONIA.</h4> +<p>ESCALLONIA FLORIBUNDA (<i>syn E. montevideusis</i>).—New +Grenada, 1827. This is one of the handsomest species, bearing long, +arching clusters of white flowers. It is a very desirable shrub for +wall or lattice-work covering, against which it grows rapidly, and +soon forms an object of great beauty by reason of its neat foliage +and graceful habit, as also wealth of pretty flowers.</p> +<p>E. ILLINATA.—Chili, 1830. This should also be included, it +being a handsome and pretty-flowered plant.</p> +<p>E. MACRANTHA.—Chiloe, 1848. This is a general favourite in +English gardens, where it succeeds well, but especially in maritime +parts of the country. It is of stout growth, 6 feet or more in +height, of spreading habit, and with elliptical, serrulated, bright +green leaves, and clusters of crimson-red flowers produced in +summer. For wall-covering this is an almost invaluable shrub, +although it succeeds well as a standard in all but the colder parts +of the country. Any free, open soil suits it well, but thorough +drainage must be attended to. There are several very distinct and +good varieties, such as E. macrantha sanguinea, with flowers deeper +in colour than those of the parent plant; and E. macrantha Ingrami, +a profuse-blooming and very desirable form.</p> +<p>E. PHILLIPIANA.—Valdivia, 1873. When seen as a standard +bush, and loaded with its myriads of tiny white flowers, this must +rank amongst the handsomest members of the family. It is very +hardy, and retains its foliage throughout the winter. The hybrid +forms, E. exoniensis and E. leucantha, deserve recognition, the +latter even as late as November being laden with its small spikes +of pretty white flowers, which contrast nicely with the neat, +evergreen foliage.</p> +<p>E. PTEROCLADON.—Patagonia, 1854. This is remarkable for +the curiously-winged branches, which give to the shrub a rather +peculiar and distinct appearance. The freely-produced flowers are +white or pink.</p> +<p>E. RUBRA.—Chili, 1827. This has less handsome leaves and +flowers than the above, but it is, all the same, a beautiful plant. +The flowers vary a good deal in depth of colouring, and may be seen +of all tints between pure white and red.</p> +<p>The Escallonias are all of very free growth in any light, warm, +sandy, and well-drained soil, and are readily propagated.</p> +<h4>EUCRYPHIA.</h4> +<p>EUCRYPHIA PINNATIFOLIA.—Chili, 1880. This shrub, is as yet +rare in cultivation, and is not suited for the colder or more +exposed parts of the country. It is, however, a singularly distinct +and beautiful shrub, with deep glossy-green, pinnate foliage, and +bearing large, pure white flowers, that are rendered all the more +conspicuous by the golden-yellow anthers. As an ornamental shrub it +is well worthy of cultivation. In so far as its hardihood in this +climate has to do, it may be mentioned that in various parts of +England and Ireland it has stood in the open ground unharmed for +several years back. Light, sandy, well drained peat would seem to +meet with its requirements.</p> +<h4>EUONYMUS.</h4> +<p>EUONYMUS AMERICANA.—American Spindle Tree. North America, +1686. This is a deciduous or semi-evergreen shrub, of about 6 feet +in height, found over a wide area in Canada and the United States. +It is of partially erect growth, with long and lithe branches, +covered with pleasing light green bark. Flowers appearing in June, +and succeeded by rough, warted, brilliant scarlet capsules, which +are particularly showy and attractive. It likes a shady situation, +and rich, rather damp soil.</p> +<p>E. EUROPAEUS.—West Asia, Europe (Britain), &c. An +indigenous species, rarely exceeding 6 feet in height, and rendered +very effective in autumn by reason of the pale scarlet fruit, +which, when fully ripe, and having split open, reveals the +orange-coloured arils of the seeds. It, too, delights to grow in +the shade.</p> +<p>E. FIMBRIATUS, Japan and India, and its handsome variegated +form, E. fimbriatus foliis variegatus et argenteo maculatus, are +rather too tender for cultivation in this country, even in southern +districts, and where afforded wall protection. E. verrucosus and E. +atropurpureus are also worthy of cultivation.</p> +<p>E. LATIFOLIUS.—Broad-leaved Spindle Tree. A European +species (1730), deciduous, and growing from 10 feet to sometimes +fully 20 feet in height. The leaves are bright, shining green, and +much larger than those of our native species. Flowers, +purplish-white, appearing in June; the capsules large, deep red, +and when open contrasting very effectively with the bright orange +arils in which the seeds are enveloped. It is a very distinct and +beautiful, small-growing lawn tree, and succeeding, as it does, +best in shade is an extra qualification.</p> +<h4>FABIANA.</h4> +<p>FABIANA IMBRICATA.—Chili, 1838. This is, unfortunately, +not hardy in any but the milder maritime parts of England and +Ireland. It is a charming shrub of Heather-like appearance, with +small, crowded leaves, and pure white flowers produced in May. +Planted at the base of a southern wall it does best, and where it +thrives it is certainly one of our handsomest half-hardy +shrubs.</p> +<h4>FATSIA.</h4> +<p>FATSIA JAPONICA (<i>syns Aralia japonica</i> and <i>A. +Sieboldii</i>).—Japan, 1858. This is of no particular value +as a flowering shrub, but being hardy in most districts, and having +large handsome leaves that impart to it a tropical appearance, it +is well worthy of culture. The flowers are ivory-white, and +produced in large umbels towards the end of autumn, but our early +frosts too often mar their beauty. In this country it grows about +10 feet high, and is usually what is termed "leggy" in appearance, +and thrives well in any good loamy soil if fairly dry.</p> +<h4>FENDLERA.</h4> +<p>FENDLERA RUPICOLA.—Mexico, 1888. A low-growing shrub, +peculiar to the dry rocky parts of the United States, particularly +the south-western district. It grows about a yard high, and bears a +great profusion of bluish-white flowers, that are rendered very +conspicuous by reason of the bright yellow stamens. It is the only +known species, and is nearly allied to the Saxifrages. Any fairly +good garden soil will suit it well, but it wants to be planted +where superfluous moisture is quickly carried off.</p> +<h4>FORSYTHIA.</h4> +<p>FORSYTHIA SUSPENSA (<i>syn F. Fortunei</i> and <i>F. +Sieboldii</i>).—Japan and China, 1864. A slender-growing +shrub, with variable leaves, and long, trailing shoots. The flowers +are abundantly produced, are of a beautiful golden tint, and +bell-shaped, and being of good substance last for a long time. +Either as a wall plant, or for using in some sheltered corner, and +where the branches can spread about at will, it forms a very +distinct and handsome shrub, and one that is perfectly hardy and +quite indifferent as regards the quality of soil in which it is +planted. There are several forms of this pretty shrub, but as they +do not differ to any great extent from the species, are hardly +worthy of consideration.</p> +<p>F. suspensa intermedia is a garden hybrid, 1891.</p> +<p>F. VIRIDISSIMA.—Japan, 1845. This is another desirable +species, but it is not comparable in point of beauty with the +former. It is usually of strong erect growth, with stout shoots, +wreathed with bright yellow flowers towards the end of winter. It +is a very beautiful shrub, and a valuable addition to the winter or +early spring flowering section.</p> +<h4>FOTHERGILLA.</h4> +<p>FOTHERGILLA ALNIFOLIA.—North Eastern America, 1765. This +is an ungainly habited shrub, of dwarf growth, the branches being +somewhat slender and crooked. The flowers are white, sweetly +scented, and produced in dense terminal spikes. It is perfectly +hardy.</p> +<h4>FRAXINUS.</h4> +<p>FRAXINUS ORNUS (<i>syn F. argentea, F. rotundifolia</i>, and +<i>Ornus europea</i>).—Manna Ash. South Europe, 1730. This is +a handsome tree, especially when young and vigorous, and by far the +most ornamental species in cultivation. For planting in situations +where large-growing subjects would be out of place this is a +valuable tree, while the wealth of flowers renders it particularly +interesting and effective. It rarely exceeds 30 feet in height, +with leaves not unlike those of the common Ash, and conspicuous +panicles of light, feathery, white petaliferous flowers, produced +usually in great abundance all over the tree. Perfectly hardy.</p> +<p>F. Ornus serotina alba and F. Ornus serotina violacea are +beautiful seedling forms that were raised in France, and on account +of their dwarf habit and profusion of flowers are well worthy of +attention. The flowers of the first-named variety are pure white, +the stamens having at first yellow anthers, which speedily turn to +a rich blackish-brown. The other differs but little, only in the +flowers, which are of a distinct greyish-violet hue, while the +leaves are of a darker shade of green, and the leaflets longer and +narrower.</p> +<p>F. MARIESII.—Northern China, 1880. This is hardy in most +parts of the country. The whole tree is quite glabrous except the +petioles, which are clothed with a dense pubescence. Flowers pure +white, and arranged in large dense panicles.</p> +<h4>FREMONTIA.</h4> +<p>FREMONTIA CALIFORNICA.—California, 1851. A handsome and +deciduous Californian shrub, but scarcely hardy enough for the open +air without protection. In Southern England and Ireland, however, +it does well, and all the better if planted within the influence of +the sea. The large yellow flowers are often about 2 inches across, +and produced singly along the branches, while the leaves are large, +lobed, and of an enticing shade of green. Planted against a wall, +in good dampish loam, it succeeds well.</p> +<h4>FUCHSIA.</h4> +<p>FUCHSIA MACROSTEMA GLOBOSA (<i>syn F. globosa</i>).—Chili. +This is readily recognised by the globose form assumed by the +incurved sepals, while the flowers are smaller and less showy than +those of F. Riccartoni. Hardihood about similar to the +following.</p> +<p>F. RICCARTONI.—This seedling from F. m. globosa is one of +the two hardiest varieties, but even this plant, except in warm, +maritime districts, is by no means satisfactory. Where it does well +it is a shrub of great beauty, and blooms profusely. This species +has red, straight sepals, and a purple corolla. In favoured +districts it may frequently be seen as much as 12 feet high, and is +then during the flowering period an object of great beauty. It +originated at Riccarton, near Edinburgh, about 1830.</p> +<h4>GARRYA.</h4> +<p>GARRYA ELLIPTICA.—California, 1818. This is a handsome +shrub, with dark green coreaceous leaves, resembling very nearly +those of the Evergreen Oak. The long, tassellated catkins, of a +peculiar yellowish-green colour, render the plant one of much +interest and beauty. As a wall plant it thrives well, the slight +protection thus afforded favouring the growth and expansion of the +catkins. For planting in the shrubbery it is also well suited, and +where it oft-times attains to a height of 6 feet, and is bushy in +proportion. It is well to bear in mind that there are male and +female plants of the Garrya, and that the former is the more +ornamental. Good rich, well-drained loam will suit this shrub +well.</p> +<h4>GAULTHERIA.</h4> +<p>GAULTHERIA NUMMULARIOIDES (<i>syn G. nummulariae</i> and <i>G. +repens</i>). —Himalayas. This is a neat Alpine species, with +small and very dark green leaves. It likes a shady situation and +vegetable soil. For planting on the rockwork, amongst tree roots, +or beneath the shade of trees, the Gaultherias are particularly +suitable. Light, but rich vegetable soil suits them best.</p> +<p>G. PROCUMBENS.—Canada Tea, or Creeping Winter-green. North +America, 1762. This is of much smaller growth than the following, +rarely rising to a greater height than about half a foot, with +lanceolate, serrated leaves, and pendulous axillary clusters of +white flowers.</p> +<p>G. SHALLON.—North-west America, 1826. Growing in +favourable situations to fully a yard in height, this distinct +evergreen shrub, which is fairly common in cultivation, is +particularly valuable, as it thrives well under the shade and drip +of trees. It is a rambling plant, with ovate-cordate, almost +sessile leaves, and bears tiny white flowers that are succeeded by +purplish fruit. G. Shallon acutifolia has more sharply pointed +leaves than those of the species.</p> +<h4>GENISTA.</h4> +<p>GENISTA AETNENSIS (<i>syn Spartium aetnensis</i>).—Etna +Broom. Sicily and Sardinia, 1816. This is a large-growing species +of elegant growth, and remarkable for the abundance of yellow +flowers with which it is literally covered in August. Than this +South-European Pea-flower, perhaps not another member of the family +is more worthy of culture, the neat, elegant habit of growth and +profusion of flowers rendering it a plant of particular interest +and beauty. It is quite hardy, thrives in any light soil if well +drained, and is readily propagated from seed, which it ripens in +abundance.</p> +<p>G. ANXANTICA.—Naples, 1818. This is a nearly allied +species to our native G. tinctoria, and is of dwarf growth with a +rich abundance of golden yellow flowers that are produced towards +the end of summer.</p> +<p>G. CINEREA (<i>syn G. ramosissima</i>), from South Europe, is a +very beautiful and desirable species, a yard high, and bearing in +July slender twigs of the brightest yellow flowers.</p> +<p>G. EPHEDROIDES.—Corsica and Sardinia, 1832. With small and +abundantly-produced flowers, this resembles Ephedra, hence its +name.</p> +<p>G. GERMANICA.—Germany, 1773. This is a handsome rock +garden shrub, of fully 18 inches in height, with arching stems and +a plentiful supply of bright flowers during the summer and autumn +months.</p> +<p>G. HISPANICA.—South-western Europe, 1759. This species +resembles our common Broom, but the branches are not angular. The +large, yellow, fragrant flowers appear in July. There is a charming +double-flowered variety named G. hispanica flore-pleno.</p> +<p>G. LUSITANICA.—Portugal, 1771. This is remarkable for its +opposite branches, is of spiny growth, and one of the earliest to +appear in flower.</p> +<p>G. MONOSPERMA.—South Europe, 1690. This has white flowers, +and is of value as a seaside shrub, and grows well in almost pure +sand. A native of the Mediterranean coast.</p> +<p>G. PILOSA.—Greenweed. Europe (Britain). This is a dense +prostrate native species, with bright yellow blossoms produced +freely during May and June. A delightful rock shrub, and one that +will succeed well almost in pure gravel.</p> +<p>G. PROSTRATA.—Burgundy and Alps of Jura, 1775. A +small-growing species suitable for rock gardening, and of spreading +bushy growth. Flowers small, but ornamental, and produced in May +and June.</p> +<p>G. RADIATA (<i>syn Spartium radiatum</i>).—South Europe, +1758. This is a slender-growing shrub, about 18 inches high, with +narrow leaflets, and terminal heads of yellow flowers produced in +summer.</p> +<p>G. SAGITTALIS.—South Europe, 1750. With its peculiarly +winged and jointed stems, which are of a deep green colour, this is +one of the most distinct forms. The flowers are few but pretty, and +with the dwarf habit render the plant an excellent subject for +rockwork.</p> +<p>G. TINCTORIA.—Dyers' Greenweed. Europe (Britain), North +and West Asia. This is a spineless species, and bears a profusion +of yellow flowers from July onwards. The double-flowering variety, +G. tinctoria flore-pleno, is, in so far as ornamental qualities are +concerned, superior to the parent form.</p> +<p>G. TINCTORIA ELATIOR (<i>syn G. elatior</i>) grows to 12 feet in +height, is of free, spreading growth, and a very handsome plant. +The flowers, which are individually small and yellow, are so +thickly produced that the shrub, in late summer, has the appearance +of a sheet of gold.</p> +<p>G. TRIANGULARIS (<i>syn G. triquetra</i>).—South Europe, +1815. This is a decidedly good garden plant, and of neat, trailing +habit. The stems are three sided, and the flowers golden yellow and +plentifully produced. A native of South Europe, and perfectly hardy +in almost any position.</p> +<p>The above include most of the hardy Genistas, though G. capitata +and G. daurica, both very ornamental kinds, might be added to the +list. They are all very hardy, free-flowering shrubs, of simple +culture, and succeeding well in any light and rather dry soil.</p> +<h4>GLEDITSCHIA.</h4> +<p>GLEDITSCHIA TRIACANTHOS.—Honey Locust. United States, +1700. As an ornamental hardy tree this is well worthy the attention +of planters, the pinnate and bipinnate foliage being particularly +elegant, while the flowers, though individually small, are borne in +such quantities of fascicled racemes as to attract notice. The stem +and branches are armed with formidable prickles, but there is a +form in which the prickles are absent. A native of North America, +and readily cultivated in any soil of even fair quality. For town +planting it is a valuable tree. There is a good weeping variety +named G. triacanthos pendula.</p> +<p>G. SINENSIS (<i>syn G. horrida</i>).—China, 1774. This +nearly resembles the latter, and is occasionally to be met with in +cultivation in this country.</p> +<h4>GORDONIA.</h4> +<p>GORDONIA LASIANTHUS.—Loblolly Bay. North America, 1739. A +shrub of great beauty, but one that, unfortunately, is rarely to be +seen outside the walls of a botanic garden. It is of Camellia-like +growth, with large, sweetly fragrant flowers and a good habit of +growth.</p> +<p>G. PUBESCENS.—North America, 1774. This is of smaller +growth than the latter, rarely exceeding about 6 feet high, with +large white flowers that are rendered all the more conspicuous by +the tuft of golden stamens. Both species are somewhat tender, +although hailing from the coast, swampy grounds of the southern +States of North America. Planted in favoured sites, they usually +grow freely in light, peaty soil, or that containing a large +admixture of decayed leaf soil.</p> +<h4>GRABOWSKIA.</h4> +<p>GRABOWSKIA BOERHAAVIAEFOLIA.—Peru, 1780. This is +occasionally to be seen in sheltered and favoured gardens, but it +is not to be relied upon in other than southern and seaside +districts. The plant is of no particular interest to the +cultivator, the outline being ungainly, while the pale blue flowers +are both dull and uninteresting. It belongs to the Solanum family, +and is only worth cultivating as a curiosity. Light, warm soil and +a sunny position are necessities in the cultivation of this +shrub.</p> +<h4>GRISELINIA.</h4> +<p>GRISELINIA LITTORALIS.—New Zealand, 1872. This forms a +compact bush of moderate size, and is fairly hardy. The leaves are +of a light, pleasing green shade, coriaceous, and glossy, and +remain on the plant during winter. It is an excellent shrub for the +seaside, and, moreover, will succeed well in stiff soils where many +other plants would refuse to grow.</p> +<h4>GYMNOCLADUS.</h4> +<p>GYMNOCLADUS CANADENSIS.—Kentucky Coffee Tree. Canada, +1748. When in full leafage this is a distinct and beautiful tree, +the foliage hanging in well-rounded masses, and presenting a pretty +effect by reason of the loose and tufted appearance of the masses +of finely-divided leaves. Leaves often 3 feet long, bipinnate, and +composed of numerous bluish-green leaflets. Flowers white, borne in +loose spikes in the beginning of summer, and succeeded by flat, +somewhat curved brown pods. It prefers a rich, strong soil or +alluvial deposit.</p> +<p>G. CHINENSIS.—Soap Tree. China, 1889. Readily +distinguished from the American species by its much smaller and +more numerous leaflets, and thicker fruit pod. It is not very hardy +in this country unless in the milder sea-side districts. The leaves +are used by the Chinese women to wash their hair, hence the popular +name of Soap Tree.</p> +<h4>HALESIA.</h4> +<p>HALESIA DIPTERA (<i>syn H. reticulata</i>).—North America, +1758. This is not so suitable for our climate as H. tetraptera, +though in southern parts of the country it forms a neat, healthy +bush, and flowers freely. It is distinguished, as the name +indicates, by having two wings to the seed vessel, H. tetraptera +having four.</p> +<p>H. HISPIDA (<i>syn Pterostyrax hispidum</i>).—Japan, 1875. +This is a shrub of perfect hardihood, free growth, and very +floriferous. The flowers, which are pure white, and in long +racemes, resemble much those of the Snowdrop Tree. Leaves broad and +slightly dentated. It is a handsome shrub, of free growth, in +light, sandy loam, and quite hardy even when fully exposed.</p> +<p>H. PARVIFLORA has smaller flowers than those of our +commonly-cultivated plant.</p> +<p>H. TETRAPTERA.—Snowdrop Tree. North America, 1756. This is +a very ornamental tall-growing shrub, of somewhat loose growth, and +bearing flowers which resemble, both in size and appearance, those +of our common Snowdrop. It is one of the most ornamental of all the +small-growing American trees, and richly deserves a place in every +collection, on account of the profusion with which the flowers are +produced in April and May. They are snow-white, drooping, and +produced in lateral fascicles of eight or ten together. It is a +native of river banks in North Carolina, and is well suited for +cultivation in this country. Light, peaty soil will grow it to +perfection.</p> +<h4>HALIMODENDRON.</h4> +<p>HALIMODENDRON ARGENTEUM (<i>syn Robinia +Halimodendron</i>).—Salt tree. A native of Asiatic Russia +(1779), having silvery foliage, and pink or purplish-pink flowers, +axillary or fascicled. It is a neat and pretty shrub, that is +rendered valuable as succeeding well in maritime districts. Quite +hardy and of free growth in sandy soil.</p> +<h4>HAMAMELIS.</h4> +<p>HAMAMELIS JAPONICA.—The Japanese Witch Hazel. Japan, 1862. +This is a small species with lemon-yellow flowers. H. japonica +arborea is a taller growing variety, with primrose-yellow petals, +and a deep claret calyx. The flowers are borne in clusters in early +spring. Rarely in this country do we find this species of greater +height than about 8 feet, but it is of bushy growth, though +somewhat straggling in appearance. As early as the beginning of +January this Witch Hazel may be found in bloom, the bare branches +being studded here and there with the curious-shaped flowers, these +having bright yellow, twisted petals and reddish calyces. H.j. +Zuccarinianais a very desirable free-flowering variety, with pale +yellow petals and a greenish-brown calyx.</p> +<p>H. VIRGINICA.—Virginian Witch Hazel. North America, 1736. +This has smaller flowers than H.j. arborea, and they are +plentifully produced in autumn or early winter. In this country it +assumes the shape of an open bush of about 6 feet in height, but is +usually of untidy appearance from the branches being irregularly +disposed.</p> +<p>They all delight in cool, rather moist soil, and are of value +for their early-flowering nature.</p> +<h4>HEDYSARUM.</h4> +<p>HEDYSARUM MULTIJUGUM.—South Mongolia. Hardly ten years +have elapsed since this pretty shrub was introduced into England, +so that at present it is rather rare in our gardens. It is a +decided acquisition, if only for the production of flowers at a +time when these are scarce. Usually the flowering time is in +August, but frequently in the first weeks of October the pretty +flowers are still full of beauty. It is of bushy habit, from 4 feet +to 5 feet high, with oblong leaflets, in number from twenty to +thirty-five, which are Pea-green above and downy on the under +sides. Flowers bright red, and produced in axillary racemes. It is +perfectly hardy, and grows freely in porous decomposed +leaf-soil.</p> +<h4>HELIANTHEMUM.</h4> +<p>HELIANTHEMUM HALIMIFOLIUM.—Spain, 1656. This species is of +erect habit, 3 feet or 4 feet high, and with leaves reminding one +of those of the Sea Purslane. It is an evergreen, and has large +bright yellow flowers, slightly spotted at the base of the +petals.</p> +<p>H. LAEVIPES (<i>syn Cistus laevipes</i>).—South-western +Europe. A dwarf shrub, with Heath-like leaves, and yellow flowers +that are produced in great abundance.</p> +<p>H. LASIANTHUM (<i>syns H. formosum</i> and <i>Cistus +formosus</i>).—Spain and Portugal, 1780. This is a beautiful +species, but not hardy unless in the South and West. It has large, +bright yellow flowers, with a deep reddish-purple blotch at the +base of each petal.</p> +<p>H. LAVENDULAEFOLIUM has lavender-like leaves, with the under +surface hoary, and yellow flowers. A native of the Mediterranean +regions.</p> +<p>H. LIBONATES.—This species bears dark green Rosemary-like +leaves, and yellow flowers that are produced very abundantly. South +Europe.</p> +<p>H. PILOSUM.—South of France, 1831. This bears white +flowers that are of good substance, and about an inch across.</p> +<p>H. POLIFOLIUM (<i>syn H. pulverulentum</i>).—Europe +(Britain), and North Africa. This is a neat-growing shrub, of very +dwarf growth, with hairy leaves and yellow flowers; and H. +polifolium roseum, has pretty rosy-red flowers.</p> +<p>H. UMBELLATUM.—South Europe, 1731. A neat, small-growing +species, with white flowers and glossy-green leaves covered with a +rusty-white tomentum beneath.</p> +<p>H. VULGARE.—Common Rock Rose. Europe (Britain), North +Africa, and West Asia. A widely distributed native plant, of dwarf +growth, with linear-oblong, hairy leaves, and usually yellow +flowers. H. vulgare nummularium differs in having the leaves green +and sub-orbicular, with yellow flowers. H. vulgare barbaturn is of +erect habit, with silky, hairy, oval leaves. H. vulgare mutabile +bears pale rose flowers, marked with yellow at the base. H. vulgare +grandiflorum is remarkable for the large, bright yellow flowers, +and is one of the most beautiful and worthy varieties. H. vulgare +ovalifolium (<i>syn H. serpyllifolium</i>) bears yellow flowers and +ovate leaves, with the margins revolute. H. vulgare hyssopifolium +bears reddish flowers, but the colouring varies considerably, and +saffron is not uncommon.</p> +<p>The Rockroses are very valuable plants, in that they will +succeed on poor, gravelly banks where few other plants could eke +out an existence. They cannot withstand stiff soil, nor that at all +inclined to be damp, their favourite resorts being exposed, rocky +ground, and dry, gravelly banks. Being readily increased from +cuttings, which take root well under a hand glass or in a cool +house, it is advisable, at least with the more tender forms, to +have at hand a stock, so that blanks in the shrubbery may be filled +up.</p> +<h4>HIBISCUS.</h4> +<p>HIBISCUS SYRIACUS (<i>syn Althaea frutex</i>).—Syrian +Mallow. Syria, 1596. An old occupant of our gardens, and one that +cannot be too freely cultivated. When favourably situated, it often +reaches 6 feet in height, with three-lobed, neatly-toothed leaves, +and with large, showy blossoms that are borne towards the end of +summer. The typical species has purplish flowers, with a crimson +spot at the base of each petal, but others, varying in colour from +snow-white to purple and blue, are common in cultivation. H. +syriacus coelestis bears bright blue flowers, while H. syriacus +variegatus has beautifully variegated foliage. Of the +double-flowered forms, there are several beautiful and worthy +plants, the following list containing some of the best varieties of +this popular shrub:—</p> +<dl> +<dt>H. syriacus albo-pleno.</dt> +<dd>" amaranthus.</dd> +<dd>" amplissima.</dd> +<dd>" ardens.</dd> +<dd>" caerulea plena.</dd> +<dd>" carnea plena.</dd> +<dd>" De la Veuve.</dd> +<dd>" elegantissimum.</dd> +<dd>" fastuosa.</dd> +<dd>" Lady Stanley.</dd> +<dd>" Leopoldii.</dd> +<dd>" lilacina plena.</dd> +<dd>" paeoniaeflora.</dd> +<dd>" puniceus +plenus.</dd> +<dd>" rosea plena.</dd> +<dd>" spectabilis +plena.</dd> +<dd>" violacea.</dd></dl> +<h4>HIPPOPHAE.</h4> +<p>HIPPOPHAE RHAMNOIDES.—Sea Buckthorn, or Sallow Thorn. +Though generally considered as a sea-side shrub, the Sea Buckthorn +is by no means exclusively so, thriving well, and attaining to +large dimensions, in many inland situations. The flowers are not at +all conspicuous, but this is amply compensated for by the beautiful +silvery-like leaves and wealth of fruit borne by the shrub. In not +a few instances, for fully a foot in length, the branches are +smothered with crowded clusters of bright orange berries, and which +render the shrub during November and December both distinct and +effective. It does best in sandy soil, and is readily increased +from suckers, which are usually plentifully produced by old plants. +For sea-side planting it is one of our most valuable shrubs, +succeeding, as it does, well down even to high water mark, and +where the foliage is lashed with the salt spray.</p> +<h4>HOLBOELLIA.</h4> +<p>HOLBOELLIA LATIFOLIA (<i>syn Stauntonia +latifolia</i>).—Himalayas, 1840. An evergreen climbing shrub +that is more often found under glass than out of doors. In the +South of England, however, it is quite hardy against a sunny wall. +It grows 12 feet high, with shining green leathery leaves, and +fragrant purplish-green flowers. H. latifolia angustifolia has +decidedly narrower leaves than the species, but is in no other way +different.</p> +<h4>HYDRANGEA.</h4> +<p>HYDRANGEA ARBORESCENS.—North America, 1736. This is a +plant of large growth, but the flowers are greenish-white, and by +no means conspicuous.</p> +<p>H. HORTENSIS (<i>syn Hortensia opuloides</i>).—China, +1790. This is an old-fashioned garden shrub that is only hardy in +the south and west of these islands and in the vicinity of the sea. +In some of the forms nearly all the flowers are sterile, the +calyx-lobes being greatly expanded, and in others the outer flowers +only are sterile. According to the nature of the soil the flowers +vary much in colour, some being pure white, others pink, and others +of varying shades of blue. There are some very beautiful and +distinct varieties, such as H. hortensis japonica; H. hortensis +Otaksa, with large panicles of sterile blue flowers; H. hortensis +rosea-alba, with large rosy flowers; H. hortensis Thomas Hogg, a +very free-flowering and welcome form; H. hortensis mandschurica, +and H. hortensis stellata flore-pleno, with partially double +flowers, are worthy of attention.</p> +<p>H. PANICULATA.—Japan, 1874. This is one of the most +distinct species, in which the flower-heads are elongated, not +flat, as in most other species, and from which the finest form in +cultivation has been obtained. This is H. paniculata grandiflora, +in which the flowers are sterile and pure white, forming large +panicles often a foot in length. It is a magnificent variety, and, +being perfectly hardy, should be extensively planted for ornament. +The flowers are produced in late summer, but remain in good form +for fully two months, dying off a rich reddish hue.</p> +<p>H. QUERCIFOLIA.—Oak-leaved Hydrangea. Florida, 1803. This +species has neatly lobed leaves, and terminal panicles of +pinky-white, but partially barren, flowers.</p> +<p>H. SCANDENS.—Climbing Hydrangea. Japan, 1879. This is not +very hardy, but with the protection of a sunny wall it grows +freely.</p> +<p>The Hydrangeas require a rich, loamy soil, and, unless in +maritime districts, a warm and sheltered situation. They are +readily propagated by means of cuttings.</p> +<h4>HYMENANTHERA.</h4> +<p>HYMENANTHERA CRASSIFOLIA.—A curious New Zealand shrub with +rigid ashy-coloured branches, and small leathery leaves. The +flowers are violet-like in colour, but by no means conspicuous. The +small white berries which succeed the flowers are, in autumn, +particularly attractive, and very ornamental. It is perfectly hardy +and of free growth in light peaty earth.</p> +<h4>HYPERICUM.</h4> +<p>HYPERICUM ANDROSAEMUM.—Tutsan, or Sweet Amber. Europe +(Britain). A pretty native species, growing about 2 feet high, with +ovate leaves having glandular dots and terminal clustered cymes of +yellow flowers.</p> +<p>H. AUREUM.—South Carolina and Georgia, 1882. This soon +forms a neat and handsome plant. The flowers are unusually large, +and remarkable for the tufts of golden-yellow stamens with which +they are furnished.</p> +<p>H. CALYCINUM.—Aaron's Beard, or Rose of Sharon. South-east +Europe. This is a well-known native species of shrubby growth, +bearing large yellow flowers from 3 inches to 4 inches in diameter. +It is a prostrate plant, with coriaceous glossy leaves with small +pellucid dots, and of great value for planting in the shade.</p> +<p>H. ELATUM is a spreading species from North America (1762), +growing to fully 4 feet in height, and bearing terminal corymbs of +large, bright yellow flowers in July and August. Leaves rather +large, oblong-ovate, and revolute. On account of its spreading +rapidly from the root, this species requires to be planted where it +will have plenty of room.</p> +<p>H. HIRCINUM.—Goat-scented St. John's Wort. Mediterranean +region, 1640. A small-growing and slender species, with +oblong-lanceolate leaves 2 inches long, and producing small yellow +flowers in terminal heads. There is a smaller growing form known as +H. hircinum minus. The plant emits a peculiar goat-like odour.</p> +<p>H. MOSERIANUM is a beautiful hybrid form with red anthers.</p> +<p>H. OBLONGIFOLIUM (<i>syns H. Hookerianum</i> and <i>H. +nepalensis</i>).—Nepaul, 1823. An evergreen species, about 4 +feet high, with oblong, pellucid, dotted leaves, and deep golden, +somewhat waxy flowers at the end of summer.</p> +<p>H. PROLIFICUM.—North America, 1758. This is a much +branched twiggy shrub, about 4 feet high, with small, +linear-lanceolate leaves, thickly studded with pellucid dots. +Flowers not very large, five-petalled, and of a pleasing bright +yellow colour. The allied if not identical H. Kalmiana is worthy of +being included in a selection of these plants.</p> +<p>H. URALUM.—Nepaul, 1823. A neat but fragile species that +attains to about a yard in height. Leaves rather small, elliptic, +almost stalkless, and perforated with transparent dots. Flowers +small and of a bright golden yellow.</p> +<p>H. fasciculatum, H. pyrimidatum, and H. patulum are all worthy +of attention, where a good representative collection is of +importance. The Hypericums succeed best when planted in a rather +sandy and not too dry loam, and they are readily increased either +from divisions or by means of cuttings.</p> +<h4>IDESIA.</h4> +<p>IDESIA POLYCARPA (<i>syns Flacourtica japonica</i> and +<i>Polycarpa Maximowiczii</i>).—A Japanese tree of small +growth, and only introduced to this country in 1866. It is a +handsome, hardy species, bearing large, bright-green leaves with +conspicuous crimson footstalks, often 4 inches across, and of a +glaucous tint on the under sides. The deliciously fragrant flowers +are greenish-white or yellowish-green, and produced in graceful +drooping racemes. In southern England it does well, and, being a +tree of unusual beauty of both leaves and flowers, is well worthy +of attention. Rich loam, not too stiff, will grow the Idesia +well.</p> +<h4>ILEX.</h4> +<p>ILEX AQUIFOLIUM.—Common Holly. Europe (Britain) and West +Asia. Though the Hollies are not usually reckoned ornamental for +the sake of their flowers, their berries are highly so. Some of +them are nevertheless deliciously fragrant when in bloom. The +leaves of this, our native species, in their typical form are +oblong-ovate, wavy, and deeply spiny-toothed. The tree flowers in +May and June, while the clusters of bright red berries ripen in +autumn, persist all the winter, and sometimes even hang on tree +till a second crop is matured, provided they are not devoured by +birds during severe weather. The varieties are very numerous, and +differ chiefly in the form and toothing of the leaves, which are +variegated in many cases, their size and form, and in the colour of +the berries in a few instances.</p> +<p>I. Aquifolium albo-marginata has ovate, nearly flat, +spiny-serrate leaves, with a narrow silvery margin, and fruits +freely. I. Aquifolium fructu albo has white berries; in I. +Aquifolium fructu luteo they are yellow and very abundantly +produced; and in I. Aquifolium fructu nigro they are black. I. +Aquifolium handsworthensis has elliptic-oblong spiny leaves, with a +creamy-white margin and marbled with gray. Grafted trees bear +berries in great profusion from the time they are only a foot high, +and are highly ornamental. I. Aquifolium Hodginsii has large, +broadly oblong-ovate, slightly spiny leaves, and large crimson-red +berries that ripen late in autumn. I. Aquifolium Hodginsii aurea is +a sub-variety with a broad golden margin to the leaves, and the +disc splashed with gray. Beautiful and distinct is I. Aquifolium +Lawsoniana, with ovate, flat, almost spineless leaves, heavily and +irregularly blotched with yellow in the centre. The berries are of +a brilliant red. The variety differs from Milkmaid in having flat, +nearly entire leaves. I. Aquifolium pendula has a wide, rounded, +drooping head, but otherwise does not differ from the type. Many +others bear berries, but the above are all very distinct forms.</p> +<p>I. OPACA.—American Holly. United States, 1744. The leaves +of this species are oblong or oval, small, spiny-serrate, and of a +dark opaque green. The berries, which ripen in autumn, are small, +bright red, and very liable to be eaten by birds. In America this +Holly is put to precisely the same purposes as the common Holly is +in Europe. It is perfectly hardy here.</p> +<h4>ILLICIUM.</h4> +<p>ILLICIUM FLORIDANUM, from Florida (1771), is a beautiful but +uncommon shrub, probably on account of its being tender and +susceptible to injury by frost, unless in the warmer and more +favoured parts of the country. The fragrant flowers are of a +purplish-rose, while the foliage is neat and of a pleasing +green.</p> +<p>I. ANISATUM (<i>syn I. religiosum</i>), from China and Japan +(1842), is too tender for outdoor culture in this country.</p> +<h4>INDIGOFERA.</h4> +<p>INIDGOFERA GERARDIANA (<i>syns I. floribunda</i> and <i>I. +Dosua</i>).—India, 1842. This forms a compact dwarf bush in +the open, but is still better suited for covering a wall, the +growth and floriferousness being then much increased. The foliage +is neat and Pea-green, while the bright pink Pea-like flowers are +produced in long racemes. It is a pretty bush, and grows freely +enough in any good garden soil, but very fine flowering specimens +may be seen in light, sandy soil of a peaty nature. There is a +white flowered variety named I. Gerardiana alba.</p> +<h4>ITEA.</h4> +<p>ITEA VIRGINICA.—North America, 1744. This is a neat, +deciduous shrub of 3 feet or 4 feet in height. The ovate-lanceolate +leaves are of a light greyish-green, and the small white flowers +are produced in dense racemes or spikes. Planted in a somewhat +shady place, and in rather cool, damp soil, this little shrub does +well and flowers profusely.</p> +<h4>JAMESIA.</h4> +<p>JAMESIA AMERICANA.—Rocky Mountains and Colorado, 1865. +Amongst early spring-flowering shrubs this pretty but neglected +plant is one of the best, of perfect hardihood, for it stands the +vigour of our winters with impunity, and of dense thick growth; it +is suitable for using in a variety of ways, as well as for purely +ornamental purposes. The leaves are oval and neatly dentated, and +the flowers individually of large size, pure white, and produced in +terminal bunches. Cool soil and a shady situation would seem to +suit the plant admirably, but for screen purposes in the rock +garden or border it is invaluable on account of the strong and +dense twigs.</p> +<h4>JASMINUM.</h4> +<p>JASMINUM FRUTICANS.—South Europe, 1570. An evergreen +species, well adapted, from its rather stiff and upright growth, +for planting alone. It has trifoliolate leaves and showy yellow +flowers.</p> +<p>J. HUMILE.—India, 1656. A hardy species of dwarf growth, +and bearing beautiful golden flowers produced in summer.</p> +<p>J. NUDIFLORUM.—Naked Jasmine. China, 1844. A showy and +well-known species, from China, with numerous, usually solitary +yellow flowers, ternate leaves, and flexible branches. The variety +J. nudiflorum aureo-variegatum has golden-variegated leaves.</p> +<p>J. OFFICINALE.—Northern India to Persia, 1548. The +white-flowered Jasmine of our gardens is a very beautiful and +desirable clambering shrub, either for wall covering, for planting +by tree stumps, rooteries, or rockeries, or for screening and +draping the pergola or garden latticework. From its great +hardihood, vigour of growth, and beauty of flowers, it is certainly +one of the most deservedly popular of wall shrubs. The branches are +deep green, angular, and flexible, the leaves pinnate, and the +flowers pure-white and sweetly-scented. The variety J. officinale +affine has flowers that are individually larger than those of the +species; J. officinale aurea has badly variegated leaves; J. +officinale grandiflorum and J. officinale grandiflorum majus, are +also desirable kinds.</p> +<p>J. PUBIGERUM GLABRUM (<i>syn J. Wallichianum</i>), from +North-west India, is not well-known, being tender in most parts of +the country.</p> +<p>J. REVOLUTUM.—India, 1812. This has persistent dark, +glossy-green leaves, and fragrant, bright yellow flowers, produced +in large, terminal clusters. From India, but perfectly hardy as a +wall plant, and for which purpose, with its bright evergreen +leaves, it is well suited.</p> +<p>As regards soil, the Jasmines are very accommodating, and are +propagated by layers or cuttings.</p> +<h4>KADSURA.</h4> +<p>KADSURA JAPONICA.—Japan, 1846. This is a small-growing +shrub, with lanceolate and pointed leaves, that are remotely +dentated. The flowers are not very showy, being of a +yellowish-white colour and about an inch across. They are produced +both terminal and axillary, and in fair abundance. The scarlet +fruits are arranged in clusters, and when fully ripe are both showy +and interesting. Generally speaking this shrub suffers from severe +frost, but as only the branch tips are injured, it shoots freely +from the stock. It produces its flowers in the autumn. There is a +variety with variegated leaves.</p> +<h4>KALMIA.</h4> +<p>KALMIA ANGUSTIFOLIA.—Sheep Laurel. Canada, 1736. This is +at once distinguished from K. latifolia by its much smaller and +narrower leaves and smaller flowers, which latter are, however, of +brighter tint and more plentifully produced. It rarely exceeds 2 +feet in height. Of this there are two very distinct forms, that +named K. angustifolia pumila, being of neat and dense small growth; +and K. angustifolia rubra, in which the flowers are of an unusually +deep red.</p> +<p>K. GLAUCA.—Canada and Sitcha, 1767. This, which has +lilac-purple flowers, produced in early spring, is not a very +desirable species, being rather straggling of growth and with few +flowers.</p> +<p>K. HIRSUTA.—Hairy-leaved Kalmia. South-east Virginia to +Florida, 1786. This is at once distinguished by the rather rough +and hairy foliage and few rosy-tinted flowers. It is of dwarf, neat +growth.</p> +<p>K. LATIFOLIA.—Calico Bush, or Mountain Laurel. +Alleghanies, Canada, and Western Florida, 1734. A favourite shrub +in every garden where the conditions of soil will allow of its +being successfully cultivated. In peaty soil, or light, friable +loam and leaf soil, it forms a dense, round-headed bush, often 8 +feet in height, and nearly as much through, with pleasing green +leaves, and dense clusters of beautiful pink, wax-like flowers. The +flowering period commences in May, and usually extends to the end +of July. This is a choice shrub of great hardihood, and one of the +handsomest flowering in cultivation. There is a still more +beautiful form named K. latifolia major splendens, and one with +small Myrtle-like foliage named K. latifolia myrtifolia.</p> +<p>The members of this handsome family are, as a rule, partial to +cool, damp soil, peat of a light, sandy nature being preferred. +They thrive well where Azaleas and Rhododendrons will succeed. In +bold masses they have a fine effect, but a well developed standard +specimen of the commonly cultivated species is highly +ornamental.</p> +<h4>KERRIA.</h4> +<p>KERRIA JAPONICA (<i>syn Corchorus japonicus</i>).—Japan, +1700. A Japanese shrub, the double-flowered variety of which, K. +japonica flore-pleno, is one of our commonest wall plants. The +orange-yellow flowers, produced in great rosettes, are highly +ornamental, and have earned for the shrub a well-known name. It +succeeds well almost anywhere, and, though usually seen as a wall +plant, is perfectly hardy, and forms a neat shrub for the open +border. There is a form in which the leaves are variegated, and +known under the name of K. japonica variegata.</p> +<h4>KOELREUTERIA.</h4> +<p>KOELREUTERIA PANICULATA.—Northern China, 1763. Whether for +its foliage or flowers, this small-growing tree is worthy of a +place. Though of rather irregular growth, the beautiful foliage and +large panicles of yellowish flowers, which stand well above the +leaves, make the shrub (for it does not in this country attain to +tree height), one of particular interest, and a valuable aid in +ornamental planting. In a sheltered corner, and planted in rich +soil, it grows and flowers freely.</p> +<h4>LABURNUM.</h4> +<p>LABURNUM ADAMI (<i>syn Cytisus Adami</i>).—A graft hybrid +form between the common Laburnum and Cytisus purpureus, the result +being flowers of the Laburnum, the true Cytisus purpureus, and the +graft hybrid between the two. It was raised by Jean Louis Adam in +1825. It is a curious and distinct tree, worthy of culture if only +for the production of three distinct kinds of flowers on the same +plant.</p> +<p>L. ALPINUM (<i>syn Cytisus alpinus</i>).—Scotch Laburnum. +Europe, 1596. This very closely resembles the common Laburnum, but +it is of larger growth, and flowers later in the season. The +flowers, too, though in longer racemes, are usually less +plentifully produced. It grows 30 feet high. There is a weeping +form, L. alpinum pendulum, and another with fragrant flowers, named +L. alpinum fragrans, as also a third, with very long racemes of +flowers, named L. alpinum Alschingeri.</p> +<p>L. CARAMANICUM.—Asia Minor, 1879. A bushy shrub of +vigorous habit, with trifoliolate and petiolate leaves of a pale +green colour, thick and tough, and brightly polished on the upper +surface. Flowers bright yellow, the calyx being helmet-shaped and +rusty-red. It is a beautiful but uncommon shrub, and succeeds very +well in chalky or calcareous soil. Flowers in July.</p> +<p>L. VULGARE (<i>syn Cytisus Laburnum</i>).—Common Laburnum. +Southern France to Hungary, 1596. This is one of our commonest +garden and park trees, and at the same time one of the most +beautiful and floriferous. The large, pendulous racemes of bright +yellow flowers are, when at their best in May, surpassed neither in +quantity nor beauty by those of any other hardy tree. There are +several varieties of this Laburnum—a few good, but many +worthless, at least from a garden point of view. L. vulgare +Parkesii is a seedling form, bearing large racemes of deep-coloured +flowers, often 14 inches long; L. vulgare Watereri was raised in +the Knap Hill Nursery, Surrey, and is one of the most distinct and +beautiful of the many forms into which the Laburnum has been +sub-divided. The flower racemes are very long and richly coloured. +L. vulgare quercifolium and L. vulgare sessilifolium are fairly +well described by their names; L. vulgare fragans differs only in +having sweetly-scented flowers; L. vulgare involutum has +curiously-curled leaves; while L. vulgare aureum, where it does +well, is a beautiful and distinct form.</p> +<h4>LARDIZABALA.</h4> +<p>LARDIZABALA BITERNATA.—Chili, 1848. Requires wall +protection, there being few situations in which it will succeed +when planted in the open. It is a tall, climbing shrub, with dark +green persistent leaves, and bearing purplish flowers in drooping +racemes in mid-winter. Planted in rather dry soil, at the base of a +sunny wall, this shrub forms a by no means unattractive covering, +the twice ternate, glossy leaves being fresh and beautiful the +winter through.</p> +<h4>LAPAGERIA.</h4> +<p>LAPAGERIA ROSEA.—Chili, 1847. This is, unfortunately, not +hardy, unless in favoured maritime districts, but in such +situations it has stood unharmed for many years, and attained to +goodly proportions. It is a beautiful climber, with deep-green +leaves, and large, fleshy, campanulate flowers of a deep rose +colour. There is a white-flowered form called L. alba, introduced +from Chili in 1854. Planted on an east aspect wall, and in roughly +broken up peat and gritty sand, it succeeds well.</p> +<h4>LAVANDULA.</h4> +<p>LAVANDULA VERA (<i>syn L. Spica</i>).—Common Lavender. +South Europe, 1568. A well-known and useful plant, but of no +particular value for ornamental purposes. It is of shrubby growth, +with narrow-lanceolate, hoary leaves, and terminal spikes of blue +flowers.</p> +<h4>LAVATERA.</h4> +<p>LAVATERA ARBOREA.—Tree Mallow. Coasts of Europe, +(Britain). A stout-growing shrub reaching in favourable situations +a height of fully 6 feet, with broadly orbicular leaves placed on +long stalks. The flowers are plentiful and showy, of a pale +purplish-red colour, and collected into clusters. It is a seaside +shrub succeeding best in sheltered maritime recesses, and when in +full flower is one of the most ornamental of our native plants. +There is also a beautiful variegated garden form, L. a. +variegata.</p> +<h4>LEDUM.</h4> +<p>LEDUM LATIFOLIUM (<i>syn L. groenlandicum</i>).—Wild +Rosemary, or Labrador Tea. This is a small shrub, reaching to about +3 feet in height, indigenous to swampy ground in Canada, Greenland, +and over a large area of the colder parts of America. Leaves oval +or oblong, and plentifully produced all over the plant. Flowers +pure white, or slightly tinted with pink, produced in terminal +corymbs, and usually at their best in April. A perfectly hardy, +neat-growing, and abundantly-flowered shrub, but one that, somehow, +has gone greatly out of favour in this country. This plant has been +sub-divided into several varieties, that are, perhaps, distinct +enough to render them worthy of attention. They are L. latifolium +globosum, with white flowers, borne in globose heads, on the short, +twiggy, and dark-foliaged branches. L. latifolium angustifolia has +narrower leaves than those of the species, while L. latifolium +intermedium is of neat growth and bears pretty, showy flowers.</p> +<p>L. PALUSTRE.—Marsh Ledum. This is a common European +species, growing from 2 feet to 3 feet high, with much smaller +leaves than the former, and small pinky-white flowers produced in +summer. It is an interesting and pretty plant. The Ledums succeed +best in cool, damp, peaty soil.</p> +<h4>LEIOPHYLLUM.</h4> +<p>LEIOPHYLLUM BUXIFOLIUM (<i>syns L. thymifolia, Ammyrsine +buxifolia</i> and <i>Ledum buxifolium</i>).—Sand Myrtle. New +Jersey and Virginia, 1736. This is a dwarf, compact shrub from New +Jersey, with box-like leaves, and bunches of small white flowers in +early summer. For using as a rock plant, and in sandy peat, it is +an excellent subject, and should find a place in every +collection.</p> +<h4>LESPEDEZA.</h4> +<p>LESPEDEZA BICOLOR (<i>syn Desmodium +penduliflorum</i>).—North China and Japan. A little-known but +beautiful small-growing shrub, of slender, elegant growth, and +reaching, under favourable culture, a height of about 6 feet. The +leaves are trifoliolate, small, and neat, and the abundant racemes +of individually small, Pea-shaped flowers are of the richest and +showiest reddish-purple. Being only semi-hardy will account for the +scarcity of this beautiful Japanese shrub, but having stood +uninjured in all but the coldest parts of these islands should +induce lovers of flowering shrubs to give it a fair chance.</p> +<h4>LEUCOTHOË.</h4> +<p>LEUCOTHOË AXILLARIS (<i>syn Andromeda +axillaris</i>).—North America, 1765. This is of small growth, +from 2 feet to 3 feet high, with oval-pointed leaves and white +flowers in short racemes produced in May and June. It is not a very +satisfactory species for cultivation in this country.</p> +<p>L. CATESBAEI (<i>syns Andromeda Catesbaei</i> and <i>A. +axillaris</i>).—North America. This has white flowers with an +unpleasant odour like that of Chestnut blossoms, but is worthy of +cultivation, and succeeds best in cool sandy peat or friable yellow +loam.</p> +<p>L. DAVISIAE, from California (1853), is a very handsome +evergreen shrub, of small and neat growth, and will be found an +acquisition where compact shrubs are in demand. The leaves are +small, of a deep green colour, and remain throughout the year. +Flowers produced in great abundance at the branch tips, usually in +dense clusters, and individually small and pure white.</p> +<p>L. RECURVA (<i>syn Andromeda recurva</i>).—North America. +A very distinct plant on account of the branch tips being almost of +a scarlet tint, and thus affording a striking contrast to the +grayish-green of the older bark. The flowers are pinky-white and +produced in curving racemes and abundantly over the shrub. Like +other members of the family it delights to grow in cool sandy +peat.</p> +<h4>LEYCESTERIA.</h4> +<p>LEYCESTERIA FORMOSA, from Nepaul (1824), is an erect-growing, +deciduous shrub, with green, hollow stems, and large ovate, pointed +leaves of a very deep green colour. The flowers are small, and +white or purplish, and produced in long, pendulous, bracteate +racemes from the axils of the upper leaves. It is one of the most +distinct and interesting of hardy shrubs, the deep olive-green of +both stem and leaves, and abundantly-produced and curiously-shaped +racemes, rendering it a conspicuous object wherever planted. +Perfectly hardy, and of free, almost rampant growth in any but the +stiffest soils. Cuttings root freely and grow rapidly.</p> +<h4>LIGUSTRUM.</h4> +<p>LIGUSTRUM IBOTA (<i>syn L. amurense</i>).—Japan, 1861. A +compact growing species, about 3 feet in height, with small spikes +of pure white flowers produced freely during the summer months.</p> +<p>L. JAPONICUM (<i>syns L. glabrum, L. Kellennanni, L. +Sieboldii</i> and <i>L. syringaeflorum</i>).—Japan Privet. +This is a dwarf-growing species rarely exceeding 4 feet in height, +with broad, smooth, glossy-green leaves, and large compound racemes +of flowers. There are several varieties, including L. japonicum +microphyllum, with smaller leaves than the parent; and one with +tricoloured foliage and named L. japonicum variegatum.</p> +<p>L. LUCIDUM (<i>syns L. magnoliaefolium</i> and <i>L. +strictum</i>).—Shining-leaved Privet, or Woa Tree. China, +1794. A pretty evergreen species, with oval leaves, and terminal, +thyrsoid panicles of white flowers. It is an old inhabitant of our +gardens, and forms a somewhat erect, twiggy bush, of fully 10 feet +in height. Of this there are two varieties, one with larger bunches +of flowers, and named L. lucidum floribundum, and another with +variegated leaves, L. lucidum variegatum. L. lucidum coriaceum +(Leathery-leaved Privet) is a distinct variety, with thick, +leathery-green leaves, and dense habit of growth.</p> +<p>L. OVALIFOLIUM (<i>syn L. californicum</i>).—Oval-leaved +Privet. Japan, 1877. This is a commonly-cultivated species, with +semi-evergreen leaves, and spikes of yellowish-white flowers. It is +a good hedge plant, and succeeds well as a town shrub. There are +several variegated forms, of which L. ovalifolium variegatum +(Japan, 1865) and L. ovalifolium aureum are the best.</p> +<p>L. QUIHOI.—China, 1868. This is a much valued species, as +it does not flower until most of its relations have finished. Most +of the Privets flower at mid-summer, but this species is often only +at its best by the last week of October and beginning of November. +It forms a straggling freely-branched shrub, of fully 6 feet in +height and nearly as much through, with dark shining-green oblong +leaves, and loose terminal panicles of pure white, +powerfully-scented flowers. It flourishes, like most of the +Privets, on poor soil, and is a little-known species that note +should be made of during the planting season.</p> +<p>L. SINENSE (<i>syns L. villosum</i> and <i>L. Ibota +villosum</i>).—Chinese Privet. China, 1858. This is a tall +deciduous shrub, with oblong and tomentose leaves, and flowers in +loose, terminal panicles and produced freely in August. L. sinense +nanum is one of the prettiest forms in cultivation. It is almost +evergreen, with a horizontal mode of growth, and dense spikes of +crearny-white flowers, so thickly produced as almost to hide the +foliage from view. It is a most distinct and desirable variety.</p> +<p>L. VULGARE.—Common Privet. Although one of our commonest +shrubs, this Privet can hardly be passed unnoticed, for the spikes +of creamy-white flowers, that are deliciously scented, are both +handsome and effective. Of the common Privet there are several +distinct and highly ornamental forms, such as L. vulgare +variegatum, L. vulgare pendulum, having curiously-creeping +branches, and the better-known and valuable L. vulgare sempervirens +(<i>syn L. italicum</i>), the Italian Privet.</p> +<h4>LINNAEA.</h4> +<p>LINNAEA BOREALIS.—Twin Flower. A small and elegant, +much-creeping evergreen shrub, with small, ovate crenate leaves, +and pairs of very fragrant, pink flowers. Two conditions are +necessary for its cultivation—a half-shaded aspect where +bottom moisture is always present, and a deep, rich, friable loam. +A native of Scotland and England, flowering in July.</p> +<h4>LIPPIA.</h4> +<p>LIPPIA CITRIODORA (<i>syns Aloysia citriodora</i> and <i>Verbena +triphylla</i>).—Lemon-scented Verbena. Chili, 1794. With its +slender branches and pale green, pleasantly-scented, linear leaves, +this little plant is a general favourite that needs no description. +The flowers are not very ornamental, being white or lilac, and +produced in small, terminal panicles. A native of Chili, it is not +very hardy, but grown against a sunny wall, and afforded the +protection of a mat in winter, with a couple of shovelfuls of +cinders heaped around the stem, it passes through the most severe +weather with little or no injury, save, in some instances, the +branch tips being killed back. Propagated readily from cuttings +placed in a cool frame or under a hand-light.</p> +<h4>LIRIODENDRON.</h4> +<p>LIRIODENDRON TULIPIFERA.—Tulip Tree. North America, 1688. +One of the noblest hardy exotic trees in cultivation. The large, +four-lobed, truncate leaves, of a soft and pleasing green, are +highly ornamental, and are alone sufficient to establish the +identity of the tree. Flowers large, yellow, and sweet-scented, and +usually freely produced when the tree has attained to a height of +between 20 feet and 30 feet. When we consider the undoubted +hardihood of the tree and indifference to soil, its noble aspect, +handsome foliage that is so distinct from that of any other tree, +and showy flowers, we feel justified in placing it in the very +first rank of ornamental trees. L. tulipifera integrifolia has +entire leaves, which render it distinct from the type; L. +tulipifera fastigiata, or pyramidalis, is of erect growth; L. +tulipifera aurea, with golden foliage; and L. tulipifera crispa, +with the leaves curiously undulated—a peculiarity which seems +constant, but is more curious than beautiful. Few soils come amiss +to the Tulip Tree, it thriving well in that of very opposite +descriptions—loam, almost pure gravel, and alluvial +deposit.</p> +<h4>LONICERA.</h4> +<p>LONICERA CAPRIFOLIUM.—Europe. This species resembles L. +Periclymenum, but is readily distinguished by the sessile +flower-heads, and fawny-orange flowers.</p> +<p>L. FLEXUOSA (<i>syn L. brachypoda</i>).—Japan, 1806. This +is a pretty species, and one of the most useful of the climbing +section. By its slender, twining, purplish stems, it may at once be +distinguished, as also by the deep green, purplish-tinted leaves, +and sweetly-scented flowers of various shades of yellow and purple. +A native of China, and perfectly hardy as a wall plant. L. flexuosa +aureo-reticulata is a worthy variety, in which the leaves are +beautifully netted or variegated with yellow.</p> +<p>L. FRAGRANTISSIMA.—China, 1845. This species is often +confounded with L. Standishii, but differs in at least one respect, +that the former is strictly a climber, while the latter is of bushy +growth. The leaves, too, of L. Standishii are hairy, which is not +the case with the other species. It is a very desirable species, +with white fragrant flowers, produced during the winter season.</p> +<p>L. PERICLYMENUM.—Honeysuckle, or Woodbine. An indigenous +climbing shrub, with long, lithe, and twisted cable-like branches, +and bearing heads of sweetly-scented, reddish-yellow flowers. This +is a favourite wild plant, and in the profusion and fragrance of +its flowers it is surpassed by none of the exotic species. There +are several distinct nursery forms of this plant, including those +known as L. Periclymenum Late Dutch, L. Periclymenum Early Cream, +and L. Periclymenum odoratissimum; as also one with variegated +foliage.</p> +<p>L. SEMPERVIRENS.—Scarlet Trumpet Honeysuckle. A North +American evergreen species (1656), with scarlet, almost inodorous +flowers, produced freely during the summer. For wall covering it is +one of the most useful of the family. The variety L. sempervirens +minor is worthy of attention.</p> +<p>L. STANDISHII, a Chinese species (1860), has deliciously +fragrant while flowers, with a slight purplish tint, and is well +worthy of attention, it soon forming a wall covering of great +beauty.</p> +<p>L. TATARICA.—-Tartarian Honeysuckle. Tartary, 1752. This +is a very variable species, in so far at least as the colour of +flowers is concerned, and has given rise to several handsome +varieties. The typical plant has rosy flowers, but the variety L. +tatarica albiflora has pure white flowers; and another, L. tatarica +rubriflora has freely produced purplish-red flowers.</p> +<p>L. XYLOSTEUM (<i>syn Xylosteum dumetorum</i>).—Fly +Honeysuckle. Europe (England) to the Caucasus. The small, +creamy-white flowers of this plant are not particularly showy, but +the scarlet berries are more conspicuous in September and October. +The gray bark of the branches has also a distinct effect in winter +when grown in contrast to the red-barked species of Cornus, +Viburnum, and yellow-barked Osier. It is one of the oldest +occupants of British shrubberies. L. Xylosteum leucocarpum has +white berries; those of L. Xylosteum melanocarpum are black; and in +L. Xylosteum xanthocarpum they are yellow.</p> +<p>The Honeysuckles are all of the readiest culture, and succeed +well in very poor soils, and in that of opposite qualities. +Propagated from cuttings or by layering.</p> +<h4>LOROPETALON.</h4> +<p>LOROPETALON CHINENSE.—Khasia Mountains and China, 1880. +This is a pretty and interesting shrub belonging to the more +familiar Witch Hazel family. Flowers clustered in small heads, the +calyx pale green, and the long linear petals almost pure white. +Being quite hardy, and interesting as well as ornamental, should +insure this Chinese shrub a place in every good collection.</p> +<h4>LYCIUM.</h4> +<p>LYCIUM BARBARUM.—Box Thorn, or Tea Tree. North Asia, 1696. +A pretty lax, trailing shrub, with long, slender, flexible twigs, +small linear-lanceolate leaves, and rather sparsely-produced lilac +or violet flowers. Planted against a wall, or beside a +stout-growing, open-habited shrub, where the peculiarly lithe +branches can find support, this plant does best. Probably nowhere +is the Box Thorn so much at home as in seaside places, it then +attaining to sometimes 12 feet in height, and bearing freely its +showy flowers during summer, and the bright scarlet or orange +berries in winter.</p> +<p>L. EUROPAEUM.—European Box Thorn. South Europe, 1730. This +is a spiny, rambling shrub, that may often be seen clambering over +some cottage porch, or used as a fence or wall plant in many parts +of England. It often grows nearly 20 feet long, and is then a plant +of great beauty, with linear-spathulate leaves of the freshest +green, and pretty little pink or reddish flowers. For quickly +covering steep, dry banks and mounds where few other plants could +exist this European Box Thorn is invaluable. Either species will +grow in very poor, dry soil, and is readily propagated by means of +cuttings.</p> +<h4>LYONIA.</h4> +<p>LYONIA PANICULATA (<i>syns L. ligustrina, Andromeda globulifera, +A. pilifera</i>, and <i>Menziesia globularis</i>).—North +America, 1806. This species grows about a yard high, with +clustered, ovate leaves, and pretty, pinky, drooping flowers.</p> +<h4>MACLURA.</h4> +<p>MACLURA AURANTIACA.—Osage Orange, or Bow-wood. North +America, 1818. This is a wide-spreading tree with deciduous +foliage, and armed with spines along the branches. The leaves are +three inches long, ovate and pointed, and of a bright shining +green. Flowers rather inconspicuous, being green with a light tinge +of yellow, and succeeded by fruit bearing a resemblance when ripe +to the Seville orange. It is hardy, and grows freely in rather +sandy or gravelly soil.</p> +<h4>MAGNOLIA.</h4> +<p>MAGNOLIA ACUMINATA.—Cucumber Tree. North America, 1736. +This is a large and handsome species, of often as much as 50 feet +in height, and with a head that is bushy in proportion. The leaves +are 6 inches long, ovate and pointed, and of a refreshing shade of +green. Flowers greenish-yellow, sweetly scented, and produced +abundantly all over the tree. They are succeeded by small, roughish +fruit, resembling an infant cucumber, but they usually fall off +before becoming ripe.</p> +<p>M. CAMPBELII.—Sikkim, 1868. This is a magnificent Indian +species, but, unfortunately, it is not hardy except in the favoured +English and Irish localities. The leaves are large, and silky on +the undersides, while the flowers are crimson and white, and +equally as large as those of the better-known M. grandiflora.</p> +<p>M. CONSPICUA (<i>syn M. Yulan</i>).—Yulan. China, 1789. A +large-growing shrub, with Pea-green, deciduous foliage, and large, +pure white flowers that oft get damaged by the spring frosts. M. +conspicua Soulangeana is a supposed hybrid between M. conspicua and +M. obovata. Whatever may be the origin of this Magnolia, it is +certainly a handsome and showy plant of very vigorous growth, +producing freely its white, purple-tinted flowers, and which last +for a long time in perfection. There are several other varieties, +including M. conspicua Soulangeana nigra, with dark purplish +flowers; M. conspicua Alexandrina, M. conspicua Soulangeana +speciosa, and M. conspicua Norbertii.</p> +<p>M. CORDATA, a native of the Southern Alleghanies (1801), is +still rare in collections. It is a small-growing, deciduous +species, with yellow flowers, that are neither scented nor +showy.</p> +<p>M. FRASERI (<i>syn M. auriculata</i>).—Long-leaved +Cucumber Tree. North America, 1786. This species has distinctly +auriculated leaves and large, yellowish-white, fragrant +flowers.</p> +<p>M. GLAUCA.—Laurel Magnolia. North America, 1688. This is +one of the commonest species in our gardens, and at the same time +one of the hardiest. It is of shrub size, with Laurel-like leaves, +and sweetly-scented, small, pure white flowers, produced about the +end of June.</p> +<p>M. GRANDIFLORA.—North America, 1737. One of the handsomest +species, with very large, glossy, evergreen leaves, and deliciously +odoriferous, creamy-white flowers, that are often fully 6 inches +across. It is usually seen as a wall plant, and the slight +protection thus afforded is almost a necessity in so far as the +development of the foliage and flowers is concerned. M. grandiflora +exoniensis (Exmouth Magnolia) is a very handsome form.</p> +<p>M. LENNEI.—This is a garden hybrid between M. conspicua +and M. obovata discolor, and has flowers as large as a goose's egg, +of a rosy-purple colour, and produced profusely.</p> +<p>M. MACROPHYLLA.—North America, 1800. This species has very +large leaves and flowers, larger, perhaps, than those of any other +species. They are very showy, being white with a purple centre. It +attains a height of 30 feet.</p> +<p>M. OBOVATA DISCOLOR (<i>syn M. purpurea</i>).—Japan, 1790. +This is a small-growing, deciduous shrub, with large, dark green +leaves, and Tulip-shaped flowers, that are purple on the outside +and almost white within.</p> +<p>M. PARVIFLORA, from Japan, with creamy-white, fragrant flowers, +that are globular in shape, is a very distinct and attractive +species, but cannot generally be relied upon as hardy.</p> +<p>M. STELLATA (<i>syn M. Halleana</i>).—Japan, 1878. A neat, +small-growing, Japanese species, of bushy habit, and quite hardy in +this country. The small, white, fragrant flowers are produced +abundantly, even on young plants, and as early as April. One of the +most desirable and handsome of the small-growing species. M. +stellata (pink variety) received an Award of Merit at the meeting +of the Royal Horticultural Society on March 28, 1893. This bids +fair to be really a good thing, and may best be described as a +pink-flowered form of the now well-known and popular species.</p> +<p>M. UMBRELLA (<i>syn M. tripetala</i>).—Umbrella Tree. +North America, 1752. A noble species, with large, deep green +leaves, that are often 16 inches long. It is quite hardy around +London, and produces its large, white, fragrant flowers in +succession during May and June. The fruit is large and showy, and +of a deep purplish-red colour.</p> +<h4>MEDICAGO.</h4> +<p>MEDICAGO ARBOREA.—South Europe, 1596. This species grows +to the height of 6 feet or 8 feet, and produces its Pea-shaped +flowers from June onwards. The leaves are broadly oval and serrated +at the tips, but they vary in this respect. It is not hardy unless +in warm, sheltered corners of southern England and Ireland, +although it stood unharmed for many years at Kew. It succeeds best, +and is less apt to receive injury, when planted in rather dry and +warm soil.</p> +<h4>MENISPERMUM.</h4> +<p>MENISPERMUM CANADENSE.—Moonseed. North America, 1691. This +shrub is principally remarkable for the large, reniform, peltate +leaves, which are of value for covering pergolas, bowers and walls. +The flowers are of no great account, being rather inconspicuous and +paniculate. It is hardy in most places, and is worthy of culture +for its graceful habit and handsome foliage.</p> +<h4>MICROGLOSSA.</h4> +<p>MICROGLOSSA ALBESCENS (<i>syn Aster albescens</i> and <i>A. +cabulicus</i>).—Himalayas, 1842. This member of the +Compositae family is a much-branched shrub, with grayish lanceolate +foliage, and clusters of flowers about 6 inches in diameter, and of +a bluish or mauve colour. It is a native of Nepaul, and, with the +protection of a wall, perfectly hardy around London.</p> +<h4>MITCHELLA.</h4> +<p>MITCHELLA REPENS.—Partridge Berry. North America, 1761. A +low-growing, creeping plant, having oval, persistent leaves, white +flowers, and brilliant scarlet fruit. It is a neat little bog +plant, resembling Fuchsia procumbens in habit, and with bunches of +the brightest Cotoneaster-like fruit. For rock gardening, or +planting on the margins of beds in light, peaty soil, this is one +of the handsomest and most beautiful of hardy creeping shrubs.</p> +<h4>MITRARIA.</h4> +<p>MITRARIA COCCINEA.—Scarlet Mitre Pod. Chiloe, 1848. This +is only hardy in the South of England and Ireland, and even there +it requires wall protection. It is a pretty little shrub, with +long, slender shoots, which, during the early part of the summer, +are studded with the bright red, drooping blossoms, which are +urn-shaped, and often nearly 2 inches long. It delights in damp, +lumpy, peat.</p> +<h4>MYRICA.</h4> +<p>MYRICA ASPLENIFOLIA (<i>syn Comptonia +asplenifolia</i>).—Sweet Fern. North America, 1714. A North +American plant of somewhat straggling growth, growing to about 4 +feet high, and with linear, pinnatified, sweet-smelling leaves. The +flowers are of no decorative value, being small and inconspicuous, +but for the fragrant leaves alone the shrub will always be prized. +It grows well in peaty soil, is very hardy, and may be increased by +means of offsets. This shrub is nearly allied to our native Myrica +or Sweet Gale.</p> +<p>M. CALIFORNICA.—Californian Wax Myrtle. California, 1848. +In this we have a valuable evergreen shrub that is hardy beyond a +doubt, and that will thrive in the very poorest classes of soils. +In appearance it somewhat resembles our native plant, but is +preferable to it on account of the deep green, persistent leaves. +The leaves are about 3 inches long, narrow, and produced in tufts +along the branches. Unlike our native species, the Californian Wax +Myrtle has no pleasant aroma to the leaves.</p> +<p>M. CERIFERA.—Common Candle-berry Myrtle. Canada, 1699. +This is a neat little shrub, usually about 4 feet high, with +oblong-lanceolate leaves, and inconspicuous catkins.</p> +<p>M. GALE.—Sweet Gale or Bog Myrtle. This has inconspicuous +flowers, and is included here on account of the deliciously +fragrant foliage, and which makes it a favourite with cultivators +generally. It is a native shrub, growing from 3 feet to 4 feet +high, with deciduous, linear-lanceolate leaves, and clustered +catkins appearing before the leaves. A moor or bog plant, and of +great value for planting by the pond or lake side, or along with +the so-called American plants, for the aroma given off by the +foliage.</p> +<p>The Myricas are all worthy of cultivation, although the flowers +are inconspicuous—their neat and in most cases fragrant +foliage, and adaptability to poor soil or swampy hollows, being +extra recommendations.</p> +<h4>MYRTUS.</h4> +<p>MYRTUS COMMUNIS.—Common Myrtle. South Europe, 1597. A +well-known shrub, which, unless in very favoured spots and by the +sea-side, cannot survive our winters. Where it does well, and then +only as a wall plant, this and its varieties are charming shrubs +with neat foliage and an abundance of showy flowers. The +double-flowered varieties are very handsome, but they are more +suitable for glass culture than planting in the open.</p> +<p>M. LUMA (<i>syn Eugenia apiculata</i> and <i>E. +Luma</i>).—Chili. Though sometimes seen growing out of doors, +this is not to be recommended for general planting, it being best +suited for greenhouse culture.</p> +<p>M. UGNI (<i>syn Eugenia Ugni</i>).—Valdivia, 1845. A +small-growing, Myrtle-like shrub, that is only hardy in favoured +parts of the country. It is of branching habit, with small, wiry +stems, oval, coriacious leaves, and pretty pinky flowers. The +edible fruit is highly ornamental, being of a pleasing ruddy tinge +tinted with white. This dwarf-growing shrub wants the protection of +a wall, and when so situated in warm seaside parts of the country +soon forms a bush of neat and pleasing appearance.</p> +<h4>NEILLIA.</h4> +<p>NEILLIA OPULIFOLIA (<i>syn Spiraea opulifolia</i>).—Nine +Bark. North America, 1690. A hardy shrub, nearly allied to Spiraea. +It produces a profusion of umbel-like corymbs of pretty white +flowers, that are succeeded by curious swollen membraneous purplish +fruit. N. opulifolia aurea is worthy of culture, it being of free +growth and distinct from the parent plant.</p> +<p>N. THYRSIFLORA, Nepaul, 1850, would seem to be quite as hardy as +N. opulifolia, and is of more evergreen habit. The leaves are +doubly serrated and three lobed, and cordate-ovate. Flowers white +in spicate, thyrsoid racemes, and produced rather sparsely.</p> +<h4>NESAEA.</h4> +<p>NESAEA SALICIFOLIA (<i>syn Heimia +salicifolia</i>).—Mexico, 1821. This can only be styled as +half hardy, but with wall protection it forms a pretty bush often +fully a yard in height. The leaves resemble those of some species +of Willow, being long and narrow, while the showy yellow flowers +are freely produced in August and September. It thrives best when +planted in light, dry soil, and in a sheltered position.</p> +<h4>NEVIUSA.</h4> +<p>NEVIUSA ALABAMENSIS.—Alabama Snow Wreath. Alabama, 1879. +This is a rare American shrub, with leaves reminding one of those +of the Nine Bark, Neillia opulifolia, and the flowers, which are +freely produced along the full length of the shoots, are white or +yellowish-green, with prominent stamens of a tufted brush-like +character. It is usually treated as a green-house plant, but may be +seen growing and flowering freely in the open ground at Kew.</p> +<h4>NUTTALLIA.</h4> +<p>NUTTALLIA CERASIFORMIS.—Osoberry. California, 1848. This +shrub is of great value on account of the flowers being produced in +the early weeks of the year, and when flowers are few and far +between. It grows from 6 feet to 10 feet high, with a thick, twiggy +head, and drooping racemes of white flowers borne thickly all over +the plant. Few soils come amiss to this neglected shrub, it growing +and flowering freely even on poor gravelly clay, and where only a +limited number of shrubs could succeed.</p> +<h4>OLEARIA.</h4> +<p>OLEARIA HAASTII.—New Zealand, 1872. This Composite shrub +is only hardy in the milder parts of England and Ireland. It is of +stiff, dwarf growth, rarely growing more than 4 feet high, but of +neat and compact habit. Flowering as it does in late summer it is +rendered of special value, the Daisy-like white blossoms being +produced in large and flat clusters at the branch tips. The leaves +are neat and of leathery texture, and being evergreen lend an +additional charm to the shrub.</p> +<p>O. MACRODONTA (<i>syn O. dentata</i>), from New Zealand, 1886, +is tolerably hardy, and may be seen in good form both at Kew and in +the South of Ireland. The large Holly-like leaves are of a peculiar +silvery-green tint above, and almost white on the under sides. +Flowers white, and produced in dense heads in June and July.</p> +<p>O. Forsterii and O. Gunniana (<i>syn Eurybia Gunniana</i>) are +nearly hardy species, the latter, from New Zealand, bearing a +profusion of white Daisy-like flowers on dense, twiggy +branches.</p> +<h4>ONONIS.</h4> +<p>ONONIS ARVENSIS.—Restharrow. A native undershrub of very +variable size, according to the position in which it is found +growing. It creeps along the ground, the shoots sending out roots +as they proceed, and is usually found on dry sandy banks. The +flowers when at their best are very ornamental, being bright pink, +and with the standard streaked with a deeper shade. They are +abundantly produced, and render the plant very conspicuous during +the summer and autumn months. When planted on an old wall, and +allowed to roam at will, the Restharrow is, perhaps, seen to best +advantage.</p> +<h4>OSMANTHUS.</h4> +<p>OSMANTHUS AQUIFOLIUM ILLICIFOLIUS.—Holly-leaved Osmanthus. +Japan. This is a handsome evergreen shrub, with Holly-like leaves, +and not very conspicuous greenish-white flowers. It is a very +desirable shrub, of which there are varieties named O.A. +ilicifolius argenteo-variegatus, O.A. ilicifolius aureo-variegatus, +and O.A. ilicifolius nanus, the names of which will be sufficient +to define their characters.</p> +<p>O.A. ILICIFOLIUS MYRTIFOLIUS.—Myrtle-leaved Osmanthus. A +very distinct and beautiful shrub, with unarmed leaves. It is of +dwarf, compact growth, with small, sharply-pointed leaves, and +inconspicuous flowers. For the front line of a shrubbery this is an +invaluable shrub, its pretty leaves and neat twiggy habit making it +a favourite with planters. The variety rotundifolius is seldom seen +in cultivation, but being distinct in foliage from any of the +others is to be recommended. They grow freely in any good garden +soil, but all the better if a little peat is added at the time of +planting.</p> +<h4>OSTRYA.</h4> +<p>OSTRYA CARPINIFOLIA (<i>syn O. vulgaris</i>).—Common Hop +Hornbeam. South Europe, 1724. A much-branched, round-headed tree, +with cordate-ovate, acuminate leaves. Both this and the following +species, by reason of the resemblance between their female catkins +and those of the Hop, and between their leaves and those of the +Hornbeam, have acquired the very descriptive name of Hop Hornbeam. +This is a large-growing tree, specimens in various parts of the +country ranging in height from 50 feet to 60 feet.</p> +<p>O. VIRGINICA.—Virginian Hop Hornbeam. Eastern United +States, 1692. Resembles the latter, but is of smaller growth, +rarely exceeding 40 feet in height. They grow fairly well in almost +any class of soil, and on account of the long and showy catkins are +well worthy of cultivation.</p> +<h4>OXYDENDRUM.</h4> +<p>OXYDENDRUM ARBOREUM (<i>syn Andromeda +arborea</i>).—Sorrel-tree. Eastern United States, 1752. +Unfortunately this species is not often found under cultivation, +being unsuitable generally for our climate. In some instances, +however, it has done well, a specimen in the Knap Hill Nursery, +Surrey, being 30 feet high, and with a dense rounded head. The +flowers are very beautiful, being of a waxy white, and produced +abundantly. It wants a free rich soil, and not too exposed +site.</p> +<h4>OZOTHAMNUS.</h4> +<p>OZOTHAMNUS ROSMARINIFOLIUS.—Australia, 1827. A pretty +little Australian Composite, forming a dense, twiggy shrub, with +narrow, Rosemary-like leaves, and small, whitish, Aster-like +flowers which resemble those of its near relative, the Olearia, and +are produced so thickly that the plant looks like a sheet of white +when the blooms are fully developed. It flowers in June and July. +In most parts of the country it will require protection, but can be +classed as fairly hardy. Cuttings root freely if placed in sandy +soil in a cool frame.</p> +<h4>PAEONIA.</h4> +<p>PAEONIA MOUTAN.—Moutan Paeony, or Chinese Tree Paeony. +China and Japan, 1789. A beautiful shrubby species introduced from +China about one hundred years ago. The first of the kind introduced +to England had single flowers, and the plant is figured in Andrews' +<i>Botanists' Repository</i> (tab. 463) under the name of P. +papaveracea. The flowers are white with a dark red centre. In the +<i>Botanical Magazine</i> (tab. 2175), the same plant is figured +under the name of P. Moutan var. papaveracea. This is perfectly +hardy in our gardens, and is the parent of many beautiful and +distinct varieties, including double and single white, pink, +crimson, purple, and striped.</p> +<h4>PALIURUS.</h4> +<p>PALIURUS ACULEATUS (<i>syn P. australis</i>).—Christ's +Thorn, or Garden Thorn. Mediterranean region, 1596. A +densely-branched, spiny shrub, with small leaves, and not very +showy, yellowish-green flowers. It grows and flowers freely enough +in light, peaty earth, but is not very hardy, the tips of the +branches being usually killed back should the winter be at all +severe.</p> +<h4>PARROTIA.</h4> +<p>PARROTIA PERSICA.—Persia, 1848. Well known for the lovely +autumnal tints displayed by the foliage when dying off. But for the +flowers, too, it is well worthy of culture, the crimson-tipped +stamens of the male flowers being singularly beautiful and +uncommon. In February it is no unusual sight to see on +well-established plants whole branches that are profusely furnished +with these showy flowers. For planting in a warm corner of a rather +dry border it seems to be well suited; but it is perfectly hardy +and free of growth when suited with soil and site. It is as yet +rare in cultivation, but is sure, when better known and more widely +disseminated, to become a general favourite with lovers of hardy +shrubs.</p> +<h4>PASSIFLORA.</h4> +<p>PASSIFLORA CAERULEA.—Passion Flower. Brazil and Peru, +1699. Though not perfectly hardy, yet this handsome climbing plant, +if cut down to the ground, usually shoots up freely again in the +spring. The flowers, which are produced very freely, but +particularly in maritime districts, vary from white to blue, and +the prettily-fringed corona and centre of the flower render the +whole peculiarly interesting and beautiful. P. caerulea Constance +Elliott has greenish-white flowers; and P. caerulea Colvillei has +white sepals and a blue fringe. The latter is of more robust +growth, and more floriferous than the species.</p> +<h4>PAULOWNIA.</h4> +<p>PAULOWNIA IMPERIALIS.—Japan, 1840. This is a handsome, +fast-growing tree, and one that is particularly valuable for its +ample foliage, and distinct and showy flowers. Though perfectly +hardy, in other respects it is unfortunate that the season at which +the Paulownia flowers is so early that, unless the conditions are +unusually favourable, the flower buds get destroyed by the frost. +The tree grows to fully 40 feet high in this country, and is a +grandly decorative object in its foliage alone, and for which, +should the flowers never be produced, it is well worthy of +cultivation. They are ovate-cordate, thickly covered with a grayish +woolly tomentum, and often measure, but particularly in young and +healthy trees, as much as 10 inches in length. The Foxglove-like +flowers are purplish-violet and spotted, and borne in terminal +panicles. They are sweetly-scented. When favourably situated, and +in cool, sandy loam or peaty earth, the growth of the tree is very +rapid, and when a tree has been cut over, the shoots sent out often +exceed 6 feet in length in one season, and nearly 2 inches in +diameter. There are many fine old trees throughout the country, and +which testify to the general hardihood of the Paulownia.</p> +<h4>PERIPLOCA.</h4> +<p>PERIPLOCA GRAECA.—Poison Vine. South Eastern Europe, and +Orient, 1597. A tall, climbing shrub, with small, ovate-lanceolate +leaves, and clusters of curious purplish-brown, green-tipped +flowers produced in summer. The long, incurved appendages, in the +shape of a crown, and placed so as to protect the style and +anthers, render the flowers of peculiar interest. Though often used +as a greenhouse plant, it is perfectly hardy, and makes a neat, +deciduous wall or arch covering, thriving to perfection in rich +soil that is well-drained. It is readily propagated from +cuttings.</p> +<h4>PERNETTYA.</h4> +<p>PERNETTYA MUCRONATA (<i>syn Arbutus +mucronata</i>).—Prickly Heath. Magellan, 1828. This is a +dwarf-growing, wiry shrub, with narrow, stiff leaves, and bears an +abundance of white, bell-shaped flowers. It is a capital wind +screen, and may be used to advantage on the exposed side of +rockwork or flower beds, or as an ornamental shrub by the pond or +lake side. The small dark-green leaves, the tiny white flowers, and +great abundance of deep purple berries in winter, are all points +that are in favour of the shrub for extended cultivation. The +pretty, pinky shoots, too, help to make the plant attractive even +in mid-winter. Propagation by layers or seed is readily brought +about. To grow this shrub to perfection, peaty soil or decayed +vegetable matter will be found most suitable. There is a +narrow-leaved form named P. mucronata angustifolia, and another on +which the name of P. mucronata speciosa has been bestowed.</p> +<p>There are many beautiful-berried forms of the Pernettya, but as +their flowers are small can hardly be included in our list.</p> +<h4>PHILADELPHUS.</h4> +<p>PHILADELPHUS CORONARIUS.—Mock Orange, or Syringa. South +Europe, 1596. A well-known and valuable garden shrub, of from 6 +feet to 10 feet high, with ovate and serrulated leaves, and pretty +racemes of white or yellowish-white, fragrant flowers. P. +coronarius aureo-variegatus is one of the numerous forms of this +shrub, having brightly-tinted, golden foliage, but the flowers are +in no way superior to those of the parent. It is, if only for the +foliage, an extremely pretty and distinct variety. P. coronarius +argenteo-variegatus has silvery-tinted leaves; P. coronarius +flore-pleno, full double flowers; and P. coronarius Keteleeri +flore-pleno is the best double-flowered form in cultivation.</p> +<p>P. GORDONIANUS, an American species (1839), is a well-known and +beautiful shrub, in which the flowers are usually double the size +of those of the common species, and which are not produced till +July, while those of P. coronarius appear in early May.</p> +<p>P. GRANDIFLORUS (<i>syns P. floribundus, P. latifolius</i> and +<i>P. speciosus</i>).—Southern United States, 1811. This has +rotundate, irregularly-toothed leaves, and large white, +sweetly-scented flowers produced in clusters. This forms a stout +bush 10 feet high, and as much through. There are two varieties, P. +grandiflorus laxus, and P. grandiflorus speciosissimus, both +distinct and pretty kinds.</p> +<p>P. HIRSUTUS.—North America, 1820. Another handsome, +small-flowered species, of dwarf growth, and having hairy +leaves.</p> +<p>P. INODOROUS, also from North America (1738), differs little in +size and shape of flowers from P. grandiflorus, but the flowers are +without scent. The leaves, too, are quite glabrous and obscurely +toothed.</p> +<p>P. LEMOINEI BOULE D'ARGENT is a cross, raised in 1888, from P. +Lemoinei and the double-flowered form of P. coronarius. The flowers +are double white and with the pleasant, but not heavy, scent of P. +microphyllus. P. Lemoinei Gerbe de Neige bears pleasantly-scented +flowers that are as large as those of the well-known P. +speciosissimus. There is an erect form of P. Lemoinei named erectus +that is also worthy of note.</p> +<p>P. LEWISI, from North America, is hardly sufficiently distinct +from some of the others to warrant special notice.</p> +<p>P. MICROPHYLLUS, from New Mexico (1883), is of low growth, and +remarkable for its slender branches, small, Myrtle-like leaves, and +abundance of small, white flowers. It is a decidedly pretty shrub, +but is not so hardy as the others.</p> +<p>P. SATZUMI (<i>syn P. chinensis</i>).—Japan, 1851. A +slender-growing species, with long and narrow leaves, and large, +white flowers.</p> +<p>P. TRIFLORUS and P. MEXICANUS are other species that might be +worthy of including in a representative collection of these +plants.</p> +<p>This is a valuable genus of shrubs, all being remarkable for the +abundance of white, and usually sweet-scented, flowers which they +produce. They require no special treatment, few soils, if at all +free and rich, coming amiss to them; while even as shrubs for shady +situations they are not to be despised. Propagation is effected by +means of cuttings, which root freely if placed in sandy soil.</p> +<h4>PHILLYREA.</h4> +<p>P. ANGUSTIFOLIA (narrow-leaved Phillyrea), P. ilicifolia +(Holly-leaved Phillyrea), P. salicifolia (Willow-leaved Phillyrea), +P. buxifolia (Box-leaved Phillyrea), and P. ligustrifolia +(Privet-leaved Phillyrea), are all more or less valuable species, +and their names indicate their peculiarities of leafage. P. +angustifolia rosmarinifolia (<i>syn P. neapolitana</i>) is a +somewhat rare shrub, but one that is well worthy of culture, if +only for its neat habit and tiny little Rosemary-like leaves. It is +from Italy, and known under the synonym of <i>P. +rosmarinifolia</i>.</p> +<p>P. LATIFOLIA (<i>syn P. obliqua</i>).—Broad-leaved +Phillyrea. South Europe, 1597. This is a compact-growing and +exceedingly ornamental shrub, with bright and shining, +ovate-serrulated leaves. For its handsome, evergreen foliage and +compact habit of growth it is, perhaps, most to be valued, for the +small flowers are at their best both dull and inconspicuous. Not +very hardy unless in the sea-coast garden.</p> +<p>P. MEDIA (<i>syns P. ligustrifolia</i> and <i>P. +oleaefolia</i>).—South Europe, 1597. This is another +interesting species, but not at all common in cultivation.</p> +<p>P. VILMORINIANA (<i>syns P. laurifolia</i> and <i>P. +decora</i>).—Asia Minor, 1885, This is a grand addition to +these valuable shrubs, of which it is decidedly the best from an +ornamental point of view. It is of compact growth, with large, +Laurel-like leaves, which are of a pleasing shade of green, and +fully 4 inches long. They are of stout, leathery texture, and +plentifully produced. That this shrub is perfectly hardy is now a +well-established fact.</p> +<p>The Phillyreas succeed well in light, warm, but not too dry +soil, and they do all the better if a warm and sheltered position +is assigned to them. Being unusually bright of foliage, they are of +great service in planting for shrubbery embellishment, and which +they light up in a very conspicuous manner during the dull winter +months. They get shabby and meagre foliaged if exposed to cold +winds.</p> +<h4>PHLOMIS.</h4> +<p>PHLOMIS FRUTICOSA.—Jerusalem Sage. Mediterranean region, +1596. This is a neat-growing shrubby plant, with ovate acute +leaves, that are covered with a yellowish down. From the axils of +the upper leaves the whorls of yellow flowers are freely produced +during the summer months. It is valued for its neat growth, and as +growing on dry soils where few other plants could eke out an +existence.</p> +<h4>PHOTINIA.</h4> +<p>PHOTINIA JAPONICA (<i>syn Eriobotrya +japonica</i>).—Loquat, Japan Medlar, or Japan Quince. Japan, +1787. This is chiefly remarkable for its handsome foliage, the +leaves being oblong of shape and downy on the under sides. The +white flowers are of no great beauty, but being produced at the +beginning of winter, and when flowers are scarce, are all the more +welcome. It requires protection in all but the warmer parts of +these islands.</p> +<p>P. ARBUTIFOLIA (<i>syns Crataegus arbutifolia</i> and +<i>Mespilus arbutifolia</i>).—Arbutus-leaved Photinia, or +Californian May-bush. California, 1796. This is a very distinct +shrub, with leaves resembling those of the Strawberry Tree +(Arbutus), the flowers in an elongated panicle, and bright red bark +on the young wood.</p> +<p>P. BENTHAMIANA is only worthy of culture for its neat habit and +freedom of growth when suitably placed.</p> +<p>P. SERRULATA (<i>syn Crataegus glabra</i>).—Chinese +Hawthorn. Japan and China, 1804. This has Laurel-like leaves, 4 +inches or 5 inches long, and, especially when young, of a beautiful +rosy-chocolate colour, and clustered at the branch-tips. Flowers +small, white, and produced in flat corymbs. An invaluable seaside +shrub.</p> +<p>They all grow well either in light, rich loam, or in sandy, +peaty earth, and are usually propagated by grafting.</p> +<h4>PHYLODOCE.</h4> +<p>PHYLODOCE TAXIFOLIA (<i>syns P. caerulea</i> and <i>Menziesia +caerulea</i>).—An almost extinct native species, having +crowded linear leaves, and lilac-blue flowers. It is only of value +for rock gardening.</p> +<h4>PIERIS.</h4> +<p>PIERIS FLORIBUNDA (<i>syns Andromeda floribunda</i> and +<i>Leucothoë floribunda</i>).—United States, 1812. Few +perfectly hardy shrubs are more beautiful than this, with its pure +white Lily-of-the-Valley like flowers, borne in dense racemes and +small, neat, dark green leaves. To cultivate this handsome shrub in +a satisfactory way, fairly rich loam or peat, and a situation +sheltered from cold and cutting winds, are necessities.</p> +<p>P. JAPONICA (<i>syn Andromeda japonica</i>).—Japan, 1882. +A hardy, well-known shrub, that was first brought specially under +notice in "The Garden," and of which a coloured plate and +description were given. It is thickly furnished with neat and small +deep-green, leathery leaves, and pretty, waxy white flowers, +pendulous at the branch tips. Planted in free, sandy peat, it +thrives vigorously, and soon forms a neat specimen of nearly a yard +in height. It is a very desirable hardy species, and one that can +be confidently recommended for ornamental planting. There is a +variegated variety, P. japonica elegantissima, with leaves clearly +edged with creamy-white, and flushed with pink. Amongst variegated, +small-growing shrubs it is a gem.</p> +<p>P. MARIANA (<i>syn Andromeda Mariana ovalis</i>).—North +America, 1736. A neat shrub of about 3 feet in height, with oval +leaves, and pretty white flowers in pendent clusters.</p> +<p>P. OVALIFOLIA (<i>syn Andromeda ovalifolia</i>).—Nepaul, +1825. A fine, tall-growing species, with oval-pointed, leathery +leaves placed on long footstalks. Flowers in lengthened, drooping, +one-sided racemes, and white or pale flesh-coloured. Being +perfectly hardy, and attaining to as much as 20 feet in height, it +is a desirable species for the lawn or shrubbery.</p> +<h4>PIPTANTHUS.</h4> +<p>PIPTANTHUS NEPALENSIS (<i>syn Baptisia +nepalensis</i>).—Evergreen Laburnum. Temperate Himalaya, +1821. A handsome, half-hardy shrub, of often fully 10 feet high, +with trifoliolate, evergreen leaves, and terminal racemes of large +yellow flowers. In the south and west of England and Ireland it +does well, and only receives injury during very severe winters. +Planted either as a single specimen, or in clumps of three or five, +the evergreen Laburnum has a pleasing effect, whether with its +bright, glossy-green leaves, or abundance of showy flowers. It is +of somewhat erect growth, with stout branches and plenty of shoots. +Propagated from seed, which it ripens abundantly in this +country.</p> +<h4>PITTOSPORUM.</h4> +<p>PITTOSPORUM TOBIRA.—Japan, 1804. This forms a neat, +evergreen shrub, with deep green, leathery leaves, and clusters of +white, fragrant flowers, each about an inch in diameter. It is +hardy in the more favoured parts of the south and west of England, +where it makes a reliable seaside shrub.</p> +<p>P. UNDULATUM, from Australia (1789), is also hardy against a +wall, but cannot be depended upon generally. It is a neat shrub, +with wavy leaves, that are rendered conspicuous by the dark +midribs. They grow well in any good garden soil.</p> +<h4>PLAGIANTHUS.</h4> +<p>PLAGIANTHUS LYALLI, a native of New Zealand (1871), and a member +of the Mallow family, is a free-flowering and beautiful shrub, but +one that cannot be recommended for general planting in this +country. At Kew it does well and flowers freely on an east wall. +The flowers are snow-white, with golden-yellow anthers, and +produced on the ends of the last season's branchlets during June +and July. The flower-stalks, being fully 2 inches long, give to the +flowers a very graceful appearance. In this country the leaves are +frequently retained till spring.</p> +<p>P. LAMPENI.—Van Dieman's Land, 1833. This is about equally +hardy with the former, and produces a great abundance of +sweetly-scented flowers.</p> +<p>P. PULCHELLUS (<i>syn Sida pulchella</i>).—Australia and +Tasmania. Another half-hardy species, which bears, even in a young +state, an abundance of rather small, whitish flowers.</p> +<h4>POLYGALA.</h4> +<p>POLYGALA CHAMAEBUXUS.—Bastard Box. A neat little shrubby +plant, with small ovate, coriaceous leaves, and fragrant yellow and +cream flowers. P. chamaebuxus purpureus differs in bearing rich +reddish-purple flowers, and is one of the most showy and beautiful +of rock plants. They are natives of Europe (1658), and grow best in +vegetable mould.</p> +<h4>POTENTILLA.</h4> +<p>POTENTILLA FRUTICOSA.—Northern Hemisphere (Britain). An +indigenous shrub that grows about a yard high, with pinnate leaves +and golden flowers. It is a most persistent blooming plant, as +often for four months, beginning in June, the flowers are produced +freely in succession. It delights to grow in a strong soil, and, +being of low, sturdy growth, does well for the outer line of the +shrubbery.</p> +<h4>PRUNUS.</h4> +<p>PRUNUS AMYGDALUS (<i>syn Amygdalus communis</i>).—Common +Almond. Barbary, 1548. Whether by a suburban roadside, or even in +the heart of the crowded city, the Almond seems quite at home, and +is at once one of the loveliest and most welcome of early +spring-flowering trees. The flowers are rather small for the +family, pale pink, and produced in great quantity before the +leaves. There are several distinct forms of the Almond, differing +mainly in the colour of the flowers, one being pink, another red, +while a third has double flowers. P. Amygdalus macrocarpa +(Large-fruited Almond) is by far the handsomest variety in +cultivation, the flowers being large, often 3 inches in diameter, +and white tinged with pink, particularly at the base of the petals. +The flowers, too, are produced earlier than those of any other +Almond, while the tree is of stout growth and readily suited with +both soil and site.</p> +<p>P. AMYGDALUS DULCIS (<i>syn A. dulcis</i>), Sweet Almond, of +which there are three distinct varieties, P.A. dulcis purpurea, +P.A. dulcis macrocarpa, and P.A. dulcis pendula, should be included +in every collection of these handsome flowering plants.</p> +<p>P. AVIUM JULIANA (<i>syn Cerasus Juliana</i>).—St. +Julian's Cherry. South Europe. This bears large flowers of a most +beautiful and delicate blush tint. P. Avium multiplex is a double +form of the Wild Cherry, or Gean, with smaller leaves than the +type.</p> +<p>P. BOISSIERII (<i>syn Amygdalus Boissierii</i>).—Asia +Minor, 1879. This is a bushy shrub, with almost erect, long, and +slender branches, and furnished with leaves an inch long, elliptic, +and thick of texture. Flowers pale flesh-coloured, and produced +abundantly. It is a very ornamental and distinct plant, and is +sure, when better known, to attract a considerable amount of +attention.</p> +<p>P. CERASIFERA (<i>syn P. Myrobalana</i>).—Cherry, or +Myrobalan Plum. Native Country unknown. A medium-sized tree, with +an abundance of small white flowers, which are particularly +attractive if they escape the early spring frosts. It is of stout, +branching habit, with a well-rounded head, and has of late years +attracted a good deal of notice as a hedge plant. P. cerasifera +Pissardii, the purple-leaved Cherry plum, is a remarkable and +handsome variety, in which the leaves are deep purple, thus +rendering the plant one of the most distinct and +ornamental-foliaged of the family. It produces its white, +blush-tinted flowers in May. It was received by M.A. Chatenay, of +Sceau, from M. Pissard, director of the garden of His Majesty the +Shah of Persia. When it flowered it was figured in the <i>Revue +Horticole</i>, 1881, p. 190.</p> +<p>P. CERASUS (<i>syn Cerasus vulgaris</i>).—Common Cherry. A +favourite medium-sized tree, and one that lends itself readily to +cultivation. As an ornamental park tree this Cherry, though common, +must not be despised, for during summer, when laden with its pure +white flowers, or again in autumn when myriads of the black, +shining fruits hang in clusters from its branches, it will be +readily admitted that few trees have a more beautiful or +conspicuous appearance, P. Cerasus flore-pleno (double-flowered +Cherry) is a distinct and desirable variety. P. Cerasus multiplex +is a very showy double form, more ornamental than P. Avium +muliplex, and also known under the names of <i>Cerasus +ranunculiflora</i> and <i>C. Caproniana multiplex</i>. P. Cerasus +semperflorens (<i>syn Cerasus semperflorens</i>), the All Saints, +Ever Flowering, or Weeping, Cherry, is another valuable variety, of +low growth, and with gracefully drooping branches, particularly +when the tree is old. It is a very desirable lawn tree, and flowers +at intervals during the summer.</p> +<p>P. CHAMAECERASUS (<i>syn Cerasus +Chamaecerasus</i>).—Ground Cherry. Europe, 1597. This is a +dwarf, slender-branched, and gracefully pendent shrub, of free +growth, undoubted hardihood, and well worthy of extended +cultivation. The variety C. Chamaecerasus variegata has the leaves +suffused with greenish lemon. There is also a creeping form named +P. Chamaecerasus pendula.</p> +<p>P. DAVIDIANA.—Abbé David's Almond. China. This is the tree +to which, under the name of Amygdalus Davidiana alba, a First-class +Certificate was awarded in 1892 by the Royal Horticultural Society. +The typical species is a native of China, from whence it was +introduced several years ago, but it is still far from common. It +is the earliest of the Almonds to unfold its white flowers, for in +mild winters some of them expand before the end of January; but +March, about the first week, it is at its best. It is of more +slender growth than the common Almond, and the flowers, which are +individually smaller, are borne in great profusion along the shoots +of the preceding year, so that a specimen, when in full flower, is +quite one mass of bloom. There is a rosy-tinted form known as +Amygdalus Davidiana rubra.</p> +<p>P. DIVARICATA, from the Caucasus (1822), is useful on account of +the pure white flowers being produced early in the year, and before +the leaves. It has a graceful, easy habit of growth, and inclined +to spread, and makes a neat lawn or park specimen.</p> +<p>P. DOMESTICA, Common Garden Plum, and P. domestica insititia, +Bullace Plum, are both very ornamental-flowering species, and some +of the varieties are even more desirable than the parent +plants.</p> +<p>P. ILLICIFOLIA (<i>syn Cerasus +ilicifolius</i>).—Holly-leaved Cherry. California. A distinct +evergreen species, with thick leathery leaves, and erect racemes of +small white flowers. A native of dry hilly ground along the coast +from San Francisco to San Diego. Hardy in most situations, but +requiring light warm soil and a dry situation.</p> +<p>P. LAUNESIANA (<i>syn Cerasus Launesiana</i>).—Japan, +1870. This is a valuable addition to the already long list of +ornamental-flowering Cherries. It flowers in the early spring, when +the tree is literally enshrouded in rose-coloured flowers, and +which produce a very striking effect. The tree is quite hardy, +flowers well even in a young state, and will grow in any soil that +suits our common wild species.</p> +<p>P. LAUROCERASUS (<i>syn Cerasus Laurocerasus</i>).—Common, +or Cherry Laurel. Levant, 1629. Although a well-known garden and +park shrub, of which a description is unnecessary, the common or +Cherry Laurel, when in full flower, must be ranked amongst our more +ornamental shrubs. There are several varieties all worthy of +culture for the sake of their evergreen leaves and showy flower +spikes. P. Laurocerasus rotundifolia has leaves that are broader in +proportion to their length than those of the common species; P. +Laurocerasus caucasica is of sturdy growth, with deep green leaves, +and a compact habit of growth; P. Laurocerasus colchica is the +freest-flowering Laurel in cultivation, with horizontally arranged +branches and pale green leaves; P. Laurocerasus latifolia, a rather +tender shrub, with bold handsome foliage; and P. Laurocerasus +parvifolia, of low growth, but never very satisfactory in +appearance. Three other less common forms might also be mentioned. +P. Laurocerasus angustifolia, with narrow leaves; P. Laurocerasus +camelliaefolia, with thick leathery foliage; and P. Laurocerasus +intermedia, halfway between P. Laurocerasus angustifolia and the +common Laurel.</p> +<p>P. LUSITANICA (<i>syn Cerasus lusitanica</i>).—Portugal +Laurel. Portugal, 1648. A well-known shrub or small growing tree, +and one of the most valuable of all our hardy evergreens. It is of +neat and compact growth, with a good supply of bright green shining +foliage, and bears long spikes of pleasing creamy white perfumed +flowers. P. lusitanica myrtifolia (Myrtle-leaved Portugal Laurel) +differs from the species in the smaller, longer, and narrower +leaves, which are more thickly arranged, and in its more decided +upright habit. P. lusitanica variegata is hardly sufficiently +constant or distinct to warrant recommendation. P. lusitanica +azorica, from the Azores, is of more robust growth than the common +plant, with larger and richer green leaves, and the bark of the +younger branches is of a very decided reddish tinge.</p> +<p>P. MAHALEB (<i>syn Cerasus Mahaleb</i>).—The Mahaleb, or +Perfumed Cherry. South Europe, 1714. This and its variegated +variety P. Mahaleb variegata are very free-flowering shrubs, and of +neat growth. The variegated variety is well worthy of attention, +having a clear silvery variegation, chiefly confined to the leaf +margin, but in a less degree to the whole of the foliage, and +imparting to it a bright, glaucous tint that is highly ornamental. +There is a partially weeping form named P. Mahaleb pendula.</p> +<p>P. MARITIMA.—Beach or Sand Plum. North America, 1800. A +prostrate, spreading shrub, that is of value for planting in poor +sandy soil, and along the sea coast. The flowers are small, but +plentifully produced.</p> +<p>P. NANA (<i>syns Amygdalus nana</i> and <i>A. +Besseriana</i>).—Dwarf Almond. From Tartary, 1683. This is of +dwarf, twiggy growth, rarely more than 3 feet high, and bearing an +abundance of rose-coloured flowers in early February. From its +neat, small growth, and rich profusion of flowers, this dwarf +Almond may be reckoned as a most useful and desirable shrub. +Suckers are freely produced in any light free soil.</p> +<p>P. PADUS (<i>syn Cerasus Padus</i>).—Bird Cherry or +Hagberry. An indigenous species, with oblong, doubly-serrated +leaves, and terminal or axillary racemes of pure-white flowers. It +is a handsome and distinct small-growing tree, and bears exposure +at high altitudes in a commendable manner.</p> +<p>P. PANICULATA FLORE-PLENO (<i>syns Cerasus serrulata +flore-pleno</i> and <i>C. Sieboldii</i>).—China, 1822. This +is one of the most desirable of the small-growing and +double-flowered Cherries. It is of neat growth, with short, stout +branches that are sparsely furnished with twigs, and smooth, +obovate, pointed leaves, bristly serrated on the margins. Flowers +double and white at first, but afterwards tinged with pink, freely +produced and of good, lasting substance. P. paniculata Watereri is +a handsome variety that most probably may be linked to the +species.</p> +<p>P. PENNSYLVANIA.—American Wild Red Cherry. North America, +1773. This is an old-fashioned garden tree, and one of the +choicest, producing in May a great abundance of its tiny white +flowers.</p> +<p>P. PERSICA FLORE-PLENO (<i>syns Amygdalus Persica +flore-pleno</i> and <i>Persica vulgaris</i>), double-flowering +Peach, is likewise well worthy of culture, there being white, rose, +and crimson-flowering forms.</p> +<p>P. PUDDUM (<i>syns P. Pseudo-cerasus</i> and <i>Cerasus +Pseudo-cerasus</i>).—Bastard Cherry. China, 1891. There are +very few more ornamental trees in cultivation in this country than +the double-flowering Cherry. It makes a charming small-growing +tree, is of free growth and perfectly hardy, and one of, if not the +most, floriferous of the tribe. The flowers are individually large, +pinky or purplish-white, and produced with the leaves in April.</p> +<p>P. SINENSIS.—China, 1869. A Chinese Plum of somewhat +slender growth, and with the branches wreathed in small, white +flowers. It is often seen as a pot plant, but it is one of the +hardiest of its family. P. sinensis flore-pleno is a double white +form, and the most ornamental for pot work. There is also a variety +with rose-coloured flowers.</p> +<p>P. SPINOSA.—Sloe, or Blackthorn. An indigenous, spiny +shrub, with tiny white flowers; and P. spinosa flore-pleno has +small, rosette-like flowers that are both showy and effective.</p> +<p>P. TOMENTOSA.—Japan, 1872. This is one of the most +desirable of hardy shrubs, with large, white, flesh-tinted flowers +produced in the first weeks of March, and in such quantities as +almost to hide the branches from view. It forms a well-rounded, +dense bush of 5 feet or 6 feet high.</p> +<p>P. TRILOBA (<i>syns P. virgata, Amygdalopsis Lindleyi</i> and +<i>Prunopsis Lindleyi</i>).—China, 1857. This is a very +handsome early-flowering shrub, that is at once recognised by the +generally three-lobed leaves. It is one of the first to flower, the +blossoms being produced in March and April, and sometimes even +earlier when the plant is grown against a sunny, sheltered wall. +The semi-double flowers are large and of good substance, and of a +rosy-white tint, but deep rose in the bud state. There is a nursery +form of this plant with white flowers, named P. triloba alba. It is +quite hardy, bears pruning well, and grows quickly, soon covering a +large space of a wall or warm, sunny bank. As an ornamental +flowering lawn shrub it has few equals, the blossoms remaining good +for fully a fortnight.</p> +<p>P. VIRGINIANA (<i>syn Cerasus virginiana</i>) and P. SEROTINA +(North American Bird Cherries) are worthy species, with long +clusters of flowers resembling those of our native Bird Cherry. +They are large-growing species, and, particularly the latter, are +finding favour with cultivators in this country on account of their +bold and ornamental appearance.</p> +<h4>PTELEA.</h4> +<p>PTELEA TRIFOLIATA.—Hop Tree, or Swamp Dogwood. North +America, 1704. A small-growing tree, with trifoliolate, +yellowish-green leaves placed on long footstalks, and inconspicuous +greenish flowers. The leaves, when bruised, emit an odour +resembling Hops. P. trifoliata variegata is one of the handsomest +of golden-leaved trees, and is well worthy of extensive planting. +It is preferable in leaf colouring to the golden Elder. Perfectly +hardy.</p> +<h4>PUNICA.</h4> +<p>PUNICA GRANATUM.—Pomegranate. For planting against a +southern-facing wall this pretty shrub is well suited, but it is +not sufficiently hardy for the colder parts of the country. +Frequently in the more favoured parts of the country it reaches a +height of 14 feet, with a branch-spread of nearly as much, and is +then, when in full flower, an object of general admiration and of +the greatest beauty. The flowers are of a rich, bright scarlet +colour, and well set off by the glossy, dark green leaves. P. +Granatum rubra flore-pleno is a decidedly ornamental shrub, in +which the flowers are of a bright scarlet, and perfectly double. +They grow satisfactorily in light, but rich soil.</p> +<h4>PYRUS.</h4> +<p>PYRUS ARIA.—White Beam Tree. Europe (Britain). A shrub or +small-growing tree, with lobed leaves, covered thickly on the under +sides with a close, flocculent down. The flowers are small and +white, and produced in loose corymbs. It is a handsome small tree, +especially when the leaves are ruffled by the wind and the under +sides revealed to view. The red or scarlet fruit is showy and +beautiful.</p> +<p>P. AUCUPARIA.—Mountain Ash, or Rowan Tree. Too well-known +to need description, but one of our handsomest small-growing trees, +and whether for the sake of its dense corymbs of small white +flowers or large bunches of scarlet fruit it is always welcomed and +admired. P. Aucuparia pendula has the branches inclined to be +pendulous; and P. Aucuparia fructo-luteo differs from the normal +plant in having yellowish instead of scarlet fruit.</p> +<p>P. AMERICANA (<i>syn Sorbus americana</i>).—American +Mountain Ash. This species, a native of the mountains of +Pennsylvania and Virginia (1782), is much like our Rowan Tree in +general appearance, but the bunches of berries are larger, and of a +brighter red colour.</p> +<p>P. ANGUSTIFOLIA.—North America, 1750. A double-flowered +crab is offered under this name, of vigorous growth, bearing +delicate pink, rose-like flowers that are deliciously fragrant, and +borne contemporaneously with the leaves. The merits claimed for the +shrub are perfect hardihood, great beauty of blossom and leaf, +delicious fragrance, and adaptability to various soils. The +single-flowered form extends over large areas in the Atlantic +States of North America. They are very desirable, small-growing +trees, and are described by Professor Sargent as being not +surpassed in beauty by any of the small trees of North America.</p> +<p>P. BACCATA.—Siberian Crab. Siberia and Dahuria, 1784. This +is one of the most variable species in cultivation, and from which +innumerable forms have been developed, that differ either in habit, +foliage, flowers, or fruit. The deciduous calyx would seem to be +the only reliable distinguishing character. It is a +widely-distributed species, being found in North China and Japan, +Siberia and the Himalayas, and has from time immemorial been +cultivated by the Chinese and Japanese, so that it is not at all +surprising that numbers of forms have been developed.</p> +<p>P. CORONARIA.—Sweet Scented Crab. North America, 1724. +This is a handsome species, with ovate, irregularly-toothed leaves, +and pink and white fragrant flowers. The flowers are individually +large and corymbose, and are succeeded by small green fruit.</p> +<p>P. DOMESTICA (<i>syn Sorbus domestica</i>).—True Service. +Britain. This resembles the Mountain Ash somewhat, but the flowers +are panicled, and the berries fewer, larger, and pear-shaped. The +flowers are conspicuous enough to render the tree of value in +ornamental planting.</p> +<p>P. FLORIBUNDA (<i>syns P. Malus floribunda</i> and <i>Malus +microcarpa floribunda</i>).—China and Japan, 1818. The +Japanese Crabs are wonderfully floriferous, the branches being in +most instances wreathed with flowers that are individually not very +large, and rarely exceeding an inch in diameter when fully +expanded. Generally in the bud state the flowers are of a deep +crimson, but this disappears as they become perfectly developed, +and when a less striking tint of pinky-white is assumed. From the +St. Petersburgh gardens many very ornamental Crabs have been sent +out, these differing considerably in colour of bark, habit, and +tint of flowers. They have all been referred to the above species. +P. floribunda is a worthy form, and one of the most brilliant of +spring-flowering trees. The long, slender shoots are thickly +covered for almost their entire length with flowers that are rich +crimson in the bud state, but paler when fully opened. There are +numerous, very distinct varieties, such as P. floribunda +atrosanguinea, with deep red flowers; P. floribunda Elise Rathe, of +pendulous habit; P. floribunda John Downie, very beautiful in +fruit; P. floribunda pendula, a semi-weeping variety; P. floribunda +praecox, early-flowering; P. floribunda mitis, of small size; P. +floribunda Halleana or Parkmanii, probably the most beautiful of +all the forms; and P. floribunda Fairy Apple and P. floribunda +Transcendant Crab, of interest on account of their showy fruit. P. +floribunda Toringo (Toringo Crab) is a Japanese tree of small +growth, with sharply cut, usually three-lobed, pubescent leaves, +and small flowers. Fruit small, with deciduous calyx lobes.</p> +<p>P. GERMANICA (<i>syn Mespilus germanica</i>).—Common +Medlar. Europe (Britain), Asia Minor, Persia. Early records show +that the Medlar was cultivated for its fruit as early as 1596. Some +varieties are still grown for that purpose, and in that state the +tree is not devoid of ornament. The large, white flowers are +produced singly, but have a fine effect in their setting of long, +lanceolate, finely-serrate leaves during May.</p> +<p>P. JAPONICA (<i>syn Cydonia japonica</i>).—Japanese +Quince. Japan, 1815. This is one of the commonest of our garden +shrubs, and one that is peculiarly well suited for our climate, +whether planted as a standard or as a wall plant. The flowers are +brilliant crimson, and plentifully produced towards the end of +winter and before the leaves. Besides the species there are several +very fine varieties, including P. japonica albo cincta, P. japonica +atropurpurea, P. japonica coccinea, P. japonica flore-pleno, P. +japonica nivalis, a charming species, with snowy-white flowers; P. +japonica rosea, of a delicate rose-pink; and P. japonica princeps. +P. japonica cardinalis is one of the best of the numerous forms of +this beautiful shrub. The flowers are of large size, of full +rounded form, and of a deep cardinal-rose colour. They are produced +in great quantity along the branches. A well-grown specimen is in +April a brilliant picture of vivid colour, and the shrub is sooner +or later destined to a chief place amongst our ornamental flowering +shrubs. P. japonica Maulei (<i>syn Cydonia Maulei</i>), from Japan +(1874), is a rare shrub as yet, small of growth, and with every +twig festooned with the brightest of orange-scarlet flowers. It is +quite hardy, and succeeds well under treatment that will suit the +common species.</p> +<p>P. PRUNIFOLIA.—Siberia, 1758. Whether in flower or fruit +this beautiful species is sure to attract attention. It is a tree +of 25 feet in height, with nearly rotundate, glabrous leaves on +long footstalks, and pretty pinky-white flowers. The fruit is very +ornamental, being, when fully ripe, of a deep and glowing scarlet, +but there are forms with yellow, and green, as also striped +fruit.</p> +<p>P. RIVULARIS.—River-side Wild Service Tree. North-west +America, 1836. A native of North America, with terminal clusters of +white flowers, succeeded by sub-globose red or yellow fruit, is an +attractive and handsome species. The fruit is eaten by the Indians +of the North-west, and the wood, which is very hard and susceptible +of a fine polish, is largely used in the making of wedges. It is a +rare species in this country.</p> +<p>P. SINICA (<i>syn P. sinensis of Lindley</i>).—Chinese +Pear Tree. China and Cochin China, 1820. Another very ornamental +Crab, bearing a great abundance of rosy-pink or nearly white +flowers. It is a shrub-like tree, reaching a height of 20 feet, and +with an upright habit of growth. Bark of a rich, reddish-brown +colour. It is one of the most profuse and persistent bloomers of +the whole family.</p> +<p>P. SINENSIS (<i>syn Cydonia chinensis</i>).—Chinese +Quince. China, 1818. This is rarely seen in cultivation, it having, +comparatively speaking, few special merits of recommendation.</p> +<p>P. SMITHII (<i>syns Mespilis Smithii</i> and <i>M. +grandiflora</i>).—Smith's Medlar. Caucasus, 1800. The habit +of this tree closely resembles that of a Hawthorn, and although the +flowers are only half the size of those of the Common Medlar, they +are produced in greater profusion, so that the round-headed tree +becomes a sheet of white blossom during May and June. The +reddish-brown fruits are small for a Medlar, and ripen in +October.</p> +<p>P. TORMINALIS.—Wild Service Tree. A native species of +small growth, with ovate-cordate leaves, and small white flowers. +P. torminalis pinnatifida, with acutely-lobed leaves, and +oval-oblong fruit may just be mentioned.</p> +<p>P. VESTITA.—Nepaul White Beam. Nepaul, 1820. In this +species the leaves are very large, ovate-acute or elliptic, and +when young thickly coated with a white woolly-like substance, but +which with warm weather gradually gives way until they are of a +smooth and shining green. The flowers are borne in woolly racemose +corymbs, and are white succeeded by greenish-brown berries as large +as marbles.</p> +<p>Other species of less interest are P. varidosa, P. salicifolia, +P. salvaefolia, P. Bollwylleriana, and P. Amygdaliformis. They are +all of free growth, and the readiest culture, and being perfectly +hardy are well worthy of a much larger share of attention than they +have heretofore received.</p> +<h4>RHAMNUS.</h4> +<p>RHAMNUS ALATERNUS.—Mediterranean region, 1629. This is an +evergreen shrub, with lanceolate shining leaves of a dark +glossy-green colour, and pretty flowers produced from March till +June. There are several well-marked varieties, one with golden and +another with silvery leaves, and named respectively, R. Alaternus +foliis aureis, and R. Alaternus foliis argenteus.</p> +<p>R. ALPINUS.—Europe, 1752. This is a neat-growing species, +with greenish flowers and black fruit.</p> +<p>R. CATHARTICUS, Common Buckthorn, is a native, thorny species, +with ovate and stalked leaves, and small, thickly clustered +greenish flowers, succeeded by black berries about the size of +peas.</p> +<p>R. FRANGULA.—The Berry-bearing Alder. Europe and Britain. +A more erect shrub than the former, and destitute of spines. The +leaves too are larger, and the fruit of a dark purple colour when +ripe. More common in Britain than the former.</p> +<h4>RHAPHIOLEPIS.</h4> +<p>RHAPHIOLEPIS JAPONICA INTEGERRIMA (<i>syn R. ovata</i>).—A +Japanese shrub (1865), with deep green, ovate, leathery leaves that +are not over abundant, and produced generally at the branch-tips. +The pure white, fragrant flowers are plentifully produced when the +plant is grown in a cosy corner, or on a sunny wall. Though seldom +killed outright, the Raphiolepis becomes badly crippled in severe +winters. It is, however, a bold and handsome shrub, and one that +may be seen doing well in many gardens around London.</p> +<h4>RHAPHITHAMNUS.</h4> +<p>RHAPHITHAMNUS CYANOCARPUS (<i>syn Citharexylum cyanocarpum</i>). +Chili. This bears a great resemblance to some of the thorny +Berberis, and is at once a distinct and beautiful shrub. The +flowers are large and conspicuous, and of a taking bluish-lilac +colour. Having stood unharmed in Ireland through the unusually +severe winters of 1879-80, when many more common shrubs were killed +outright, it may be relied upon as at least fairly hardy. The soil +in which this rare and pretty shrub does best is a brown, fibrous +peat, intermingled with sharp sand.</p> +<h4>RHODODENDRON.</h4> +<p>RHODODENDRON ARBORESCENS (<i>syn Azalea arborescens</i>), from +the Carolina Mountains (1818), is a very showy, late-blooming +species. The white, fragrant flowers, and noble port, together with +its undoubted hardihood, should make this shrub a general favourite +with cultivators.</p> +<p>R. CALENDULACEUM (<i>syn Azalea calendulacea</i>), from North +America (1806), is another of the deciduous species, having oblong, +hairy leaves, and large orange-coloured flowers. It is of robust +growth, and in favoured situations reaches a height of 6 feet. When +in full flower the slopes of the Southern Alleghany Mountains are +rendered highly attractive by reason of the great flame-coloured +masses of this splendid plant, and are one of the great sights of +the American Continent during the month of June.</p> +<p>R. CALIFORNICUM.—California. A good hardy species with +broadly campanulate rosy-purple flowers, spotted with yellow.</p> +<p>R. CAMPANULATUM (<i>syn R. aeruginosum</i>).—Sikkim, 1825. +A small-growing species, rarely over 6 feet high, with elliptic +leaves that are fawn-coloured on the under sides. The campanulate +flowers are large and showy, rose or white and purple spotted, at +the base of the three upper lobes. In this country it is fairly +hardy, but suffers in very severe weather, unless planted in a +sheltered site.</p> +<p>R. CAMPYLOCARPUM.—Sikkim, 1851. This has stood the winter +uninjured in so many districts that it may at least be recommended +for planting in favoured situations and by the seaside. It is a +Sikkim species that was introduced about forty years ago, and is +still rather rare. The leaves are about 4 inches long, 2 inches +wide, and distinctly undulated on the margins. Flowers bell-shaped, +about 2 inches in diameter, and arranged in rather straggling +terminal heads. They are sulphur-yellow, without markings, a tint +distinct from any other known Indian species.</p> +<p>R. CATAWBIENSE.—Mountains from Virginia to Georgia, 1809. +A bushy, free growing species, with broadly oval leaves, and large +campanulate flowers, produced in compact, rounded clusters. They +vary a good deal in colour, but lilac-purple is the typical shade. +This is a very valuable species, and one that has given rise to a +large number of beautiful varieties.</p> +<p>R. CHRYSANTHUM is a Siberian species (1796) of very dwarf, +compact growth, with linear-lanceolate leaves that are ferruginous +on the under side, and beautiful golden-yellow flowers an inch in +diameter. It is a desirable but scarce species.</p> +<p>R. COLLETTIANUM is an Afghanistan species, and one that may be +reckoned upon as being perfectly hardy. It is of very dwarf habit, +and bears an abundance of small white and faintly fragrant flowers. +For planting on rockwork it is a valuable species.</p> +<p>R. DAHURICUM.—Dahuria, 1780. A small-growing, +scraggy-looking species of about a yard high, with oval-oblong +leaves that are rusty-tomentose on the under sides. The flowers, +which are produced in February, are purple or violet, in twos or +threes, and usually appear before the leaves. It is a +sparsely-leaved species, and of greatest value on account of the +flowers being produced so early in the season. One of the hardiest +species in cultivation. R. dahuricum atro-virens is a beautiful and +worthy variety because nearly evergreen.</p> +<p>R. FERRUGINEUM.—Alpine Rose. Europe, 1752. This dwarf +species, rarely exceeding a yard in height, occurs in abundance on +the Swiss Alps, and generally where few other plants are to be +found. It is a neat little compact shrub, with oblong-lanceolate +leaves that are rusty-scaly on the under sides, and has terminal +clusters of rosy-red flowers.</p> +<p>R. FLAVUM (<i>syn Azalea pontica</i>).—Pontic Azalea. A +native of Asia Minor (1793), is probably the commonest of the +recognised species, and may frequently, in this country, be seen +forming good round bushes of 6 feet in height, with hairy +lanceolate leaves, and large yellow flowers, though in this latter +it varies considerably, orange, and orange tinged with red, being +colours often present. It is of free growth in any good light peaty +or sandy soil.</p> +<p>R. HIRSUTUM.—Alpine Rose. South Europe, 1656. Very near R. +ferrugincum, but having ciliated leaves, with glands on both sides. +R. hallense and R. hirsutiforme are intermediate forms of a natural +cross between R. hirsutum and R. ferrugincum. They are handsome, +small-growing, brightly flowered plants, and worthy of culture.</p> +<p>R. INDICUM.—Indian Azalea. A native of China (1808), and +perfectly hardy in the more favoured portions of southern England, +where it looks healthy and happy out of doors, and blooms freely +from year to year. This is the evergreen so-called Azalea that is +so commonly cultivated in greenhouses, with long hirsute leaves, +and large showy flowers. R. indicum amoenum (<i>syn Azalea +amoena</i>), as a greenhouse plant is common enough, but except in +the South of England and Ireland it is not sufficiently hardy to +withstand severe frost. The flowers are, moreover, not very showy, +at least when compared with some of the newer forms, being dull +magenta, and rather lax of habit.</p> +<p>R. LEDIFOLIUM (<i>syns Azalea ledifolia</i> and <i>A. +liliiflora</i>).—Ledum-leaved Azalea. China, 1819. A +perfectly hardy species. The flowers are large and white, but +somewhat flaunting. It is, however, a desirable species for massing +in quantity, beside clumps of the pink and yellow flowered kinds. +Though introduced nearly three-quarters of a century ago, this is +by no means a common plant in our gardens.</p> +<p>R. MAXIMUM.—American Great Laurel. North America, 1756. +This is a very hardy American species, growing in favoured +localities from 10 feet to 15 feet high. Leaves oblong-lanceolate, +slightly ferruginous beneath. Flowers rose and white, in dense +clusters. There are several handsome varieties that vary to a wide +extent in the size and colour of flowers. R. maximum album bears +white flowers.</p> +<p>R. MOLLE (<i>syn Azalea mollis</i>), from Japan (1867), is a +dwarf, deciduous species of neat growth, with flame-coloured +flowers. It is very hardy, and a desirable acquisition to any +collection of small-growing shrubs.</p> +<p>R. OCCIDENTALE (<i>syn Azalea occidentalis</i>), Western Azalea, +is valuable in that the flowers are produced later than those of +almost any other species. These are white, blotched with yellow at +the base of the upper petals; and being produced when the leaves +are almost fully developed, have a very pleasing effect, +particularly as they are borne in great quantity, and show well +above the foliage. This is a Californian species that has been +found further west of the Rocky Mountains than any other member of +Ihe family.</p> +<p>R. PARVIFOLIUM.—Baiacul, 1877. This is a pleasing and +interesting species, with small deep-green ovate leaves, and +clusters of white flowers, margined with rose. It is of dwarf and +neat growth, and well suited for planting on the rock garden.</p> +<p>R. PONTICUM.—Pontic Rhododendron, or Rose Bay. Asia Minor, +1763. This is the commonest species in cultivation, and although +originally a native of the district by the Black or Pontic Sea, is +now naturalised in many parts of Europe. It is the hardiest and +least exacting of the large flowered species, and is generally +employed as a stock on which to graft the less hardy kinds. +Flowers, in the typical species, pale purplish-violet and spotted. +There is a great number of varieties, including white, pink, +scarlet, and double-flowering.</p> +<p>R. PONTICUM AZALEOIDES (<i>syn R. ponticum deciduum</i>), a +hybrid between R. ponticum and a hardy Azalea, is a sub-evergreen +form, with a compact habit of growth, and bearing loose heads of +fragrant lavender-and-white flowers. It is quite hardy at Kew.</p> +<p>R. RACEMOSUM.—Central China, 1880. A neat little species, +of dwarf, compact growth, from the Yunnan district of China. The +flowers are pale pink edged with a deeper tint, about an inch +across, and borne in terminal and axillary clusters. It has stood +unharmed for several years in southern England, so may be regarded +as at least fairly hardy. Its neat dwarf growth, and flowering as +it does when hardly a foot high, renders it a choice subject for +the Alpine garden.</p> +<p>R. RHODORA (<i>syn Rhodora canadensis</i>).—North America, +1767. In general aspect this shrub resembles an Azalea, but it +comes into flower long even before R. molle. Being deciduous, and +producing its pretty purplish sweet-scented flowers in early +spring, gives to the plant a particular value for gardening +purposes, clumps of the shrub being most effective at the very time +when flowers are at their scarcest. It thrives well in any peaty +soil, and is quite hardy.</p> +<p>R. VISCOSUM (<i>syn Azalea viscosa</i>).—Clammy Azalea, or +Swamp Honeysuckle. North America, 1734. This is one of the +hardiest, most floriferous, and easily managed of the family. The +white or rose and deliciously fragrant flowers are produced in +great abundance, and impart when at their best quite a charm to the +shrub. It delights in rather moist, peaty soil, and grows all the +stronger and flowers all the more freely when surrounded by rising +ground or tall trees at considerable distance away. The variety R. +viscosum glaucum has leaves paler than those of the species; and R. +viscosum nitidum, of dwarf, compact growth, has leaves deep green +on both sides.</p> +<p>R. WILSONI, a cross between R. ciliatum and R. glaucum, is of +remarkably neat growth, and worthy of cultivation where small-sized +kinds are a desideratum.</p> +<p>The following Himalayan species have been found to thrive well +in the warmer parts of England, and in close proximity to the +sea;—R. argenteum, R. arboreum, R. Aucklandii, R. barbatum, +R. ciliatum, R. campanulatum, R. cinnabarinum, R. Campbelli, R. +compylocarpum, R. eximium, R. Fortunei, R. Falconeri, R. glaucum, +R. Hodgsoni, R. lanatum, R. niveum, R. Roylei, R. Thompsoni, and R. +Wallichii.</p> +<p>R. Ungernii and R. Smirnowii, from the Armenian frontier, are +also worthy of culture, but they are at present rare in cultivation +in this country.</p> +<p>Few hardy shrubs, it must be admitted, are more beautiful than +these Rhododendrons, none flowering more freely or lasting longer +in bloom. Their requirements are by no means hard to meet, light, +peaty soil, or even good sandy loam, with a small admixture of +decayed vegetable matter, suiting them well. Lime in any form must, +however, be kept away both from Azaleas and Rhododendrons. They +like a quiet, still place, where a fair amount of moisture is +present in the air and soil.</p> +<h4>HARDY HYBRID RHODODENDRONS.</h4> +<p>GHENT AZALEAS, as generally known, from having been raised in +Belgium, are a race of hybrids that have been produced by crossing +the Asiatic R. pontica with the various American species noted +above, but particularly R. calendulaceum, R. nudiflorum, and R. +viscosum, and these latter with one another. These have produced +hybrids of almost indescribable beauty, the flowers of which range +in colour from crimson and pink, through orange and yellow, to +almost white.</p> +<p>Within the last few years quite an interesting race of +Rhododendrons has been brought out, with double or hose-in-hose +flowers, and very appropriately termed the Narcissiflora group. +They include fully a dozen highly ornamental kinds, with flowers of +varying shades of colour.</p> +<p>The following list includes some of the best and most beautiful +of these varieties:—</p> +<table width="60%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary= +"Rhododendron Varities"> +<tr> +<td>Alba marginata.</td> +<td>Jules Caesar.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ardens.</td> +<td>La Superbe.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Astreans.</td> +<td>Louis Hellebuyck.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Aurore-de-Royghen.</td> +<td>Madame Baumann.</td></tr> +<tr align="left"> +<td>Baron G. Pyke.</td> +<td>Marie Verschaffelt.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Beauté Celeste.</td> +<td>Mathilde.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bessie Holdaway.</td> +<td>Meteor.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Belle Merveille.</td> +<td>Nancy Waterer.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bijou des Amateurs.</td> +<td>Ne Plus Ultra.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cardinal.</td> +<td>Optima.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Charles Bowman.</td> +<td>Pallas.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Comte de Flanders.</td> +<td>Queen Victoria.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Decus hortorum.</td> +<td>Reine des Belges.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Due de Provence.</td> +<td>Remarquable.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Emperor Napoleon III.</td> +<td>Roi des Belges.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Eugenie.</td> +<td>Roi des Feux.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fitz Quihou.</td> +<td>Sinensis rosea.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Glorie de Belgique.</td> +<td>Sulphurea.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Gloria Mundi.</td> +<td>Triumphans.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Gueldres Rose.</td> +<td>Unique.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Honneur de Flandre.</td> +<td>Viscocephala.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Imperator.</td> +<td> </td></tr></table> +<p>Double-flowered Rhododendrons:—</p> +<table width="55%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" summary= +"Double-flowered Rhododendrons"> +<tr> +<td>Bijou de Gendbrugge.</td> +<td>Heroine.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Louis Aimée Van Houtte.</td> +<td>Ophirié.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Graf Von Meran.</td> +<td>Narcissiflora.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Mina Van Houtte.</td> +<td>Van Houttei.</td></tr></table> +<h4>RHODOTHAMNUS.</h4> +<p>RHODOTHAMNUS CHAMAECISTUS (<i>syn Rhododendron +Chamaecistus</i>).—Ground Cistus. Alps of Austria and +Bavaria, 1786. A very handsome shrub, of small growth, and widely +distributed in Bavaria, Switzerland, and elsewhere. Planted in +peaty soil and in a rather damp, shady situation it thrives best, +the oval-serrate leaves, covered with white, villous hairs, and +pretty rosy flowers, giving it an almost unique appearance. It is a +charming rock shrub and perfectly hardy.</p> +<h4>RHODOTYPOS.</h4> +<p>RHODOTYPOS KERRIOIDES.—White Kerria. Japan, 1866. A +handsome deciduous shrub, and one that is readily propagated, and +comparatively cheap. It is distinct and pretty when in flower, and +one of the hardiest and most accommodating of shrubs. The leaves +are handsome, being deeply serrated and silky on the under sides, +while the pure white flowers are often about 2 inches across. It +grows about 4 feet in height, and is a very distinct and desirable +shrub.</p> +<h4>RHUS.</h4> +<p>RHUS COTINUS.—Smoke Plant, Wig Tree, or Venetian Sumach. +Spain to Caucasus, 1656. On account of its singular appearance this +shrub always attracts the attention of even the most unobservant in +such matters. It is a spreading shrub, about 6 feet high, with +rotundate, glaucous leaves, on long petioles. The flowers are small +and inconspicuous, but the feathery nature of the flower clusters, +occasioned by the transformation of the pedicels and hairs into +fluffy awns, renders this Sumach one of the most curious and +attractive of hardy shrubs. Spreading about freely, this south +European shrub should be allowed plenty of room so that it may +become perfectly developed.</p> +<p>R. GLABRA (<i>syns R. caroliniana, R. coccinea, R. elegans</i>, +and <i>R. sanguinea</i>).—Smooth or Scarlet Sumach. North +America, 1726. A smaller tree than the last, with leaves that are +deep glossy-green above and whitish beneath. The male tree bears +greenish-yellow flowers, and the female those of a reddish-scarlet, +but otherwise no difference between the trees can be detected. R. +glabra laciniata (Fern Sumach) is a distinct and handsome variety, +with finely cut elegant leaves, and a dwarf and compact habit of +growth. The leaves are very beautiful, and resemble those of the +Grevillea robusta. It is a worthy variety.</p> +<p>R. SUCCEDANEA.—Red Lac Sumach. Japan, 1768. This is not +often seen planted out, though in not a few places it succeeds +perfectly well. It has elegant foliage, each leaf being 15 inches +long, and divided into several pairs of leaflets.</p> +<p>R. TOXICODENDRON.—Poison Oak or Poison Ivy. North America, +1640. This species is of half-scandent habit, with large, +trifoliolate leaves, which turn of various tints of red and crimson +in the autumn. It is quite hardy, and seen to best advantage when +allowed to run over large rockwork and tree stumps in partial +shade. The variety R. toxicodendron radicans has ample foliage, and +is suited for similar places to the last. The leaves turn bright +yellow in the autumn.</p> +<p>R. TYPHINA.—Stag's Horn Sumach, or Vinegar Tree. A native +of North America (1629), and a very common shrub in our gardens, +probably on account of its spreading rapidly by suckers. It is, +when well grown, a handsome and distinct shrub or small tree, with +large, pinnate, hairy leaves, and shoots that are rendered very +peculiar by reason of the dense hairs with which they are covered +for some distance back. The dense clusters of greenish-yellow +flowers are sure to attract attention, although they are by no +means pretty. R. typhina viridiflora is the male-flowered form of +this species, with green flowers.</p> +<p>R. VENENATA (<i>syn R. vernix</i>).—Poison Elder, Sumach, +or Dogwood. North America, 1713. This is remarkable for its +handsome foliage, and is the most poisonous species of the +genus.</p> +<p>All the Sumachs grow and flower freely in any good garden soil, +indeed, in that respect they are not at all particular. They throw +up shoots freely, so that increasing the stock is by no means +difficult.</p> +<h4>RIBES.</h4> +<p>RIBES ALPINUM PUMILUM AUREUM.—Golden Mountain Currant. The +ordinary green form is a native of Britain, of which the plant +named above is a dwarf golden-leaved variety.</p> +<p>R. AUREUM.—Buffalo Currant. North-west America, 1812. In +this species the leaves are lobed and irregularly toothed, while +the flowers are yellow, or slightly reddish-tinted. It is of rather +slender and straggling growth. R. aureum praecox is an +early-flowering variety; and R. aureum serotinum is valued on +account of the flowers being produced much later than are those of +the parent plant.</p> +<p>R. CEREUM (<i>syn R. inebrians</i>).—North America, 1827. +One of the dwarfer-growing species of Flowering Currant, forming a +low, dense bush of Gooseberry-like appearance, but destitute of +spines. By May it is in full flower, and the blooms, borne in large +clusters, have a pretty pinkish tinge. The foliage is small, neat, +and of a tender green that helps to set off the pretty flowers to +perfection. It is a native of North-west America, and perfectly +hardy in every part of the country. Though not equal in point of +floral beauty with our common flowering Currant, still the +miniature habit, pretty and freely-produced pink-tinted flowers, +and fresh green foliage will all help to make it an acquisition +wherever planted. Like the other species of Ribes the present plant +grows and flowers very freely in any soil, and almost however +poor.</p> +<p>R. FLORIDUM (<i>syns R. missouriense</i> and <i>R. +pennsylvanicum</i>).—American Wild Black Currant. North +America, 1729. This should be included in all collections for its +pretty autumnal foliage, which is of a bright purplish bronze.</p> +<p>R. GORDONIANUM (<i>syns R. Beatonii</i> and <i>R. Loudonii</i>) +is a hybrid between R. aureum and R. sanguineum, and has reddish, +yellow tinged flowers, and partakes generally of the characters of +both species.</p> +<p>R. MULTIFLORUM, Eastern Europe (1822), is another desirable +species, with long drooping racemes of greenish-yellow flowers, and +small red berries.</p> +<p>R. SANGUINEUM.—Flowering Currant. North-west America, +1826. An old inhabitant of our gardens, and well deserving of all +that can be said in its favour as a beautiful spring-flowering +shrub. It is of North American origin, with deep red and +abundantly-produced flowers. There are several distinct varieties +as follows:—R. sanguineum flore-pleno (Burning Bush), with +perfectly double flowers, which are produced later and last longer +than those of the species; R. sanguineum album, with pale pink, or +almost white flowers; R. sanguineum atro-rubens, with +deeply-coloured flowers; R. sanguineum glutinosum and R. sanguineum +grandiflorum, bearing compact clusters of flowers that are +rosy-flesh coloured on the outside and white or pinky-white +within.</p> +<p>R. SPECIOSUM.—Fuchsia-flowered Gooseberry. California, +1829. A Californian species, remarkable for being more or less +spiny, and with flowers resembling some of the Fuchsias. They are +crimson, and with long, protruding stamens. As a wall plant, where +it often rises to 6 feet in height, this pretty and taking species +is most often seen.</p> +<p>The flowering Currants are of unusually free growth, and are not +at all particular about soil, often thriving well in that of a very +poor description. They are increased readily from cuttings and by +layers.</p> +<h4>ROBINIA.</h4> +<p>ROBINIA DUBIA (<i>syns R. echiuata</i> and <i>R. +ambigua</i>).—A very pretty garden hybrid form, said to have +for its parentage R. Pseud-Acacia and R. viscosa. It is of quite +tree-like growth and habit, with unusually short spines, and +Pea-green foliage. The flowers are produced pretty freely, and are +of a pale rose colour, and well set off by the light-green leaves, +over which they hang in neat and compact spikes.</p> +<p>R. HISPIDA.—Rose Acacia. North America, 1743. Amongst +large-growing shrubs this is certainly one of the most distinct and +handsome, and at the same time one of the hardiest and readiest of +culture. Under favourable conditions it grows about 16 feet high, +with large oval or oblong leaflets, and having the young branches +densely clothed with bristles. The flowers, which are individually +larger than those of the False Acacia, are of a beautiful +rosy-pink, and produced in June and July. It is a very ornamental, +small growing species, and one that is peculiarly suitable for +planting where space is limited. R. hispida macrophylla +(Large-leaved Rose Acacia) is rendered distinct by its generally +more robust growth, and by its larger foliage and flowers. The +species, however, varies a good deal in respect of the size of +leaves and flowers.</p> +<p>R. PSEUD-ACACIA.—Common Locust, Bastard Acacia, or False +Acacia. North America, 1640. A noble-growing and handsome tree, +with smooth shoots, and stipules that become transformed into +sharp, stiff spines. The flowers are in long racemes, pure-white or +slightly tinged with pink, and with a faint pleasing odour. This +species has been sub-divided into a great number of varieties, some +of which are very distinct, but the majority are not sufficiently +so to warrant special attention. The following include the best and +most popular kinds:—R. Pseud-Acacia Decaisneana, a distinct +form bearing light pinky flowers; R. Pseud-Acacia Bessoniana, with +thornless branches and a dense head of refreshing Pea-green +foliage; R. Pseud-Acacia angustifolia, with narrow leaves; R. +Pseud-Acacia aurea, a conspicuous but not very constant golden +leaved form; R. Pseud-Acacia inermis, of which there are weeping, +upright, and broad-leaved forms, has narrow leaves that are +glaucous beneath, and the characteristic spines of the species are +wanting or rarely well developed. R. Pseud-Acacia monophylla is +very distinct, the leaves being entire instead of pinnate; while R. +Pseud-Acacia crispa has curiously-curled foliage. Then there is the +peculiar R. Pseud-Acacia tortuosa, of ungainly habit; R. +Pseud-Acacia umbraculifera, with a spreading head; R. Pseud-Acacia +sophoraefolia, the leaves of which resemble those of Sophora +japonica; and R. Pseud-Acacia amorphaefolia, with very large +foliage when compared with the parent tree. The above may be taken +as the most distinct and desirable forms of the False Acacia, but +there are many others, such as R. Pseud-Acacia colutoides, R. +Pseud-Acacia semperflorens, and R. Pseud-Acacia Rhederi, all more +or less distinct from the typical tree.</p> +<p>R. VISCOSA (<i>syn R. glutinosa</i>).—Clammy Locust. North +America, 1797. This is a small-growing tree, and readily +distinguished by the clammy bark of the younger shoots. Flowers in +short racemes, and of a beautiful rose-pink, but varying a good +deal in depth of tint. It is a valuable species for ornamental +planting, and flowers well even in a young state.</p> +<p>Few soils would seem to come amiss to the Acacias, but +observations made in many parts of the country conclusively prove +that the finest specimens are growing on light, rich loam overlying +a bed of gravel. They are propagated from seed, by layers, or by +grafting.</p> +<h4>ROSA.</h4> +<p>ROSA ALBA.—This is a supposed garden hybrid between R. +canina and R. gallica (1597). It has very glaucous foliage, and +large flowers, which vary according to the variety from pure white +to rose.</p> +<p>R. REPENS (<i>syn R. arvensis</i>).—Field Rose. Europe +(Britain). This species bears white flowers that are produced in +threes or fours, rarely solitary. The whole plant is usually of +weak and straggling growth, with shining leaves.</p> +<p>R. BRACTEATA (Macartney Rose), R. PALUSTRIS (Marsh Rose), and R. +MICROPHYLLA (small-leaved Rose), belong to that section supplied +with floral leaves or bracts, and shaggy fruit. They are of compact +growth, with neat, shining leaves, the flowers of the +first-mentioned being rose or carmine, and those of the other two +pure white.</p> +<p>R. CANINA.—Dog Rose. Our native Roses have now been +reduced to five species, of which the present is one of the number. +It is a straggling shrub, 6 feet or 8 feet high, and armed with +curved spines. Flowers sweet-scented, pink or white, and solitary, +or in twos or threes at the branch tips.</p> +<p>R. CENTIFOLIA.—Hundred-leaved, or Cabbage Rose. Orient, +1596. A beautiful, sweetly-scented species, growing to 6 feet in +height, and having leaves that are composed of from three to five +broadly ovate, toothed leaflets. The flowers are solitary, or two +or three together, drooping, and of a rosy hue, but differing in +tint to a considerable extent. This species has varied very much, +principally through the influences of culture and crossing, the +three principal and marked variations being size, colour, and +clothing of the calyx tube. There are the common Provence Roses, +the miniature Provence or Pompon Roses, and the Moss Rose—all +of which are merely races of R. centifolia.</p> +<p>R. DAMASCENA.—Damask Rose. Orient, 1573. A bushy shrub +varying from 2 feet to 8 feet in height according to cultural +treatment and age. The flowers are white or red, large, borne in +corymbose clusters, and produced in great profusion during June and +July. The varieties that have arisen under cultivation by seminal +variation, hybridisation, or otherwise are exceedingly numerous. +Those now grown are mostly double, and a large proportion of them +are light in colour. They include the quatre saisons and the true +York and Lancaster. The flowers are highly fragrant, and, like +those of R. centifolia and other species, are used indiscriminately +for the purpose of making rose water. The species is distinguished +from R. centifolia by its larger prickles, elongated fruit, and +long, reflexed sepals.</p> +<p>R. FEROX.—North Asia. This species bears flowers in +clusters of two and three together, terminating the branches. The +petals are white with a yellow base. The branches are erect, and +thickly crowded with prickles of unequal size.</p> +<p>R. GALLICA.—The French, or Gallic Rose. Europe and Western +Asia. This Rose forms a bushy shrub 2 feet to 3 feet high, and has +been so long grown in British gardens that the date of its +introduction has been lost in obscurity. It is doubtless the red +Rose of ancient writers, but at present the flowers may be red, +crimson, or white, and there are varieties of all intermediate +shades. Several variegated or striped Roses belong here, including +Gloria Mundi, a popular favourite often but erroneously grown under +the name of York and Lancaster. They all flower in June and July, +and, together with other kinds that flower about the same time, are +generally known as summer or old-fashioned garden Roses.</p> +<p>R. HEMISPHAERICA (<i>syn R. sulphurea</i>).—Orient, 1629. +A bushy plant growing from 4 feet to 6 feet high, and bearing large +double yellow flowers.</p> +<p>R. INDICA.—Common China, or Monthly Rose. Introduced from +China, near Canton, in 1789, but the native country is not known +with certainty. The flowers of the plant when first introduced were +red and generally semi-double, but the varieties now vary through +all shades of blush, rose, and crimson, and the plant varies +exceedingly in height, in its different forms 1 foot to 20 feet in +height. The Monthly Roses form bushes generally about 2 feet high +or a little over. The Noisette and Tea Roses, with several other +more or less distinct types, belong here, but as most of them are +well known and otherwise well cared for, it is unnecessary to dwell +upon them in detail beyond the two varieties here given, and which +should not be overlooked.</p> +<p>R. INDICA MINIMA (<i>syn R. semperflorens minima, R. +Lawrenceana</i>, and <i>R. minima</i>).—Fairy, or Miniature +Rose. China, 1810. A beautiful little Rose that rarely exceeds a +height of 4 inches or 5 inches. The flowers are about the size of a +half-crown, and somewhat after the York and Lancaster as regards +colouring, though not, perhaps, so distinctly marked, and are +produced in abundance. For the rock garden it is one of the most +desirable, and being perfectly hardy still further adds to its +value.</p> +<p>R. INDICA SEMPERFLORENS (<i>syns R. bengalensis</i> and <i>R. +diversifolia</i>).—The Ever-flowering China Rose. China, +1789. A somewhat spreading bush, with slender branches, armed with +curved prickles. Leaves composed of three or five leaflets, and +tinted with purple. Flowers almost scentless, solitary, +semi-double, and of a bright and showy crimson.</p> +<p>R. LUTEA (<i>syn R. Eglanteria</i>).—The Austrian Brier, +or Yellow Eglantine. South Europe, 1596. This belongs to the Sweet +Brier section, and is a bush of from 3 feet to 6 feet high, with +shining dark-green leaves, and large, cup-shaped flowers that are +yellow or sometimes tinged with reddish-brown within. The Scarlet +Austrian Brier (R. lutea punicea) is a handsome variety, with the +upper surface of the petals scarlet and the under surface +yellow.</p> +<p>R. RUBIGINOSA (<i>syn R. Eglanteria</i>).—Eglantine, or +Sweet Brier. This species has pink flowers and clammy leaves, which +are glandular on the under surface, and give out a fragrant smell +by which it may be recognised.</p> +<p>R. RUGOSA (<i>syn R. ferox of Bot. Reg.</i>), a Japanese +species, and its variety R. rugosa alba, are beautiful shrubs that +have proved themselves perfectly hardy and well suited for +extensive culture in this country. They are of stiff, shrubby +habit, about 4 feet high, and with branches thickly clothed with +spines becoming brown with age. Leaflets oval in shape, deep green, +with the upper surface rough to the touch, the under sides densely +tomentose. Flowers single, fully 3 inches in diameter, the petals +of good substance, and white or rose-coloured. The fruit is large, +larger than that of perhaps any other rose, and of a bright red +when fully ripe. In so far as beauty of fruit is concerned, this +Rose has certainly no rival, and whether for the rockwork or open +border it must be classed amongst the most useful and beautiful of +hardy shrubs. R. rugosa is a capital hedge plant, and being a true +species it is readily propagated from seed. R. rugosa Kamtschatika +is a deep-red flowered form with deciduous spines.</p> +<p>R. SEMPERVIRENS.—Evergreen Rose. South Europe and India, +1529. A climbing species, with long, slender branches, armed with +hooked prickles. Leaves evergreen, shining, and composed of from +five to seven leaflets. The clustered flowers are white and +sweet-scented.</p> +<p>R. SPINOSISSIMA (<i>syn R. pimpinellifolia</i>).—Burnet, +or Scotch Rose. A small bush about 2 feet high, of neat growth, +with small leaves, and pink or white flowers that are solitary at +the branch ends.</p> +<p>R. VILLOSA.—Downy Rose. Europe (Britain). This species is +of erect bushy growth, with the leaflets softly downy on both +sides. Flowers white or pale pink, succeeded by globular fruits, +that are more or less covered with fine hair or prickles.</p> +<h4>ROSMARINUS.</h4> +<p>ROSMARINUS OFFICINALIS.—Common Rosemary. Mediterranean +region, 1848. A familiar garden shrub, of dense growth, with +dusky-gray green linear leaves, and pale blue or white flowers. +There is a golden and a silver leaved variety, named respectively +R. officinalis foliis-aureis, and R. officinalis foliis-argenteis; +as also one distinguished by having broader foliage than the +species, and named R. officinalis latifolius.</p> +<h4>RUBUS.</h4> +<p>RUBUS ARCTICUS.—Arctic Regions of both hemispheres. An +interesting species about 6 inches high, with trifoliolate leaves, +and deep-red flowers. For Alpine gardening it is a valuable species +of dwarf growth.</p> +<p>R. AUSTRALIS, from New Zealand, is a very prickly species, with +the leaves reduced to their stalks and the midribs of three +leaflets. Not being very hardy it is usually seen as a wall +plant.</p> +<p>R. BIFLORUS.—Himalayas, 1818. A tall-growing species with +whitish, spiny stems, and simple three-lobed leaves that are +tomentose on the under sides. The flowers are thickly produced, +pure white, and render the plant highly attractive, and of great +beauty.</p> +<p>R. DELICIOSUS.—This Rocky Mountain Bramble (1870) is a +very worthy species, with three or five-lobed (not pinnate) leaves, +and large, pure white flowers that are each about 2 inches in +diameter, and produced in profusion from the leaf-axils. For +ornamental planting this may be placed in the first rank of the +family to which it belongs.</p> +<p>R. FRUTICOSUS.—Common Bramble, or Blackberry. Of this +well-known native species there are several worthy varieties, of +which the double-flowered are especially worth notice, blooming as +they do in the latter part of summer. R. fruticosus flore +albo-pleno (Double white-flowered Bramble), and R. fruticosus flore +roseo-pleno (Double red-flowered Bramble) are very pretty and showy +varieties, and well worth including in any collection. There is a +pretty variegated-leaved form of the common Bramble, known as R. +fruticosus variegatus.</p> +<p>R. LACINIATUS, Cut-leaved Bramble, might also be included on +account of its profusion of white flowers, and neatly divided +foliage.</p> +<p>R. NUTKANUS.—North America, 1826. This has white flowers, +but otherwise it resembles R. odoratus.</p> +<p>R. ODORATUS.—Purple flowering Raspberry. North America, +1700. The sweet-scented Virginian Raspberry forms a rather dense, +upright growing bush, fully 4 feet high, with large broadly +five-lobed and toothed leaves, that are more or less viscid, +sweet-scented, and deciduous. The leaves are placed on long, hairy, +viscid foot-stalks. Flowers in terminal corymbs, large and nearly +circular, purplish-red in colour, and composed of five broad, round +petals. The fruit, which is rarely produced in this country, is +velvety and amber-coloured. It is a very ornamental species, the +ample Maple-like leaves and large flowers rendering it particularly +attractive in summer. The leaves, and not the flowers as is +generally supposed, are sweetly scented.</p> +<p>R. ROSAEFOLIUS.—Rose-leaved Raspberry. Himalayas, 1811. +Another half-hardy species, and only suited for planting against +sunny walls. Leaves pinnate, finer than those of the Raspberry. R. +r. coronarius, with semi-double white flowers, is better than the +type.</p> +<p>R. SPECTABILIS.—The Salmon Berry. North America, 1827. +Grows about 6 feet high, with ternate or tri-lobate leaves that are +very thickly produced. Flowers usually bright red or +purplish-coloured, and placed on long pendulous footstalks. It is +of very dense growth, occasioned by the number of suckers sent up +from the roots.</p> +<p>There are also some of the so-called American Brambles well +worthy of attention, two of the best being Kittatiny and +Lawton's:</p> +<p>The brambles are particularly valuable shrubs, as owing to their +dense growth they may be used for a variety of purposes, but +especially for covering unsightly objects or banks. They are all +wonderfully floriferous, and succeed admirably even in very poor +and stony soils. Increase is readily obtained either from root +suckers or by layering.</p> +<h4>RUSCUS.</h4> +<p>RUSCUS ACULEATUS.—Butcher's Broom, Pettigree and +Pettigrue. Europe (Britain), and North Africa. This is a native +evergreen shrub, with rigid cladodes which take the place of +leaves, and not very showy greenish flowers appearing about May. +For the bright red berries, which are as large as small marbles, it +is alone worth cultivating, while it is one of the few shrubs that +grow at all satisfactorily beneath the shade of our larger +trees.</p> +<p>R. HYPOPHYLLUM.—Double Tongue. Mediterranean region, 1640. +This species has the flowers on the undersides of the leaf-like +branches; and its variety R.H. Hypoglossum has them on the upper +side. Both are of value for planting in the shade.</p> +<h4>SAMBUCUS.</h4> +<p>SAMBUCUS CALIFORNICA.—Californian Elder. A rare species as +yet, but one that from its elegant growth and duration of flowers +is sure, when better known, to become widely distributed.</p> +<p>S. GLAUCA has its herbaceous parts covered with a thick +pubescence; leaves pubescent on both sides, and with yellow flowers +produced in umbels.</p> +<p>S. NIGRA.—Common Elder. Bourtry, or Bour tree. Although +one of our commonest native trees, the Elder must rank amongst the +most ornamental if only for its large compound cymes of white or +yellowish-white flowers, and ample bunches of shining black +berries. There are, however, several varieties that should be +largely cultivated, such as S. nigra foliis aureis (Golden Elder), +S. nigra fructu albo (White Fruited), S. nigra laciniata +(Cut-leaved Elder), S. nigra argentea (Silver-leaved Elder), S. +nigra rotundifolia (Round-leaved Elder), the names of which will be +sufficient for the purposes of recognition.</p> +<p>S. RACEMOSA.—Scarlet-berried Elder. South Europe and +Siberia, 1596. This is almost a counterpart of our native species, +but instead of black the berries are brilliant scarlet. It is a +highly ornamental species, but it is rather exacting, requiring for +its perfect growth a cool and moist situation. Of this there is a +cut-leaved, form, named S. racemosa serratifolia.</p> +<p>S. ROSAEFLORA is said to be a seedling from S. glauca, but +differs in many important points from the parent. It has smooth +shoots and branches, ovate-acuminate leaves that are downy beneath, +and flowers rose-coloured without and white within. They are +produced in short, spike-like clusters, and are almost destitute of +smell. The reddish rings at the insertion of the leaves is another +distinguishing feature.</p> +<p>For freedom of growth in almost every class of soil, and +readiness with which they may be increased, the more showy kinds of +Elder are well worthy of attention.</p> +<h4>SCHIZANDRA.</h4> +<p>SCHIZANDRA CHINENSIS.—Northern China, 1860. This is a +climbing shrub, with oval, bright green leaves, and showy carmine +flowers. For clothing arbors and walls it may prove of use, but it +is as yet rare in cultivation.</p> +<p>S. COCCINEA, from North America (1806), is another uncommon +species in which the leaves are oblong and petiolate, and the +flowers red or scarlet. For purposes similar to the last this +species may be employed.</p> +<h4>SCHIZOPHRAGMA.</h4> +<p>SCHIZOPHRAGMA HYDRANGEOIDES.—Climbing Hydrangea. Japan, +1879. As yet this is an uncommon shrub, and allied to the +Hydrangea. It is of slender growth, the stems rooting into the +support, and with pinky-white flowers. As an ornamental climber it +is of no great value, and requires a favoured spot to grow it at +all satisfactorily.</p> +<h4>SHEPHERDIA.</h4> +<p>SHEPHERDIA ARGENTEA.—Beef Suet Tree, or Rabbit Berry. +North America, 1820. This shrub is rendered of particular interest +on account of the intense silvery hue of the foliage. The leaves +are narrow and lanceolate, silvery on both sides, and dotted over +with rusty-brown scales beneath. The flowers, which are produced in +April, are small and yellow, unisexual, or each sex on a distinct +plant. Berries scarlet, about the size of red Currants, and ripe +about September.</p> +<p>S. CANADENSIS.—North America, 1759. This is a +small-growing, straggling species, fully 4 feet high, and clothed +with rusty scales. The leaves are ovate or elliptic, and green +above, and the flowers of an inconspicuous yellow, succeeded by +orange-red berries.</p> +<h4>SKIMMIA.</h4> +<p>SKIMMIA FORTUNEI.—Japan, 1845. This is a neat-growing +shrub, with glossy, laurel-like leaves, white or greenish-white +flowers, and an abundance of scarlet berries in autumn. It succeeds +best in a somewhat shady situation, and when planted in not too +heavy peaty soil, but where abundance of not stagnant moisture is +present.</p> +<p>S. JAPONICA (of Thunberg) (<i>syn S. oblata</i>).—Japan, +1864. A neat-growing, evergreen shrub, with rather larger and more +showy leaves than the former, and spikes of pretty whitish, sweetly +scented flowers. The female form of this is usually known as S. +fragrans. What is usually known as S. oblata ovata, and S. oblata +Veitchii, are only forms of the true S. japonica; while S. +fragrantissima is the male of the same species. The beautiful, +berried plant that has been exhibited under the name of S. +Foremanii, and which is of very vigorous growth, and produces +pyramidal spikes of sweetly scented flowers, is probably S. +japonica, or a seminal variety. Another variety sent out under the +name of S. macrophylla has unusually large leaves; and another +named S. Rogersi produces fruit very abundantly.</p> +<p>S. LAUREOLA (<i>syn Limonia Laureola</i>), from the Himalayas, +is an uncommon species, with very fragrant and pale yellow +flowers.</p> +<p>S. RUBELLA (China, 1874) is another member of the family that +has greenish-white, sweet-scented flowers, and which when better +known will be largely planted.</p> +<h4>SMILAX.</h4> +<p>SMILAX ASPERA.—The Prickly Ivy. South Europe, 1648. A +trailing-habited shrub, with prickly stems, ovate, spiny-toothed, +evergreen leaves, and rather unattractive flowers. There are other +hardy species from North America, including S. Bona-nox (better +known as S. tamnoides), S. rotundifolia, and S. herbacea, the first +being the most desirable. S. aspera mauritanica is a hardy variety, +but one that is rare in cultivation, with long, wiry shoots, and +well adapted for wall or trellis covering. They all require +favoured situations, else the growth is short, and the plants +stunted and meagre in appearance.</p> +<h4>SOLANUM.</h4> +<p>SOLANUM CRISPUM.—Potato-tree. A native of Chili, 1824, and +not very hardy, except in the coast regions of England and Ireland. +It grows stout and bushy, often in favoured places rising to the +height of 12 feet, and has large clusters of purple-blue flowers +that are succeeded by small, white berries. This is a decidedly +ornamental shrub, that should be cultivated wherever a suitable +place can be spared. It bears hard pruning back with impunity, and +succeeds in any light, rich, loamy soil.</p> +<p>S. DULCAMARA.—Bitter Sweet, and Woody Nightshade. This is +a native plant, and one of great beauty when seen clambering over a +fence, or bank. It has long, flexuous stems, and large clusters of +purple flowers, which are made all the more conspicuous by the +showy yellow anthers. The scarlet fruit is very effective.</p> +<h4>SOPHORA.</h4> +<p>SOPHORA JAPONICA (<i>syn Styphnolobium +japonicum</i>).—Chinese or Japanese Pagoda-tree. China and +Japan, 1763. A large deciduous tree, with elegant pinnate foliage, +and clusters of greenish-white flowers produced in September. +Leaves dark-green, and composed of about eleven leaflets. S. +japonica pendula is one of the most constant of weeping trees, and +valuable for planting in certain well-chosen spots on the lawn or +in the park.</p> +<p>S. TETRAPTERA.—New Zealand, 1772. This requires protection +in this country. It is a valuable species, having numerous +leaflets, and bearing racemes of very showy yellow flowers. S. +tetraptera microphylla is a smaller-leaved variety, with ten to +forty pairs of leaflets, and is known in gardens under the names of +Edwardsia Macnabiana, and E. tatraptera microphylla.</p> +<h4>SPARTIUM.</h4> +<p>SPARTIUM JUNCEUM (<i>syn S. acutifolium</i>).—Spanish, or +Rush Broom. Mediterranean region and Canary Isles, 1548. This +resembles our common Broom, but the slender Rush-like branches are +not angular, and usually destitute of leaves. The fragrant yellow +flowers are produced abundantly in racemes, and when at their best +impart to the shrub a very striking and beautiful appearance. For +planting in poor, sandy or gravelly soils, or amongst stones and +shingle, and where only a very limited number of shrubs could be +got to grow, the Spanish Broom will be found an excellent and +valuable plant. It is a native of Southern Europe, and is quite +hardy all over the country. Propagated from seed.</p> +<h4>SPIRAEA.</h4> +<p>SPIRAEA BELLA.—Pretty-flowered Spiraea. Himalayas, 1820. +The reddish stems of this rather tall-growing species are of +interest, and render the plant distinct. Leaves ovate, acute, and +serrated, and tomentose beneath. Flowers in spreading corymbs of a +very beautiful rose colour, and at their best from the middle of +May till the middle of June. S. bella alba has white flowers.</p> +<p>S. BLUMEI.—Blume's Spiraea. Japan. This is a Japanese +species, growing 4 feet or 5 feet high, with small, ovate, +bluntly-pointed leaves, and white flowers arranged in compact +terminal cymes. It is a good and worthy species for ornamental +planting.</p> +<p>S. BULLATA (<i>syn S. crispifolia</i>.)—Japan. This will +ever be accounted valuable for the rock garden, owing to its very +dwarf habit and extreme floriferousness. It bears tiny bunches of +bright rose-coloured flowers, and these look all the more charming +owing to the miniature size of the shrub, its average height being +about 12 inches. A very interesting and valuable rock shrub, and +one that no doubt about its perfect hardihood need be +entertained.</p> +<p>S. CANA.—Hoary-leaved Spiraea. Croatia, 1825. This is a +small spreading shrub that rarely rises to more than 18 inches in +height, with small, ovate, hoary leaves, and pretty white flowers +arranged in corymbs. For rockwork planting it is one of the most +valuable species, growing freely and producing its showy flowers in +abundance. Quite hardy.</p> +<p>S. CANTONIENSIS (<i>syn S. Reevesiana</i>).—Reeve's +Spiraea. Japan, 1843. An evergreen or sub-evergreen species, +growing 3 feet high, with lanceolate leaves on long footstalks, and +large, pure white flowers arranged in terminal corymbs, and placed +on long peduncles.</p> +<p>S. CHAMAEDRIFOLIA (<i>syn S. +ceanothifolia</i>).—Germander-leaved Spiraea. South-eastern +Europe to Japan, 1789. Grows about a yard high, with ovate, +pubescent leaves, and white flowers. It varies widely in the shape +and size of leaves. S. chamaedrifolia ulmifolia (Elm-leaved +Spiraea) a twiggy shrub, 3 feet high, with broad leaves and white +flowers, is from Siberia. S. chamaedrifolia crataegifolia +(Hawthorn-leaved Spiraea) is of stout, half-erect growth, with +rather stiff glaucous leaves that are oval in shape, and bright red +or pink flowers in fastigiate panicles. From Siberia 1790, and +flowering at mid-summer.</p> +<p>S. DECUMBENS (<i>syn S. nana</i>).—Decumbent Spiraea. +Tyrol. This is the smallest-growing of the shrubby Spiraeas, rarely +attaining to a greater height than 12 inches. It is a neat growing +plant, with small oval leaves, and white pedunculate flowers. For +planting on the rockwork or in the front line of the shrubbery, +this is an invaluable shrub, and soon forms a neat and pretty +specimen. It is perfectly hardy.</p> +<p>S. DISCOLOR ARIAEFOLIA (<i>syn S. ariaefolia</i>).—White +Beam-leaved Spiraea. North-west America, 1827. This forms a dense, +erect shrub about 6 feet high, with elliptic-oblong leaves, and +clothed beneath with a whitish tomentum. The flowers are in large, +terminal, slender-stalked panicles, and white or yellowish-white. +It is one of the handsomest species in cultivation, the neat and +yet not stiff habit, and pretty, plume-like tufts of flowers making +it a general favourite with the cultivators of hardy shrubs. +Flowers about mid-summer. In rich soils, and where partially shaded +from cold winds, it thrives best.</p> +<p>S. DOUGLASII.—Douglas's Spiraea. North-west America. This +has long, obovate-lanceolate leaves, that are white with down on +the under surface, and bears dense, oblong, terminal panicles of +rosy flowers. S. Douglasii Nobleana (Noble's Spiraea) is a variety +of great beauty, growing about a yard high, with large leaves often +4 inches long, and looser panicles of purple-red flowers. Flowering +in July. The variety was introduced from California in 1859.</p> +<p>S. FISSA.—Split-leaved Spiraea. Mexico, 1839. A stout, +erect-growing shrub, about 8 feet high, with rather small leaves, +angular, downy branches, and long, loose, terminal panicles of +small and greenish-white flowers. The leaves are wedge-shaped at +the base, and when young have the lateral incisions split into a +pair of unequal and very sharp teeth. Flowering in May and June. In +the south and west of England it thrives best.</p> +<p>S. HYPERICIFOLIA (<i>syn S. flagellata</i>).—Asia Minor, +1640. A wiry twiggy shrub, fully 4 feet high, with entire leaves, +and small, white flowers produced in umbels at the tips of the last +year's shoots. It is a pretty and desirable species.</p> +<p>S. JAPONICA (<i>syns S. callosa</i> and <i>S. +Fortunei</i>).—Japanese Spiraea. China and Japan, 1859. This +is a robust species about a yard high, with large lanceolate +leaves, and small, rosy-red flowers arranged in corymbose heads. +Flowering at mid-summer. There are several fine varieties of this +species, including S. japonica alba, a compact bush about a foot +high with white flowers; S. japonica rubra differs from the type in +having dark red flowers; S. japonica splendens, is a free-flowering +dwarf plant, with peach-coloured flowers and suitable for forcing; +and S. japonica superba, has dark rose-red flowers. S. Bumalda is a +closely allied form, if not a mere variety of S. japonica. It is of +dwarf habit, with dark reddish-purple flowers.</p> +<p>S. LAEVIGATA (<i>syns S. altaicensis</i> and <i>S. +altaica</i>).—Smooth Spiraea. Siberia, 1774. A stout, +spreading shrub about a yard high, with large, oblong-lanceolate, +smooth, and stalkless leaves. The white flowers are arranged in +racemose panicles, and produced in May.</p> +<p>S. LINDLEYANA.—Lindley's Spiraea. Himalayas. A handsome, +tall-growing species, growing from 6 feet to 8 feet high, with very +large pinnate leaves, and pretty white flowers in large terminal +panicles. It is the largest-leaved Spiraea in cultivation, and +forms a stately, handsome specimen, and produces its showy flowers +in great quantities. Flowering at the end of summer.</p> +<p>S. MEDIA (<i>syns S. confusa</i> and <i>S. +oblongifolia</i>).—Northern Asia, etc. The pure white flowers +of this species are very freely produced in corymbs along the +shoots of the previous season during the months of June and July. +The lanceolate-elliptic leaves are serrate, or the smaller ones +toothed near the apex only. Within the past few years the species +has been brought into prominence for forcing purposes, for which it +is admirably suited. It forms an upright, branching bush usually +about 3 ft. high, and is best known under the name of S. +confusa.</p> +<p>S. PRUNIFOLIA.—China and Japan, 1845. A twiggy-branched +shrub growing 4 feet or 5 feet high, with oval, Plum-like leaves, +and white flowers. There is a double-flowering variety named S. +prunifolia flore-pleno, which is both distinct and beautiful.</p> +<p>S. ROTUNDIFOLIA.—Round-leaved Spiraea. Cashmere, 1839. A +slender-branched shrub, having downy shoots, and round, blunt +leaves, flowering in July.</p> +<p>S. SALICIFOLIA.—Willow-leaved Spiraea. Europe, and +naturalised in Britain. An erect-growing, densely-branched shrub, +with smooth shoots, which spring usually directly from the ground. +Leaves large, lanceolate, smooth, doubly serrated, and produced +plentifully. Flowers red or rose-coloured, and arranged in short, +thyrsoid panicles. It flowers in July and August. S. salicifolia +carnea has flesh-coloured flowers; S. salicifolia paniculata has +white flowers; and S. salicifolia grandiflora has pink flowers as +large again as the type. S. salicifolia alpestris (Mountain +Spiraea) grows fully 2 feet high, with lanceolate, finely-toothed +leaves, and loose, terminal panicles of pink or red flowers. From +Siberia, and flowering in autumn. S. salicifolia latifolia (<i>syn +S. carpinifolia</i>), the Hornbeam-leaved Spiraea, is a +white-flowered variety, with leaves resembling those of the +Hornbeam. From North America.</p> +<p>S. SORBIFOLIA.—Sorbus-leaved Spiraea. Siberia, 1759. A +handsome, stout species, 4 feet high, with large, pinnate, bright +green leaves, and small, white, sweetly-scented flowers produced in +thyrsoid panicles.</p> +<p>S. THUNBERGII.—Thunberg's Spiraea. Japan. The white +flowers of this species smell somewhat like those of the Hawthorn, +and are freely produced on the leafless, twiggy stems, in March or +early in April, according to the state of the weather. They are +borne in axillary clusters from buds developed in the previous +autumn, and are very welcome in spring, long before the others come +into bloom. The bush varies from one to three feet high, and is +clothed with linear-lanceolate, sharply serrated leaves.</p> +<p>S. TOMENTOSA.—Tomentose Spiraea. North America, 1736. This +species grows 2 feet or 3 feet high, has rusty tomentose shoots and +leaves, and large, dense, compound spikes of showy red flowers. +Flowering in summer.</p> +<p>S. TRILOBATA (<i>syn S. triloba</i>).—Three-lobed Spiraea. +Altaian Alps, 1801. This is a distinct species with horizontally +arranged branches, small, roundish, three-lobed leaves, and white +flowers arranged in umbel-like corymbs. It flowers in May, and is +quite hardy.</p> +<p>S. UMBROSA (Shady Spiraea) and S. EXPANSA (Expanded-flowered +Spiraea), the former from Northern India and the latter from +Nepaul, are well suited for planting in somewhat shady situations, +and are very ornamental species. The first mentioned grows about a +foot high, with rather large leaves, and cymes of white flowers on +long slender footstalks; while S. expansa has pink flowers, and +lanceolate and coarsely serrated leaves.</p> +<p>There are other valuable-flowering kinds, such as S. capitata, +with ovate leaves and white flowers; S. pikowiensis, a rare species +with white flowers; S. cuneifolia, with wedge-shaped leaves and +panicles of pretty white flowers; and S. vacciniaefolia, a +dwarf-growing species, with small ovate, serrulated leaves, and +showy, pure white flowers. S. betulifolia and S. chamaedrifolia +flexuosa are worthy forms of free growth and bearing white +flowers.</p> +<h4>STAPHYLEA.</h4> +<p>STAPHYLEA COLCHICA.—Colchican Bladder Nut. Caucasus. This +is a very distinct shrub, about 6 feet high, with large clusters of +showy white flowers. Being quite hardy, and very ornamental, this +species is worthy the attention of planters.</p> +<p>S. PINNATA.—Job's Tears, or St. Anthony's Nut. South +Europe. This is a straggling shrub, from 6 feet to 8 feet high, +with white, racemose flowers, succeeded by bladder-like +capsules.</p> +<p>S. TRIFOLIA.—North America, 1640. This is distinguished by +its larger white flowers and trifoliolate leaves. It is the +American Bladder Nut, but, like the latter, can hardly be included +amongst ornamental plants.</p> +<p>All the Bladder Nuts grow freely in good light dampish loam.</p> +<h4>STAUNTONIA.</h4> +<p>STAUNTONIA HEXAPHYLLA.—China and Japan, 1876. This +evergreen twining shrub is not to be generally recommended, it +requiring wall protection even in southern England. The leaves are +deep green and pinnate, while the greenish-white flowers are +fragrant, and produced in the beginning of summer.</p> +<h4>STUARTIA.</h4> +<p>STUARTIA PENTAGYNA (<i>syn Malachodendron +ovatum</i>).—North America, 1785. This differs only from the +S. virginica in having five distinct styles, hence the name. Under +very favourable circumstances this is the taller growing species, +and the leaves and flowers are larger.</p> +<p>S. PSEUDO-CAMELLIA (<i>syn S. grandiflora</i>).—Japan, +1879. This is of recent introduction, and differs from the others +in the flowers being rather larger, and of a purer white, and +supplied with yellow instead of red stamens. It is quite hardy in +Southern England and Ireland at least.</p> +<p>S. VIRGINICA (<i>syn S. marylandica</i>).—North America, +1743. This is a handsome free-growing shrub, of often 10 feet in +height, with large, creamy-white flowers, that are rendered all the +more conspicuous by the crimson-red stamens. The flowers—like +those of a single Rose, and fully 2-1/2 inches across—are +produced in May. Quite hardy, as many fine specimens in some of our +old English gardens will point out.</p> +<p>Though, perhaps, rather exacting in their requirements, the +Stuartias may be very successfully grown if planted in light, +moist, peaty earth, and where they will be screened from cold, +cutting winds.</p> +<h4>STYRAX.</h4> +<p>STYRAX AMERICANA and S. PULVERULENTA are not commonly +cultivated, being far less showy than the Japanese species. They +bear white flowers.</p> +<p>S. OFFICINALIS.—Storax. Levant, 1597. This is a small +deciduous shrub, with ovate leaves, and short racemes of pretty +pure white flowers. A not very hardy species, and only second-rate +as an ornamental flowering shrub.</p> +<p>S. SERRULATA VIRGATA (<i>syn S. japonica</i>).—Japanese +Storax. Japan. A neat-habited and dense-growing shrub, with pretty +white flowers that are neatly set off by the showy yellow stamens. +It is an extremely pretty shrub, with long, slender, much-branched +shoots, furnished with ovate leaves, and deliciously-scented, +snow-white bell-shaped flowers, produced for nearly the full length +of the shoots. So far, this shrub of recent introduction has proved +quite hardy. S. serrulata variegata is a well-marked and constant +form.</p> +<h4>SYMPHORICARPUS.</h4> +<p>SYMPHORICARPUS OCCIDENTALIS.—Wolf Berry. North America. +This species has larger and more freely-produced flowers, and +smaller fruit than the commonly-cultivated plant.</p> +<p>S. RACEMOSUS (<i>syn Symphoria racemosus</i>).—Snowberry. +North America, 1817. One of the commonest shrubs in English +gardens, with small, oval, entire leaves, and neat little racemes +of pretty pink flowers, succeeded by the familiar snow-white +berries, and for which the shrub is so remarkable.</p> +<p>S. VULGARIS.—Coral Berry, Common St. Peter's Wort. North +America, 1730. This is readily distinguished by its showy and +freely-produced coral berries. There is a very neat and much sought +after variety, having conspicuous green and yellow leaves, and +named S. vulgaris foliis variegatis.</p> +<p>The Snowberries are of no great value as ornamental shrubs, but +owing to their succeeding well in the very poorest and stoniest of +soils, and beneath the shade and drip of trees, it is to be +recommended that they are not lost sight of. They grow and spread +freely, and are therefore useful where unchecked and rampant shrub +growth is desirable.</p> +<h4>SYMPLOCOS.</h4> +<p>SYMPLOCOS JAPONICA (<i>syn S. lucida</i>).—A small growing +and not very desirable species from Japan (1850).</p> +<p>S. TINCTORIA.—Sweet-leaf, or Horse Sugar. South United +States, 1780. This is a small-growing shrub, with clusters of +fragrant yellow flowers, but it is not very hardy unless planted +against a sheltered and sunny wall.</p> +<h4>SYRINGA.</h4> +<p>SYRINGA CHINENSIS (<i>syns. S. dubia</i> and <i>S. +rothomagensis</i>).—Rouen, or Chinese Lilac. A plant of small +growth, with narrow leaves, and reddish-violet flowers. It is said +to have been raised by M. Varin, of the Botanic Garden, Rouen, as a +hybrid between S. vulgaris and S. persica, 1795.</p> +<p>S. EMODI.—Himalayas, 1840. This is a desirable species, +that forms a stout bush or small tree, with oblong, +reticulately-veined leaves, and erect, dense panicles of white +flowers, that are sometimes lilac tinged. The flowers are strongly +scented, and borne in great profusion late in the season. There is +a variegated form, S. Emodi variegata, and another named S. Emodi +villosa, both good varieties.</p> +<p>S. JAPONICA (<i>syns S. amurensis</i> and <i>Ligustrina +amurensis</i>).—Japan. This is of recent introduction, and is +a decided acquisition, producing in summer large and dense clusters +of creamy-white flowers. It is a very desirable species, and though +coming from Japan seems to be perfectly hardy.</p> +<p>S. JOSIKAEA, Josika's Lilac, is of Hungarian origin (1835), and +is so totally different from the others as to be well worthy of +special attention. It rarely exceeds 6 feet in height, with +dark-green, wrinkled leaves, and erect spikes of pale mauve +flowers.</p> +<p>S. PERSICA (Persian Lilac).—Persia, 1640. This is a +distinct small-growing species, with slender, straight branches, +and lilac or white flowers produced in small clusters. The form +bearing white flowers is named S. persica alba; and there is one +with neatly divided foliage called S. persica laciniata.</p> +<p>S. VULGARIS.—Common Lilac, or Pipe Tree. Persia and +Hungary, 1597. This is one of the commonest and most highly praised +of English garden shrubs, and one that has given rise, either by +natural variation or by crossing with other species, to a great +number of superior forms. The following include the best and most +ornamental of the numerous varieties:—alba, pure white +flowers; alba-grandiflora, very large clusters of white flowers; +alba-magna, and alba virginalis, both good white-flowering forms; +Dr. Lindley, large clusters of reddish-lilac flowers; Charles X., +purplish-lilac flowers, but white when forced; Souvenir De Ludwig +Spath, with massive clusters of richly coloured flowers; Glorie de +Moulins, Marie Legrange, Noisetteana, Duchesse de Nemours, and +Vallettiana, all beautiful flowering forms that are well worthy of +cultivation, and that are of the simplest growth.</p> +<p>The double-flowered varieties, for which we are much indebted to +M. Victor Lemoine, of Nancy, are fast gaining favour with +cultivators in this country, and rightly, too, for they include +several very handsome, full flowered forms. The following are best +known:—</p> +<dl> +<dt>S. vulgaris Alphonse Lavallee, with full double red flowers, +changing to mauve.</dt> +<dd>" Emile Lemoine, +mauve-pink, suffused with white; very handsome.</dd> +<dd>" La Tour d'Auvergne, +mauve shaded with rose. A beautiful and very dark coloured +form.</dd> +<dd>" Lemoinei, nearly +resembling our common species, but with full double flowers.</dd> +<dd>" Leon Simon, light +pink, mauve shaded.</dd> +<dd>" Madame Lemoine, the +finest form, bearing very large pure white double flowers.</dd> +<dd>" Michael Buchner, +rosy lilac.</dd> +<dd>" Virginité, whitish +pink, nearly white when fully expanded.</dd></dl> +<p>President Grevy is one of the same beautiful group. The blooms +are large, double, and produced in very massive clusters, and of a +light bluish-lilac tint, when forced almost white. The first of +this group, S. vulgaris Lemoinei, was sent out about 1884, and was +then awarded a certificate by the R.H.S. The range in colouring of +these Lilacs is rather confined, so that the various forms resemble +one another in no small degree, particularly when the flowers are +opened under glass. From the large size of the flower bunches, and +the individual flowers being double, they are all of great beauty, +and being quite hardy still further enhances their value for +outdoor gardening purposes.</p> +<p>The Lilacs grow freely in any soil of fair quality, but a free, +rich, and not too dry loam, would seem to suit the majority of +these plants best.</p> +<h4>TAMARIX.</h4> +<p>TAMARIX GALLICA.—Common Tamarisk. India to Europe. This +shrub often in favoured maritime places reaches to a height of +fully 10 feet, with long and slender branches, and spikes of +pretty, rosy-pink flowers produced at the end of summer. For +sea-side planting, it is an invaluable shrub, and on account of its +feathery appearance and wealth of showy flowers is well worthy of +being included in our list of ornamental and useful shrubs.</p> +<p>T. PARVIFLORA (<i>syns T. africana</i> and <i>T. tetrandra</i>), +South-eastern Europe and Levant, is a nearly allied species, with +white, pinky-tinged flowers.</p> +<h4>TECOMA.</h4> +<p>TECOMA GRANDIFLORA (<i>syn Bignonia grandiflora</i>), from China +and Japan (1800), is not so hardy as T. radicans, although in +certain maritime districts it succeeds fairly well. The flowers are +very attractive, being of a rich orange-scarlet, and produced in +drooping clusters. Both foliage and flowers are larger than those +of T. radicans. It wants a warm, sunny wall, and light, rich, and +well-drained soil, and if only for its lovely flowers, it is well +worthy of coddling and good treatment.</p> +<p>T. RADICANS (<i>syn Bignonia radicans</i>).—Trumpet +Flower. North America, 1640. An old occupant of our gardens and one +of the most beautiful wall plants in cultivation. It is a tall +climber, of sometimes fully 20 feet in height, with graceful +pinnate leaves, and handsome trumpet-shaped scarlet-red flowers, +that are at their best about mid-summer, though the period of +flowering extends over a considerable length of time. The stems are +long, twisted, and wiry, and like those of the Ivy send out roots +at the joints and so fasten the plant in position. Few climbing +plants are more attractive than the Trumpet Flower, and being hardy +in most parts of the country, and free of growth, is to be +recommended for covering walls, and arches, or similar structures. +T. radicans major is of more robust growth than the species, with +larger foliage and paler flowers. The orange-scarlet flowers are +produced in terminal corymbs.</p> +<h4>TILIA.</h4> +<p>TILIA VULGARIS (<i>syns T. europea</i> and <i>T. +intermedia</i>).—Lime, or Linden Tree. Europe, Caucasus, and +naturalised in Britain. Probably none of the Limes would be +included in a list of ornamental-flowering trees and shrubs, still +that they are of great interest and beauty even in that state +cannot be denied. The common species as well as its numerous +varieties have sweetly scented, yellowish-white flowers in terminal +cymes, and are, though individually small, highly ornamental when +fully developed. Other species of great interest when in flower are +T. alba (<i>syn T. argentea</i>), Silver Lime; T. petiolaris, a +curious and beautiful species; and T. euchlora.</p> +<p>The various species and varieties of Lime succeed well in almost +any class of soil, but rich loam on sand is considered the most +suitable for their perfect development.</p> +<h4>ULEX.</h4> +<p>ULEX EUROPAEUS.—Furze, Gorse, or Whin. This pretty native +shrub needs no description, suffice it to say that it is one of the +handsomest-flowering shrubs in cultivation. U. europaeus +flore-pleno (Double-flowered Gorse) is even more beautiful than the +species, the wealth of golden flowers almost hiding the plant from +view. U. europaeus strictus (Irish Furze) is of more erect and +slender growth, and less rigid than the common species.</p> +<p>U. NANUS.—-Dwarf Gorse, Cat Whin, and Tam Furze. This +differs considerably from the common plant, not only in stature, +but in the time of flowering. In this species the bracts at the +calyx base are small compared with those of U. europaeus, while the +smaller flowers are produced during summer, and when not a bloom is +to be found on its supposed parent. It is of dense growth, the +tallest stems rarely rising from the ground to a greater height +than about 15 inches.</p> +<p>All the Furze family succeed admirably in the poorest of soil; +indeed, a dry gravelly bank would seem to be their favourite +haunt.</p> +<h4>VACCINIUM.</h4> +<p>VACCINIUM CORYMBOSUM.—Canada to Carolina and Georgia, +1765. This is one of the most beautiful and showy species, with +dense clusters of small, pinky flowers.</p> +<p>V. MYRTILLUS.—Whortleberry, Bilberry, Blackberry, and +Blueberry. A native plant, with angular stems, ovate-toothed +leaves, and pinky-white flowers, succeeded by bright, bluish-black +berries.</p> +<p>V. PENNSYLVANICUM.—New England to Virginia, 1772. This has +rather inconspicuous flowers, and is of greatest value for the +autumnal foliage tints.</p> +<p>V. VITIS-IDEA (Cowberry, Flowering Box, or Brawlins) a native +species, has racemose flowers, and red berries.</p> +<p>Other species that might be included are V. canadense, V. +stamineum, V. frondosum, and V. ligustrifolium.</p> +<p>The various species of Vaccinium are of dwarf or procumbent +growth, and only suitable for planting in beds, or on rockwork, +where they will not be lost sight of. They thrive best in soil of a +peaty nature.</p> +<h4>VERONICA.</h4> +<p>VERONICA PINQUIFOLIA.—New Zealand, 1870. This is one of +the hardiest species, but it is of low growth, and only suitable +for alpine gardening. It is a dwarf spreading shrub, with intensely +glaucous leaves and white flowers.</p> +<p>V. TRAVERSII.—New Zealand, 1873. This may be considered as +one of the few species of hardy Veronicas. It grows about 4 feet +high, with deep green leaves arranged in rows, and white flowers, +produced late in summer. It is a very free-growing shrub, of +perfect hardihood, and one of, if not the best for general +planting.</p> +<p>The above two species are, so far as is at present known, the +hardiest in cultivation, although there are many kinds that will +succeed well under very favourable conditions, and particularly +when planted by the sea-side. Other half-hardy species might +include V. salicifolia (Willow-leaved Veronica), with long, narrow +leaves, and white or purplish flowers; V. ligustrifolia +(Privet-leaved Veronica), with spikes of feathery-white flowers; V. +speciosa, with erect spikes of purplish-blue flowers; and V. +Andersoni, a hybrid form, with spikes of bluish-violet flowers.</p> +<p>The dwarf or alpine species might include V. cupressoides, with +Cypress-like foliage, V. Lyallii, V. carnosula, and others, but +such hardly come within our scope.</p> +<h4>VIBURNUM.</h4> +<p>VIBURNUM ACERIFOLIUM.—Dockmackie. New England to Carolina, +1736. This is one of the handsomest members of the family, being of +slender growth and compact and neat in habit. It grows to fully 4 +feet in height, and is well supplied with neatly three-lobed +leaves, these in the autumn turning to a deep crimson. The flowers, +too, are highly ornamental, being borne in fair sized clusters, and +white or yellowish-white. It is a very desirable and beautiful +plant, quite hardy, and of free growth in any fairly rich soil.</p> +<p>V. AWAFUKII.—Japan, 1842. This is another rare and +beautiful plant, of neat habit, and producing an abundance of showy +white flowers, that are, however, seldom produced in this +country.</p> +<p>V. DAHURICUM.—Dahuria, 1785. This is a charming hardy +species, which in May and June is covered with numerous umbels of +showy white flowers. It forms a rather spreading bush of 6 feet or +8 feet high, with gray downy branches, and neat foliage. The +berries are oval-oblong, red at first, but becoming black and +faintly scented when fully ripe.</p> +<p>V. DENTATUM.—Arrowwood. A native of the United States, +1763. This can be recommended as a distinct and beautiful shrub, +with cymes of white flowers that are produced in plenty. The leaves +are dark green, smooth, and shining, and strongly veined, while the +bark is ash-coloured, and the berries bright blue.</p> +<p>V. LANTANA.—Wayfaring Tree. Europe (Britain). This is a +native species of large bush, or almost tree growth, with rugose, +oblong, serrulated leaves, and large, flat cymes of white flowers +appearing in May and June. The whole tree is usually covered with a +scaly tomentum, while the fruit is a black flattened drupe.</p> +<p>V. LENTAGO.—Sheepberry and Sweet Viburnum. North America, +1761. This resembles our native V. Lantana, with dense clusters of +white blossoms succeeded by black berries.</p> +<p>V. MACROCEPHALUM (<i>syn V. Fortunei</i>).—China, 1844. +This is a Chinese species, but one that cannot be depended on as +hardy enough to withstand our most severe winters. It has very +large heads or panicles of white neutral flowers. Against a sunny +wall and in a cosy nook it may occasionally be found doing fairly +well, but it is not to be generally recommended.</p> +<p>V. NUDUM.—American Withe Rod. Canada to Georgia, 1752. +This is also worthy of being included in a selection of these +shrubs.</p> +<p>V. OPULUS.—Guelder Rose. A native shrub of great beauty, +whether in foliage, flower, or fruit. The leaves are variously +lobed or deeply toothed, large and handsome, and the flower heads +of good size, flat, and composed of a number of small flowers, the +outer only being sterile. Individually the flowers are dull and +inconspicuous, but being produced in amazing quantity, they have a +very pleasing and effective appearance. The great bunches of clear +pinky berries render a fair-sized plant particularly handsome and +attractive, and for which alone, as also beauty of autumnal +foliage, the shrub is well worthy of extensive culture. It grows +fully 15 feet high, and may frequently be seen as much through. V. +Opulus sterilis (Snowball Tree) is one of the commonest occupants +of our shrubberies, and a decidedly ornamental-flowering shrub. The +large, almost globular flower heads hanging from every branch tip, +are too well-known to require description, and have made the shrub +one of the most popular in ornamental planting.</p> +<p>V. PAUCIFLORUM is a native of cold, moist woods from Labrador to +Alaska, and may best be described as a miniature V. Opulus. It +rarely grows more than 4 feet high, with small cymes of flowers, +that are devoid of the neutral flowers of that species.</p> +<p>V. PLICATUM, from Japan 1846, is another very beautiful and +desirable shrub, of rather dwarf, spreading growth, and having the +leaves deeply wrinkled, plaited, and serrated on the margins. The +flowers resemble those of the commonly cultivated species, but they +are rather larger, and of a purer white. It is a decidedly +ornamental species of easy growth in any good soil, and where not +exposed to cold winds.</p> +<p>V. PRUNIFOLIUM, New England to Carolina, 1731, with Plum-like +leaves, and pretty white flowers, is another free-growing and +beautiful North American species.</p> +<p>V. PYRIFOLIUM.—Pear-leaved Viburnum. Pennsylvania to New +Jersey, 1812. This is a rarely-seen, but very ornamental species, +with oval-shaped, finely-toothed leaves, that are borne on short, +slightly-winged stalks about half-an-inch long. Flowers sweetly +scented, white, and in broad corymbs, the feathery appearance of +the long, projecting stamens, each tipped with a golden anther, +adding considerably to the beauty of the flowers.</p> +<p>V. RETICULATUM and V. LAEVIGATUM are rarely seen species, but of +interest botanically, if not for floral beauty.</p> +<p>V. TINUS.—Laurustinus. South Europe, 1596. So commonly +cultivated a shrub needs no description here, sufficient to say +that the handsome evergreen foliage and pretty pinky-white flowers +assign to it a first position amongst hardy ornamental flowering +shrubs, V. Tinus strictum has darker foliage than the species, is +more upright, rather more hardy, but not so profuse in the bearing +of flowers. V. Tinus lucidum (Glossy-leaved Laurustinus), of the +several varieties of Laurustinus has the largest foliage, finest +flowers, and altogether is of the most robust growth. It is, +unfortunately, not very hardy, probably in that respect not even +equalling the parent plant. Usually it does not flower freely, +neither are the flowers produced so early as in the species, but +individually they are much larger. It is of tall growth, and rarely +forms the neat, dense bush, for which the common shrub is so +admired. V. Tinus rotundifolium has rounded leaves; and V. Tinus +rotundifolium variegatum has irregularly variegated leaves.</p> +<h4>VINCA.</h4> +<p>VINCA MAJOR.—Band-plant, Cut-finger, and Larger +Periwinkle. Europe (Britain). For trailing over tree-stumps or +rockwork this pretty evergreen shrub has a distinctive value, the +bright green leaves and showy deep blue flowers rendering it both +conspicuous and ornamental. V. major elegantissima is a decided +variety, the leaves being neatly and evenly variegated, and making +the plant of great value for bank or rock-work decoration.</p> +<p>V. MINOR.—Lesser Periwinkle. This is of much smaller +growth than the preceding, and differs, too, in not having the +leaf-margins ciliated. The variety V. minor flore-albo has white +flowers, those of the normal plant being pale blue; V. minor +flore-pleno differs in having double blue flowers; V. minor foliis +aureis has golden-tinted leaves; and V. minor foliis argenteis +bears silvery mottled and very attractive foliage.</p> +<p>They are all of simple growth, succeeding well in somewhat shady +situations, and in by no means the richest of soil. As they run +about freely and soon cover an extent of ground they are rendered +of great value for a variety of purposes.</p> +<h4>VITEX.</h4> +<p>VITEX AGNUS-CASTUS.—Chaste Tree, Hemp Tree, and Monk's +Pepper-tree. A South European shrub (1670), growing from 6 feet to +10 feet high, with digitate leaves that are almost hoary beneath, +and spikes of small violet flowers. It is not very hardy, although +in some of the warmer parts of southern England and Ireland, +fair-sized, healthy-looking specimens are now and then to be met +with. As a wall plant, however, it succeeds best, and for which +purpose, with its neat foliage and pretty flowers, it is peculiarly +suitable.</p> +<h4>VITIS.</h4> +<p>VITIS HETEROPHYLLA HUMILIFOLIA.—Turquoise-berried Vine. +North China and Japan, 1868. The leaves of this Vine are three to +five lobed, and the small flowers freely produced in slightly +branching cymes. The latter are succeeded by their most interesting +and attractive berries, that ripen in September and October. They +are pale china-blue, marked all over with very dark specks. The +stems grow to a height of 4 feet to 8 feet, and should be trained +against a wall in a sunny position to ripen the berries. The plant +is perfectly hardy. The variety V. heterophylla variegata is a +dwarf, low-growing plant with variegated leaves, and is used for +pot work, for covering the ground in sub-tropical bedding designs, +and might be used to great advantage for rambling over large stones +in the rock garden.</p> +<h4>WISTARIA.</h4> +<p>WISTARIA CHINENSIS (<i>syns W. sinensis, Glycine chinensis</i>, +and <i>G. sinensis</i>).—Chinese Wistaria. China, 1816. This +is the only species at all common in gardens, and by far the +handsomest in cultivation. It justly ranks amongst the most +beautiful of hardy climbing shrubs, and is invaluable as a wall +plant, or for clothing the bare stems of sparsely foliaged trees. +The purplish-lilac flowers are produced in long, drooping racemes +in early summer. W. chinensis alba has pretty white flowers; W. +chinensis flore-pleno has not proved very satisfactory, but when +seen at its best, which is, however, but rarely, the double flowers +are both beautiful and showy; W. chinensis variegata has badly +variegated foliage; and W. chinensis macrobotrys is a plant of +great beauty with very long racemes of pale lavender flowers, but +they vary a good deal in colour, those of some plants being almost +white. It is a very desirable variety, and one that when better +known is sure to attract attention.</p> +<p>W. FRUTESCENS (<i>syns Glycine frutescens</i> and <i>Thyrsanthus +frutescens</i>).—North America, 1724. This is a very handsome +deciduous climbing species from North America. The flowers, which +appear towards autumn, are bluish purple and fragrant, and borne in +erect racemes. It is quite hardy and equally suitable with the +Chinese species for using as a wall covering. W. frutescens +magnifica is an improved form of the species.</p> +<p>W. JAPONICA.—Japan. A bush-like species bearing white +flowers, but it is rarely seen in cultivation. It is, however, +quite hardy, and succeeds well in the bush state at Kew.</p> +<p>W. MULTIJUGA.—Japan, 1874. Resembles somewhat our +commonly-cultivated species, and has pale purple flowers arranged +in long racemes. It is a very ornamental and desirable species, but +the flowers are not borne in great quantity.</p> +<p>The Wistarias are of simple culture, but succeed best in rather +rich alluvial soil, and where protection from cold winds is +provided.</p> +<h4>XANTHOCERAS.</h4> +<p>XANTHOCERAS SORBIFOLIA.—China, 1870. An extremely pretty +flowered and handsome leaved shrub, but owing to its late +introduction is not yet well known. So far it has proved itself +perfectly hardy in this country, there being specimens at wide +distances apart that have stood uninjured through our past severe +winters.</p> +<p>The leaves are pale green, and pinnate, somewhat resembling +those of the Rowan Tree. Flowers five petalled, creamy white, +sometimes very slightly tinged with flesh colour, with a coppery +red or violet-purple centre, and disposed in racemes. When fully +expanded they are an inch across, and somewhat reflexed. It flowers +early in April, with the appearance of the leaves, the blooms being +produced in great abundance, in spike-like clusters fully seven +inches long, and succeeded by a small green Pear-like fruit. This +is one of the most distinct and handsome of recently introduced +shrubs, and will, when more widely disseminated, be largely planted +for purely ornamental purposes. It grows from 10 feet to about 15 +feet high.</p> +<h4>XANTHORHIZA.</h4> +<p>XANTHORHIZA APIIFOLIA.—Yellow-root. Pennsylvania, 1776. A +small growing shrub, with yellow creeping roots, from which suckers +are thrown up profusely. The leaves are irregularly pinnate, and +the minute flowers, which are borne in large, branching spikes, are +of a peculiar dark purple colour. It prefers a cool, moist +situation.</p> +<h4>YUCCA.</h4> +<p>YUCCA FILAMENTOSA.—Silk Grass. North America, 1675. A +well-known and beautiful plant, with numerous leaves arranged in a +dense rosette, and from 1 foot to 2 feet long by 2 inches broad. +Flower scape rising to 5 feet or 6 feet in height, and bearing +numerous flowers that are each about 2 inches deep. There is a +beautiful variegated form of this species named Y. filamentosa +variegata, and one with much narrower leaves than the typical +species, and known as Y. filamentosa angustifolia.</p> +<p>Y. GLORIOSA.—The Mound Lily. United States, 1596. This is +another well-known hardy species, with long, sharp-pointed leaves, +and a handsome, much branched scape, of flowers that are each about +2 inches deep. There are several varieties, differing in colour of +foliage, including Y. gloriosa glaucescens, with decidedly glaucous +foliage; Y. gloriosa superba, with rigid leaves and a shorter and +denser flower scape; and another with variegated leaves. Y. +gloriosa recurvifolia is usually dwarfer in the stem than the type, +and more inclined to branch than the other species, and less rigid, +with recurving leaves that are not so sharp-pointed, The flower +panicle is large and very much branched.</p> +<p>The Yuccas all do well if planted in light loam of good +quality.</p> +<h4>ZELKOVA.</h4> +<p>ZELKOVA ACUMINATA (<i>syns Z. japonica</i> and <i>Planera +acuminata</i>).—Japan. This resembles very nearly our common +Elm in appearance, and being perfectly hardy is to be recommended +for planting in this country.</p> +<p>Z. CRENATA (<i>syns Planera crenata</i> and <i>P. +Richardi</i>).—Zelkova Tree. Western Asia to Mount Caucasus, +1760. This is a handsome, large growing tree, with oblong +deeply-crenated leaves, and small and inconspicuous flowers. For +avenue planting or as a standard specimen this is a valuable tree, +being quite hardy, and of free and quick growth. P. crenata pendula +is a good weeping form, and worthy of culture.</p> +<p>Z. CRETICA.—Crete. A pretty small growing bush or tree of +about 20 feet in height, with crenate, leathery, dark green leaves, +which are usually fully an inch in length. The leaves are hairy, +and the twigs, too, are thickly covered with short grey hairs.</p> +<h4>ZAUSCHNERIA.</h4> +<p>ZAUSCHNERIA CALIFORNICA.—Californian Fuchsia, or Humming +Birds' Trumpet. California and Mexico, 1847. A small-growing, +densely-branched shrub, with linear-lanceolate silvery pubescent +leaves, and bright red or scarlet tubular flowers, with a long, +slender style resembling some of the Fuchsias. It is a pretty and +distinct Alpine shrub, and not being perfectly hardy should be +assigned a rather warm and sheltered position.</p> +<h4>ZENOBIA.</h4> +<p>ZENOBIA SPECIOSA (<i>syn Andromeda speciosa</i> and <i>A. +cassinaefolia</i>).—South United States, 1800. This is a +distinct and pretty hardy species, a native of swampy low-lying +districts. It grows about four feet high, and bears pure white, +bell-shaped, Lily-of-the-Valley like flowers in great abundance +during the summer. In too dry situations it becomes sparse of +foliage and unhappy, but grows and flowers freely in light, peaty +soil. Z. speciosa pulverulenta is a very desirable variety, the +whole plant, stems, foliage, and flowers, being of a pleasing light +gray or white colour. Individually the flowers are larger than +those of the species.</p> +<p> </p> +<h3 align="center"><i>A D D E N D A</i>.</h3> +<p> </p> +<h4>EXOCHORDA.</h4> +<p>EXOCHORDA GRANDIFLORA (<i>syn Spiraea +grandiflora</i>).—North China. This handsome shrub forms a +much branched, spreading bush, about 4 feet to 6 feet high, and +flowers abundantly in May. The habit is similar to that of a +shrubby Spiraea, but the pure white flowers are as large as those +of some of the species of Cherry, and quite unlike those of any +known species of Spiraea. The flowers are liable to injury +sometimes from late spring frosts, but the plant itself is quite +hardy. As a bush on the lawn it is nevertheless highly ornamental +and desirable.</p> +<h4>MYRICARIA.</h4> +<p>MYRICARIA GERMANICA.—Europe, Asia, 1582. A tall, somewhat +straggling shrub, very similar to the Tamarisk, with terminal +spikes of pink or rosy flowers, produced freely nearly all the +summer. It succeeds well in this country in sea-side situations, +and is often described as a Tamarisk by gardeners.</p> +<p> </p> +<h4>TREES SUITABLE FOR PLANTING IN TOWNS.</h4> +<dl> +<dt>Acer macrophylla</dt> +<dt>Ailanthus glandulosa</dt> +<dt>Crataegus Oxyacantha</dt> +<dt> flore-plena</dt> +<dt> tenacetifolia</dt> +<dt> Catalpa bignonioides</dt> +<dt>Gleditschia triacanthos</dt> +<dt>Liriodendron tulipiiera</dt> +<dt>Magnolia acuminata</dt> +<dt> glauca</dt> +<dt>Pyrus of sorts</dt> +<dt>Robinia Pseud-acacia and its varieties</dt> +<dt> viscosa</dt> +<dt>Sophora japonica</dt> +<dt>Tilia, in variet.</dt></dl> +<h4>SHRUBS FOR TOWN PLANTING.</h4> +<dl> +<dt>Amelanchier, in variety</dt> +<dt>Arbutus Unedo</dt> +<dt>Berberis Aquifolium</dt> +<dt> vulgaris</dt> +<dt>Cistus ladaniferus</dt> +<dt> laurifolius</dt> +<dt>Colutea arborescens</dt> +<dt>Daphne Laureola</dt> +<dt> Mezereum</dt> +<dt> pontica</dt> +<dt>Deutzia crenata</dt> +<dt> gracilis</dt> +<dt>Forsythia suspensa</dt> +<dt> viridissima</dt> +<dt>Griselinia littoralis</dt> +<dt>Hibiscus syriacus</dt> +<dt>Hypericum calycinum</dt> +<dt>Hypericum nepalense</dt> +<dt>Koelrenteria paniculata</dt> +<dt>Leycesteria formosa</dt> +<dt>Philadelphus Gordonianus</dt> +<dt>Prunus nana</dt> +<dt>Pyrus japonica</dt> +<dt>Rhus Cotinus</dt> +<dt>Ribes aureum</dt> +<dt> sanguineum</dt> +<dt>Skimmia japonica</dt> +<dt>Syringa (nearly all)</dt> +<dt>Ulex europaeus fl.-pl.</dt> +<dt>Viburnum Opulus</dt> +<dt>Weigelia rosea</dt> +<dt>Yucca gloriosa</dt> +<dt> recurva</dt></dl> +<h4>TREES FOR THE SEASIDE.</h4> +<dl> +<dt>Acer campestre</dt> +<dt> saccharinum</dt> +<dt>Arbutus Unedo</dt> +<dt>Ailanthus glandulosa</dt> +<dt>Aesculus Hippocastanum</dt> +<dt> rubicunda</dt> +<dt>Catalpa bignonioides</dt> +<dt>Fraxinus Ornus</dt></dl> +<h4>SHRUBS FOR THE SEASIDE.</h4> +<p>Atriplex halimus<br> +Cerasus lusitanica<br> +Cytisus Laburnum<br> + scoparius<br> +Euonymus japonicus<br> + europaeus<br> +Fabiana imbricata<br> +Griselinia littoralis<br> +Hippophae rhomnoides<br> +Ilex Aquifolium<br> +Laurus nobilis<br> +Lycium europaeum<br> +Prunus Padus<br> +Rhamnus frangula<br> +Ribes sanguineum<br> +Rosa spinosissima<br> +Shepherdia argentea<br> +Spirea adiantifolia<br> +Syringa persica<br> + vulgaris<br> +Symphoricarpus racemosus<br> +Tamarix gallica<br> + germanica<br> +Ulex europaea<br> +Viburnum Tinus</p> +<p> </p> +<h4>THE FLOWERING SEASONS OF TREES AND SHRUBS.</h4> +<p><i>The asterisk * after the name denotes that the species +continues in flower for a longer period than the month under which +it is placed</i>.</p> +<p><b><small>JANUARY.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Erica carnea*</dt> +<dt>Chimonanthus fragrans*</dt> +<dt>Crataegus Oxyacantha praecox*</dt> +<dt>Jasminum nudiflorum*</dt> +<dt>Ulex europaeus*</dt> +<dt>Viburnum Tinus*</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>FEBRUARY.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Cornus Mas*</dt> +<dt>Daphne Laureola*</dt> +<dt> Mezereum*</dt> +<dt>Hamamelis japonica</dt> +<dt>Lonicera fragrantissima*</dt> +<dt>Magnolia conspicua*</dt> +<dt>Parrotia persica*</dt> +<dt>Pittosporum Tobira*</dt> +<dt>Prunus nana*</dt> +<dt> Davidiana*</dt> +<dt>Rosmarinus officinalis*</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>MARCH.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Arbutus Andrachne*</dt> +<dt>Berberis japonica*</dt> +<dt>Erica mediterranea*</dt> +<dt>Forsythia viridissima*</dt> +<dt>Garrya elliptica</dt> +<dt>Magnolia stellata*</dt> +<dt>Nuttallia cerasiformis*</dt> +<dt>Prunus Amygdalus*</dt> +<dt> ilicifolia*</dt> +<dt> japonica*</dt> +<dt> spinosa*</dt> +<dt> triloba*</dt> +<dt> tomentosa</dt> +<dt>Rhododendron dahuricum</dt> +<dt> ledifolium</dt> +<dt>Skimmia Fortunei</dt> +<dt>Spiraea Thunbergi*</dt> +<dt>Xanthoriza apiifolia*</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>APRIL.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Akebia quinata*</dt> +<dt>Amelanchier alnifolia</dt> +<dt> canadensis</dt> +<dt> vulgaris</dt> +<dt>Berberis Aquifolium*</dt> +<dt> Darwinii*</dt> +<dt> pinnata</dt> +<dt> vulgaris</dt> +<dt>Caesalpinia sepiaria</dt> +<dt>Caragana frutescens</dt> +<dt> spinosa*</dt> +<dt>Ceanothus cuneatus*</dt> +<dt> rigidus*</dt> +<dt>Clematis cirrhosa*</dt> +<dt> florida*</dt> +<dt>Cornus florida</dt> +<dt>Cytisus scoparius*</dt> +<dt>Daphne altaica</dt> +<dt> Blagayana</dt> +<dt> Cneorum*</dt> +<dt> Genkwa</dt> +<dt> sericea</dt> +<dt>Deutzia gracilis*</dt> +<dt>Diervilla rosea*</dt> +<dt>Drimys aromatica</dt> +<dt>Fothergilla alnifolia*</dt> +<dt>Fremontia californica</dt> +<dt>Halesia diptera</dt> +<dt> tetraptera</dt> +<dt>Kalmia glauca*</dt> +<dt>Laburnum vulgare*</dt> +<dt>Ledum latifolium</dt> +<dt> palustre</dt> +<dt>Lonicera Caprifolium*</dt> +<dt> tatarica*</dt> +<dt>Magnolia cordata*</dt> +<dt> Fraseri</dt> +<dt> Lennei</dt> +<dt> obovata discolor</dt> +<dt>Pieris floribunda*</dt> +<dt> japonica*</dt> +<dt>Prunus Avium Juliana</dt> +<dt> cerasifera</dt> +<dt> cerasifera Pissardii</dt> +<dt> Cerasus</dt> +<dt> domestica</dt> +<dt> divaricata</dt> +<dt> Mahaleb</dt> +<dt> maritima</dt> +<dt> Padus*</dt> +<dt> paniculata flore-pleno</dt> +<dt> Puddum*</dt> +<dt> sinensis</dt> +<dt>Pyrus angustifolia</dt> +<dt> baccata*</dt> +<dt> floribunda*</dt> +<dt> japonica Maulei</dt> +<dt>Pyrus prunifolia*</dt> +<dt> rivularis*</dt> +<dt> sinica</dt> +<dt> vestita</dt> +<dt>Rhododendron campanulatum</dt> +<dt> Rhodora*</dt> +<dt>Rhodotypos kerrioides</dt> +<dt>Ribes aureum*</dt> +<dt> cereum</dt> +<dt> floridum*</dt> +<dt> sanguineum</dt> +<dt>Rosa indica*</dt> +<dt>Sambucus racemosa*</dt> +<dt>Skimmia japonica</dt> +<dt> Laureola</dt> +<dt>Spiraea prunifolia</dt> +<dt>Stuartia virginica*</dt> +<dt>Syringa Emodi</dt> +<dt>Xanthoceras sorbifolia</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>MAY.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Abelia triflora*</dt> +<dt>Aesculus glabra</dt> +<dt> Hippocastanum</dt> +<dt>Arbutus Menziesii</dt> +<dt>Berberis aristata*</dt> +<dt> Bealei</dt> +<dt> empetrifolia</dt> +<dt> sinensis</dt> +<dt> trifoliolata</dt> +<dt> Wallichiana</dt> +<dt>Calycanthus floridus*</dt> +<dt>Caragana arborescens</dt> +<dt> microphylla</dt> +<dt>Ceanothus dentatus*</dt> +<dt>Cercis canadensis</dt> +<dt> Siliquastrum</dt> +<dt>Chionanthus retusa</dt> +<dt> virginica</dt> +<dt>Citrus trifoliata</dt> +<dt>Cladrastis tinctoria</dt> +<dt>Clematis alpina*</dt> +<dt> montana*</dt> +<dt>Cornus canadensis</dt> +<dt> stolonifera</dt> +<dt>Coronilla Emerus*</dt> +<dt>Crataegus Azarolus</dt> +<dt> Azarolus Aronia</dt> +<dt> coccinea</dt> +<dt> cordata*</dt> +<dt> Crus-galli</dt> +<dt> Douglasii</dt> +<dt> Oxyacantha*</dt> +<dt> parvifolia</dt> +<dt> Pyracantha</dt> +<dt> tenacetifolia</dt> +<dt>Cytisus albus*</dt> +<dt> albus incarnate*</dt> +<dt> biflorus*</dt> +<dt>Daphne alpina*</dt> +<dt>Deutzia crenata*</dt> +<dt>Epigaea repens</dt> +<dt>Fabiana imbricata</dt> +<dt>Fraxinus Ornus*</dt> +<dt> Mariesii</dt> +<dt>Gaultheria Shallon</dt> +<dt>Genista lusitanica</dt> +<dt> pilosa*</dt> +<dt> prostrata*</dt> +<dt>Halesia parviflora</dt> +<dt>Halimodendron argenteum*</dt> +<dt>Laburnum Adami*</dt> +<dt>Leiophyllum buxifolium*</dt> +<dt> Leucothoë axillaris</dt> +<dt> Catesbaei</dt> +<dt>Magnolia acuminata*</dt> +<dt> glauca</dt> +<dt> Umbrella</dt> +<dt>Ostrya carpinifolia</dt> +<dt>Paeonia Moutan</dt> +<dt>Pernettya mucronata*</dt> +<dt>Philadelphus coronarius</dt> +<dt>Pieris Mariana*</dt> +<dt> ovalifolia</dt> +<dt>Piptanthus nepalensis</dt> +<dt>Polygala Chamaebuxus*</dt> +<dt>Prunus Chamaecerasus</dt> +<dt> pennsylvanica</dt> +<dt> virginiana*</dt> +<dt>Pyrus Aria*</dt> +<dt> Aucuparia*</dt> +<dt> coronaria</dt> +<dt> germanica</dt> +<dt> prunifolia</dt> +<dt> sinensis</dt> +<dt> Smithii*</dt> +<dt> torminalis</dt> +<dt>Rhododendron arborescens</dt> +<dt> calendulaceum</dt> +<dt> Collettiana</dt> +<dt> ferrugineum*</dt> +<dt> flavum</dt> +<dt> hirsutum*</dt> +<dt> molle</dt> +<dt> ponticum</dt> +<dt> racemosum</dt> +<dt>Ribes speciosum</dt> +<dt>Robinia hispida</dt> +<dt> Pseud-Acacia*</dt> +<dt> viscosa</dt> +<dt>Rosa spinosissima*</dt> +<dt>Rubus biflorus</dt> +<dt> deliciosus</dt> +<dt> spectabilis</dt> +<dt>Sophora tetraptera</dt> +<dt>Spiraea cantoniensis</dt> +<dt> laevigata</dt> +<dt> trilobata</dt> +<dt>Staphylea pinnata*</dt> +<dt> trifolia*</dt> +<dt>Stuartia pentagyna*</dt> +<dt>Syringa chinensis*</dt> +<dt> Josikaea</dt> +<dt> persica*</dt> +<dt> vulgaris*</dt> +<dt>Vaccinium corymbosum*</dt> +<dt> pennsylvanicum</dt> +<dt>Viburnum acerifolium*</dt> +<dt> Lantana*</dt> +<dt> Lentago*</dt> +<dt> nudum*</dt> +<dt> plicatum*</dt> +<dt> prunifolium</dt> +<dt> pyrifolium*</dt> +<dt>Wistaria chinensis*</dt> +<dt> multijuga*</dt> +<dt>Exochorda grandiflora</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>JUNE.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Adenocarpus decorticans*</dt> +<dt>Aesculus californica*</dt> +<dt>Andromeda polifolia</dt> +<dt>Bryanthus erectus</dt> +<dt>Buddleia globosa*</dt> +<dt> Lindleyana*</dt> +<dt> paniculata*</dt> +<dt>Calophaca wolgarica*</dt> +<dt>Calycanthus occidentalis*</dt> +<dt>Carpenteria californica</dt> +<dt>Castanea saliva</dt> +<dt>Catalpa speciosa</dt> +<dt>Ceanothus azureus*</dt> +<dt>Choisya ternata*</dt> +<dt>Cistus crispus*</dt> +<dt> ladaniferus</dt> +<dt> laurifolius*</dt> +<dt> monspeliensis*</dt> +<dt> purpureus*</dt> +<dt> salvifolius*</dt> +<dt>Clematis lanuginosa*</dt> +<dt> patens*</dt> +<dt> Viorna</dt> +<dt> Viticella</dt> +<dt>Colutea arborescens*</dt> +<dt> cruenta*</dt> +<dt>Cornus circinata</dt> +<dt> macrophylla</dt> +<dt>Crataegus nigra*</dt> +<dt>Cytisus decumbens</dt> +<dt> nigricans</dt> +<dt>Daboëcia polifolia</dt> +<dt>Diervilla floribunda*</dt> +<dt> grandiflora*</dt> +<dt>Escallonia macrantha*</dt> +<dt>Fuchsia Riccartoni*</dt> +<dt>Genista aetnensis*</dt> +<dt> saggitalis</dt> +<dt>Helianthemum halimifolium*</dt> +<dt> lasianthum</dt> +<dt> lavendulaefolium*</dt> +<dt>Helianthemum pilosum*</dt> +<dt> polifolium*</dt> +<dt> umbellatum*</dt> +<dt>Hypericum calycinum*</dt> +<dt> patulum*</dt> +<dt>Itea virginica</dt> +<dt>Jamesia americana</dt> +<dt>Jasminum revolutum*</dt> +<dt>Kalmia angustifolia</dt> +<dt> latifolia*</dt> +<dt>Kerria japonica*</dt> +<dt>Laburnum alpinum</dt> +<dt> caramanicum</dt> +<dt>Ligustrum japonicum</dt> +<dt> lucidum*</dt> +<dt> ovalitolium*</dt> +<dt> sinense*</dt> +<dt>Liriodendron tulipifera*</dt> +<dt>Lyonia paniculata</dt> +<dt>Magnolia macrophylla</dt> +<dt>Myricaria germanica*</dt> +<dt>Myrtus communis*</dt> +<dt>Neillia opulifolia</dt> +<dt>Olearia macrodonta</dt> +<dt>Oxydendrum arboreum*</dt> +<dt>Philadelphus grandiflorus</dt> +<dt> hirsutus</dt> +<dt> inodorus</dt> +<dt> Lewisi</dt> +<dt> microphyllus*</dt> +<dt>Phlomis fruticosa</dt> +<dt>Plagianthus pulchellus*</dt> +<dt>Potentilla fruticosa</dt> +<dt>Prunus lusitanica</dt> +<dt>Rhododendron californicum</dt> +<dt> campylocarpum</dt> +<dt> chrysanthum</dt> +<dt>Rhus Cotinus*</dt> +<dt>Robinia dubia*</dt> +<dt>Rosa alba*</dt> +<dt> centifolia*</dt> +<dt> damascena*</dt> +<dt> gallica*</dt> +<dt> lutea</dt> +<dt> rubiginosa</dt> +<dt> rugosa</dt> +<dt> sempervirens*</dt> +<dt>Rubus arcticus</dt> +<dt> laciniatus*</dt> +<dt> odoratus*</dt> +<dt>Sambucus nigra</dt> +<dt>Spiraea bullata*</dt> +<dt> cana*</dt> +<dt> chamaedrifolia*</dt> +<dt> decumbens*</dt> +<dt> hypericifolia*</dt> +<dt> japonica*</dt> +<dt> media*</dt> +<dt>Staphylea colchica</dt> +<dt>Stuartia Pseudo-Camellia*</dt> +<dt>Syringa japonica*</dt> +<dt>Tecoma radicans*</dt> +<dt>Tilia vulgaris*</dt> +<dt>Veronica pinquifolia</dt> +<dt> Traversii*</dt> +<dt>Viburnum dahuricum*</dt> +<dt> dentatum</dt> +<dt> macrocephalum</dt> +<dt> Opulus*</dt> +<dt>Yucca filamentosa</dt> +<dt>Zenobia speciosa*</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>JULY.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Aesculus parviflora*</dt> +<dt>Berberis Fortunei</dt> +<dt>Ceanothus americanus*</dt> +<dt>Clematis Flammula*</dt> +<dt> Vitalba*</dt> +<dt>Cornus alba</dt> +<dt> alternifolia</dt> +<dt> tartarica</dt> +<dt>Escallonia floribunda</dt> +<dt> Phillipiana*</dt> +<dt> pterocladon</dt> +<dt> rubra*</dt> +<dt>Eucryphia pinnatifolia*</dt> +<dt>Fuchsia macrostema globosa*</dt> +<dt>Genista anxanctica*</dt> +<dt> cinerea</dt> +<dt> germanica</dt> +<dt> hispanica*</dt> +<dt> radiata*</dt> +<dt> tinctoria*</dt> +<dt>Gordonia lasianthus*</dt> +<dt>Hydrangea hortensis*</dt> +<dt>Hypericum elatum</dt> +<dt> fasciculatum</dt> +<dt> hircinum*</dt> +<dt> prolificum*</dt> +<dt> uralum*</dt> +<dt>Jasminum fruticans*</dt> +<dt> humile*</dt> +<dt>Kalmia hirsuta*</dt> +<dt>Ligustrum Ibota*</dt> +<dt> Quihoi*</dt> +<dt>Lonicera Xylosteum*</dt> +<dt>Periploca graeca*</dt> +<dt>Philadelphus Gordonianus</dt> +<dt> satzumi</dt> +<dt>Photinia arbutifolia</dt> +<dt>Plagianthus Lyalli</dt> +<dt>Philadelphus Lemoinei</dt> +<dt>Rhododendron catawbiense</dt> +<dt> maximum</dt> +<dt> viscosum</dt> +<dt>Rosa bracteata</dt> +<dt> hemisphaerica</dt> +<dt>Spartium junceum*</dt> +<dt>Spiraea bella*</dt> +<dt> discolor ariaefolia</dt> +<dt>Spiraea salicifolia*</dt> +<dt> sorbifolia*</dt> +<dt> tomentosa</dt> +<dt>Tamarix gallica*</dt> +<dt> parviflora*</dt> +<dt>Tilia petiolaris*</dt> +<dt>Wistaria japonica*</dt> +<dt>Yucca gloriosa</dt> +<dt>Zauschneria californica</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>AUGUST.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Abelia chinensis*</dt> +<dt>Calluna vulgaris*</dt> +<dt>Catalpa bignonioides</dt> +<dt>Clerodendron foetidum</dt> +<dt>Erica cinerea*</dt> +<dt>Escallonia illinita</dt> +<dt>Gordonia pubescens</dt> +<dt>Hedysarum multijugum</dt> +<dt>Hibiscus syriacus*</dt> +<dt>Hypericum oblongifolium</dt> +<dt>Leycesteria formosa*</dt> +<dt>Loropetalum chinense*</dt> +<dt>Magnolia grandiflora*</dt> +<dt>Nesaea salicifolia*</dt> +<dt>Passiflora caerulea*</dt> +<dt>Rubus nutkanus</dt> +<dt>Sophora japonica*</dt> +<dt>Spiraea Douglasii</dt> +<dt> Lindleyana</dt> +<dt>Vitex Agnus-castus</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>SEPTEMBER.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Arbutus Unedo*</dt> +<dt>Baccharis halimifolia</dt> +<dt>Clerodendron trichotomum</dt> +<dt>Clethra acuminata*</dt> +<dt> alnifolia</dt> +<dt>Daphne Cneorum*</dt> +<dt>Hydrangea paniculata grandiflora*</dt> +<dt>Olearia Haastii</dt> +<dt> Gunniana</dt> +<dt>Photinia japonica</dt> +<dt>Microglossa albescens*</dt> +<dt>Tecoma grandiflora*</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>OCTOBER.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Berberidopsis corallina</dt> +<dt>Berberris nervosa*</dt> +<dt>Caryopteris Mastacanthus</dt> +<dt>Hamamelis virginica*</dt> +<dt>Lespedeza bicolor</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>NOVEMBER.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Azara microphylla</dt> +<dt>Cassinia fulvida</dt> +<dt>Chimonanthus fragrans*</dt> +<dt>Jasminum nudiflorum*</dt></dl> +<p><b><small>DECEMBER.</small></b></p> +<dl> +<dt>Chimonanthus fragrans*</dt> +<dt>Lardizabala biternata</dt> +<dt>Viburnum Tinus*</dt></dl> +<p> </p> +<h3 align="center">I N D E X.</h3> +<center><i><big>Synonymous names are printed in +italics</big></i>.</center> +<p> </p> +<table width="95%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" +summary="Index"> +<tr> +<td>Aaron's Beard,</td> +<td>Leycesteria formosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Abelia chinensis,</td> +<td><i>Ligustrina amurensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>rupestris</i>,</td> +<td>Ligustrum <i>amurense</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> triflora,</td> +<td> <i>californicum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Adenocarpus <i>Boissieri</i>,</td> +<td> <i>glabrum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> decorticans,</td> +<td> Ibota,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Aesculus californica,</td> +<td> <i>Ibota villosum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> chinensis,</td> +<td> japonicum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> flava,</td> +<td>Ligustrum <i>Kellermanni</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> flava discolor,</td> +<td> lucidum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> glabra,</td> +<td> magnoliaefolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Hippocastanum,</td> +<td> ovalifolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Pavia,</td> +<td> <i>Sieboldii</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Pavia atrosanguinea,</td> +<td> sinense,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Pavia humilis,</td> +<td> <i>strictum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Pavia macrocarpa,</td> +<td> <i>villosum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Pavia Whitleyana,</td> +<td> vulgare,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> parviflora,</td> +<td>Lily, the Mound,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>rubicunda</i>,</td> +<td><i>Limonia Laureola</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ailanthus <i>flavescens</i>,</td> +<td>Linden Tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> glandulosa,</td> +<td>Ling, the common,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Akebia quinata,</td> +<td>Linnaea borealis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Alabama Snow Wreath,</td> +<td>Lippia citriodora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Alder, the berry bearing</td> +<td>Liriodendron tulipifera,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Alexandrian Laurel,</td> +<td>Loblolly Bay,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Almond, Abbé David's</td> +<td>Locust, common,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> common,</td> +<td>Lonicera <i>brachypoda</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Aloysia citriodora</i>,</td> +<td> Caprifolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Aloysia</i>. See Lippia</td> +<td> flexuosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Alpine Rose,</td> +<td> fragrantissima,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Althaea frutex</i>,</td> +<td> Periclymenum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Amelanchier alnifolia,</td> +<td> sempervirens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> canadensis,</td> +<td> Standishii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgaris,</td> +<td> tatarica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>American Great Laurel,</td> +<td> Xylosteum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>American Withe Rod,</td> +<td>Loquat, the,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Ammyrsine buxifoiia</i>,</td> +<td>Loropetalum chinense,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Amoor Yellow Wood,</td> +<td>Lycium barbarum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Amorpha canescens,</td> +<td> europaeum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> fruticosa,</td> +<td>Lyonia <i>ligustrina</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Amygdatus communis</i>,</td> +<td> paniculata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>dulcis</i>,</td> +<td>Maclura aurantiaca,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Besseriana</i>,</td> +<td>Mahaleb, or Perfumed Cherry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Boissieri</i>,</td> +<td><i>Mahonia Aquifolium</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Lindleyi</i>,</td> +<td> <i>Bealei</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>nana</i>,</td> +<td> <i>facicularis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>persica flore-pleno</i>,</td> +<td> <i>Fortunei</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Amygdalus</i>. See Prunus,</td> +<td> <i>glumacea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Andromeda <i>arborea</i>,</td> +<td> <i>gracilis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>axillaris</i>,</td> +<td> <i>Hookeri</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>calyculata</i>,</td> +<td> <i>japonica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>cassinaefolia</i>,</td> +<td> <i>nepalensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Catesbaei</i>,</td> +<td> <i>Neumanii</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>fastigiata</i>,</td> +<td> <i>repens</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>floribunda</i>,</td> +<td> <i>trifoliolata</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>globulifera</i>,</td> +<td> <i>trifurca</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>japonica</i>,</td> +<td>Magnolia acuminata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Mariana ovalis</i>,</td> +<td> <i>auriculata</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>ovalifolia</i>,</td> +<td> Campbelii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>pilifera</i>,</td> +<td> conspicua,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> polifolia,</td> +<td> conspicua Alexandrina,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>recurva</i>,</td> +<td> conspicua Soulangeana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>speciosa</i>,</td> +<td> conspicua Soulangeana nigra,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>tetragona</i>,</td> +<td> conspicua Soulangeana +Norbertii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Angelica tree,</td> +<td> conspicua Soulangeana +speciosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Aralia <i>japonica</i>,</td> +<td> cordata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> mandshurica,</td> +<td> Fraseri,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Sieboldii</i>,</td> +<td> glauca,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> spinosa,</td> +<td> grandiflora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Aralia. See Fatsia,</td> +<td> <i>Halleana</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Arbutus Andrachne,</td> +<td> Lennei,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Menziesii,</td> +<td> macrophylla,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Milleri,</td> +<td> obovata discolor,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>mucronata</i>,</td> +<td> parviflora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> photiniaefolia,</td> +<td> <i>purpurea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>procera</i>,</td> +<td> stellata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Rollisoni,</td> +<td> <i>tripetala</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> serratifolia,</td> +<td> Umbrella,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Unedo,</td> +<td> <i>Yulan</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Unedo Croomei,</td> +<td><i>Malachodendron ovatum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Arctostaphylos alpina,</td> +<td>Mallow, Syrian,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Uva-ursi,</td> +<td>Mallow tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Aristolochio Sipho,</td> +<td><i>Malus microcarpa floribunda</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Aronia Thorn,</td> +<td>Manna Ash,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Arrowwood,</td> +<td>Marsh Ledum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Asimina triloba,</td> +<td>Mayflower, New England,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Aster albescens</i>,</td> +<td>Medicago arborea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>cabulicus</i>,</td> +<td>Medlar, common,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Atragene alpina</i>,</td> +<td>Menispermum canadense,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Azalea <i>arborescens</i>,</td> +<td><i>Menziesia</i>. See Daboëcia; Phylodoce;</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>calendulacea</i>,</td> +<td> and Lyonia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>ledifolia</i>,</td> +<td><i>Menziesia caerulea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>mollis</i>,</td> +<td> <i>empetrifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>occidentalis</i>,</td> +<td> <i>globularis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>pontica</i>,</td> +<td> <i>polifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>viscosa</i>,</td> +<td><i>Mespilus arbutifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Azalea</i>. See Rhododendron,</td> +<td> <i>germanica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Azaleas, Ghent,</td> +<td> <i>grandiflora</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Azara microphylla,</td> +<td> <i>Smithii</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> integrifolia,</td> +<td>Mexican Orange Flower,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> lanceolata,</td> +<td>Mezereon, the,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> serrata,</td> +<td>Microglossa albescens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Baccharis halimifolia,</td> +<td>Mitchella repens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> patagonica,</td> +<td>Mitraria coccinea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Band plant,</td> +<td>Mitre pod, scarlet,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bastard Acacia,</td> +<td>Mock Orange,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bastard Box,</td> +<td>Monk's Pepper-tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Baptisia nepalensis</i>,</td> +<td>Moonseed,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Beach or Sand Plum,</td> +<td>Mountain Ash,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bearberry,</td> +<td>Mountain Laurel,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Beef Suet tree,</td> +<td>Moutan Paeony,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Benthamia fragifera</i>,</td> +<td>Myrica asplenifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>japonica</i>,</td> +<td> californica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Benthamia</i>. See Cornus,</td> +<td> cerifera,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Berberidopsis corallina,</td> +<td> Gale,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Berberis Aquifolium,</td> +<td>Myricaria germanica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Aquifolium repens,</td> +<td>Myrobalan Plum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> aristata,</td> +<td>Myrtle, Bog,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Bealei,</td> +<td> Common,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> buxifolia,</td> +<td> Californian Wax,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> congestiflora,</td> +<td> Common Candle-berry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Darwinii,</td> +<td> Sand,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>dulcis</i>,</td> +<td>Myrtus communis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> empetrifolia,</td> +<td> Luma,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Fortunei,</td> +<td> Ugni,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> gracilis,</td> +<td>Neillia opulifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> ilicifolia,</td> +<td> thyrsiflora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> japonica,</td> +<td>Nepaul White Beam,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Berberis <i>microphylla</i>,</td> +<td>Nesaea salicifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> nepalensis,</td> +<td>Neviusa alabamensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> nervosa,</td> +<td>New Jersey Tea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pinnata,</td> +<td>Nine Bark,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> sinensis,</td> +<td>Nuttalia cerasiformis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> stenophylla,</td> +<td>Old Man's beard,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> trifoliolata,</td> +<td>Olearia <i>dentata</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> trifurca,</td> +<td> Forsterii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgaris,</td> +<td> Gunniana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Wallichiana,</td> +<td> Haastii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Berchemia volubilis,</td> +<td> macrodonta,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bignonia capreolata,</td> +<td>Ononis arvensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> grandiflora,</td> +<td>Orange Ball tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> radicans,</td> +<td><i>Ornus europea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bignonia. See Tecoma,</td> +<td>Osage Orange,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Billardiera longiflora,</td> +<td>Osmanthus Aquifolium ilicifolius,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Billberry,</td> +<td> Aquifolium illicifolius +myrtifolius,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Birchberry,</td> +<td>Osoberry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bird Cherry,</td> +<td>Ostrya carpinifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bitter Sweet,</td> +<td> virginica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bladder Senna,</td> +<td> <i>vulgaris</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Blue Apple berry,</td> +<td>Oxydendrum arboreum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Blueberry,</td> +<td>Ozothamnus rosmarinifolius,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bog Myrtle,</td> +<td>Paeonia Moutan,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bour tree,</td> +<td>Pagoda-tree, Chinese,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Box, flowering,</td> +<td>Paliurus aculeatus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Box Thorn,</td> +<td> <i>australis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bow-wood,</td> +<td>Papaw, the Virginian,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Bridgesia spicata</i>,</td> +<td>Parrotia persica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Bridgesia</i>. See Ercilla,</td> +<td>Partridge Berry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bryanthus erectus,</td> +<td>Passiflora caerulea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> empetriforrnis,</td> +<td>Paulownia imperialis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Buckeye, the,</td> +<td><i>Pavia californica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Buckthorn, common,</td> +<td> <i>discolor</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Buddleia <i>crispa</i>,</td> +<td> <i>flava</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> globosa,</td> +<td> <i>humilis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Lindleyana,</td> +<td><i>Pavia macrocarpa</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> paniculata,</td> +<td><i>Pavia macrocarpa</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Bupleurum fruticosum,</td> +<td> <i>rubra</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Butcher's Broom,</td> +<td><i>Pavia</i>, See Aesculus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Caesalpinia <i>japonica</i>,</td> +<td>Pepper-plant, Tasmanian,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> sepiaria,</td> +<td>Pepper-tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Calico bush,</td> +<td>Periploca graeca,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Californian or Western Allspice,</td> +<td>Periwinkles,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Californian Fuchsia,</td> +<td>Pernettya mucronata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Calluna vulgaris,</td> +<td>Persimmon, the,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Calophaca wolgarica,</td> +<td>Philadelphus coronarius,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Calycanthus floridus,</td> +<td> <i>chinensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> occidentalis,</td> +<td> <i>chinensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Canada Tea,</td> +<td> Gordonianus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Caragana <i>Altagana</i>,</td> +<td> grandiflorus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> arborescens,</td> +<td> hirsutus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> frutescens,</td> +<td> inodorus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> microphylla,</td> +<td> <i>latifolius</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> spinosa,</td> +<td> Lemoinei,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cardiandra alternifolia,</td> +<td> Lewisii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Carolina Allspice,</td> +<td> mexicanus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Carpenteria californica,</td> +<td> microphyllus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Caryopteris Mastacanthus,</td> +<td> satzumi,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Casandra calyculata,</td> +<td> <i>speciosus</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cassinia fulvida,</td> +<td> triflorus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cassiope fastigiata,</td> +<td>Phillyrea angustifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> tetragona,</td> +<td> <i>decora</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Castanea sativa,</td> +<td> latifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>vesca</i>,</td> +<td> latifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>vulgaris</i>,</td> +<td> latifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Catalpa bignonioides,</td> +<td> latifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Bungei,</td> +<td> latifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Kaempferi,</td> +<td> latifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> speciosa,</td> +<td> latifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cat Whim,</td> +<td> <i>rosmarinifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ceanothus americanus,</td> +<td> Vilmoriniana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> azureus,</td> +<td>Phlomis fruticosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> cuneatus,</td> +<td>Photinia arbutifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> dentatus,</td> +<td> Benthumiana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pappilosus,</td> +<td> japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> rigidus,</td> +<td> serrulata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>verrucosus</i>,</td> +<td>Phyllodoce taxifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cedrela sinensis,</td> +<td> <i>caerulea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Celustrus scandens,</td> +<td>Pieris floribunda,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Celtis australis,</td> +<td> japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> occidentalis,</td> +<td> Mariana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cerasus <i>Caproniana multiplex</i>,</td> +<td> ovalifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Chamaecerasus</i>,</td> +<td>Pipe tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>ilicifolius</i>,</td> +<td>Piptanthus nepalensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Juliana</i>,</td> +<td>Pittosporum Tobira,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Launesiana</i>,</td> +<td> undulatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Laurocerasus</i>,</td> +<td>Plagianthus Lyalli,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>lusitanica</i>,</td> +<td> Lampeni,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Mahaleb</i>,</td> +<td> pulohellus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Padus</i>,</td> +<td><i>Planera acuminata</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Pseudocerasus</i>,</td> +<td> <i>crenata</i>, 134</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>ranunculiflora</i>,</td> +<td> <i>Richardi</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>semperflorens</i>,</td> +<td><i>Planera</i>, See Zelkova,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> serrulata flore-pleno,</td> +<td>Poison Elder,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Sieboldii,</td> +<td>Poison Ivy,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>virginiana</i>,</td> +<td>Poison Oak,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>vulgaris</i>,</td> +<td>Poison Vine,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Cerasus</i>. See Prunus,</td> +<td><i>Polycarpa Maximowiczii</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cercis canadensis,</td> +<td>Pomegranate,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Siliquastrum,</td> +<td>Pontic Daphne,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Chaste tree,</td> +<td>Portugal Laurel,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cherry, Bastard,</td> +<td>Potato tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> common,</td> +<td>Potentilla fruticosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> ground,</td> +<td>Prickly Ivy,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Laurel,</td> +<td>Privets,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> St. Julian's,</td> +<td><i>Prunopsis Lindleyi</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Chimonanthus fragrans,</td> +<td>Prunus Amygdalus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Chinese Akebia,</td> +<td> Amygdalus dulcis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Chinese Pear tree,</td> +<td> Avium Juliana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Quince,</td> +<td> Boissieri,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Chionanthus retusa,</td> +<td> cerasifera,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> virginica,</td> +<td> cerasifera Pissardii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Choisya ternata,</td> +<td> Cerasus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Christ's Thorn,</td> +<td>Prunus Chamaecerasus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cistus crispus,</td> +<td> Davidiana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>formosus</i>,</td> +<td> divaricata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> ladaniferus,</td> +<td> domestica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>laevipes</i>,</td> +<td> ilicifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> laurifolius,</td> +<td> Launesiana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> monspeliensis,</td> +<td> Laurocerasus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> purpureus,</td> +<td> lusitanica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> salvifolius,</td> +<td> Mahaleb,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Citharexylum cyanocarpum</i>,</td> +<td> maritima,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Citharexylum</i>. See Rhapithamnus,</td> +<td> <i>Myrobalana</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Citrus trifoliata,</td> +<td> nana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cladrastis amurensis,</td> +<td> Padus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> tinctoria,</td> +<td> paniculata flore-pleno,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>lutea</i>,</td> +<td> pennsylvanica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Clammy Azalea,</td> +<td> Persica flore-pleno,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Clammy Locust,</td> +<td> <i>Pissardii</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Clematis alpina,</td> +<td> <i>Pseudo-cerasus</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>austriaca</i>,</td> +<td> Puddum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>azurea grandiflora</i>,</td> +<td> serotina,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>cirrhosa</i>,</td> +<td> sinensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>caerulea</i>,</td> +<td> spinosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Flammula,</td> +<td> tomentosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> florida,</td> +<td> triloba,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Fortunei</i>,</td> +<td> virginiana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> graveolens,</td> +<td> virginiana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> lanuginosa,</td> +<td>Ptelea trifoliata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> montana,</td> +<td><i>Pterpstyrax hispidum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> patens,</td> +<td>Punica Granatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>sibirica</i>,</td> +<td>Purple Broom,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Viorna,</td> +<td>Purple Hazel,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Vitalba,</td> +<td>Pyrus amygdaliformis.,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Williamsii,</td> +<td> Aria,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Clerodendron foetidum,</td> +<td> Aucuparia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> trichotomum,</td> +<td> americana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Clethra acuminata,</td> +<td> angustifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> alnifolia,</td> +<td> baccata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Climbing Berchemia,</td> +<td> Bollwylleriana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Climbing Waxwork,</td> +<td> coronaria,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cockspur Thorn,</td> +<td> domestica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cocculus carolinus,</td> +<td> floribunda,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> laurifolius,</td> +<td> germanica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Colchican Bladder Nut,</td> +<td> japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Colletia <i>bictonensis</i>,</td> +<td> prunifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> cruciata,</td> +<td> <i>Malus floribunda</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>serratifolia</i>,</td> +<td> rivularis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> spinosa,</td> +<td> salvaefolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Colutea arborescens,</td> +<td> salicifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> cruenta,</td> +<td> <i>sinensis of Lindley</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>orientalis</i>,</td> +<td> sinensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>sanguinea</i>,</td> +<td> sinica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Comptonia asplenifolia</i>,</td> +<td> Smithii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Comptonia</i>. See Myrica,</td> +<td> torminalis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Constantinople Hazel,</td> +<td> vestita,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Coral Barberry,</td> +<td>Quince, Japanese,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Coral Berry,</td> +<td> Chinese,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Corchorus japonicus</i>,</td> +<td>Rabbit berry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Coriaria myrtifolia,</td> +<td>Red Osier Dogwood,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cornel, the,</td> +<td>Restharrow,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cornelian Cherry,</td> +<td>Rhamnus Alaternus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Corokia Cotoneaster,</td> +<td> alpinus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Coronilla Emerus,</td> +<td> catharticus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cernus alba,</td> +<td> Frangula,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> alternifolia,</td> +<td>Rhaphiolepis japonica integerrima,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> amomum,</td> +<td> <i>ovata</i></td></tr> +<tr> +<td> asperifolia,</td> +<td>Rhaphithamnus cyanocarpus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Baileyi,</td> +<td>Rhododendron <i>aeruginosum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>brachypoda</i>,</td> +<td> arborescens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> californica,</td> +<td> arboreum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> canadensis,</td> +<td> argenteum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> candidissima,</td> +<td> Aucklandii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> capitata,</td> +<td> barbatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> circinata,</td> +<td> calendulaceum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> florida,</td> +<td> californicum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Kousa,</td> +<td> campanulatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> macrophylla,</td> +<td> Campbelli,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Mas,</td> +<td> campylocarpum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Nuttalii,</td> +<td> catawbiense,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> officinalis,</td> +<td>Rhododendron <i>Chamaecistus</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>paniculata</i>,</td> +<td> chrysanthum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>pubescens</i>,</td> +<td> ciliatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>sericea</i>,</td> +<td> cinnabarinum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> stolonifera,</td> +<td> Collettianum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> tartarica,</td> +<td> dahuricum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>sibirica</i>,</td> +<td> eximium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Corylopsis Himalayana,</td> +<td> Falconeri,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pauciflora,</td> +<td> ferrugineum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> spicata,</td> +<td> flavuni,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Corylus Avellana purpurea,</td> +<td> Fortunei,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Colurna,</td> +<td> glaucum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cotoneaster bacillaris,</td> +<td> hirsutum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> frigida,</td> +<td> Hodgsoni,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> microphylla,</td> +<td> indicum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Simonsii,</td> +<td> lanatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cowberry,</td> +<td> ledifolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Crataegus <i>arbutifolia</i>,</td> +<td> maximum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Azarolus,</td> +<td> molle,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Azarolus Aronia,</td> +<td> niveum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Celsiana</i>,</td> +<td> occidentale,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> coccinea,</td> +<td> parvifolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> coccinea macrantha,</td> +<td> ponticum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> cordata,</td> +<td> ponticum azaleoides,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Crus-galli,</td> +<td> <i>ponticum deciduum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Douglasii,</td> +<td> racemosum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>glabra</i>,</td> +<td> Rhodora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> nigra,</td> +<td> Roylei,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Oxyacantha,</td> +<td> Smirnowii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> parvifolia,</td> +<td> Thompsoni,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Pyracantha,</td> +<td> Ungernii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> tanacetifolia,</td> +<td> viscosum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cucumber tree,</td> +<td> Wallichii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Currants, flowering,</td> +<td> Wilsoni,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Cydonia chinensis</i>,</td> +<td>Rhododendrons, hardy hybrid,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>japonica</i>,</td> +<td>Rhodora canadensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cytisus <i>Adami</i>,</td> +<td>Rhodothamnus Chamaecistus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> albus,</td> +<td>Rhodotypos Kerrioides,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> albus incarnatus,</td> +<td>Rhus caroliniana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>alpinus</i>,</td> +<td> <i>coccinea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> biflorus,</td> +<td> Cotinus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> decumbens,</td> +<td> <i>elegans</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Cytisus <i>elongatus</i>,</td> +<td> glabra,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>incarnatus</i>,</td> +<td> <i>sanguinea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Laburnum</i>,</td> +<td> succedanea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> nigricans,</td> +<td> Toxicodendron,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> purpureus,</td> +<td> typhina,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> scoparius,</td> +<td> venenata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Daboëcia polifolia,</td> +<td> <i>vernix</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Danaë Laurus,</td> +<td>Ribes alpinum pumilum aureum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>racemosa</i>,</td> +<td> aureum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Daphne alpina,</td> +<td> <i>Beatonii</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> altaica,</td> +<td> cereum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Blagayana,</td> +<td> floridum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Championi,</td> +<td> Gordonianum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Cneorum,</td> +<td> <i>inebrians</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>collina</i>,</td> +<td> <i>Loudonii</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Fioniana,</td> +<td> <i>missouriense</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Fortunei</i>,</td> +<td> multiflorum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Genkwa,</td> +<td> <i>pennsylvanicum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Laureola,</td> +<td> sanguineum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Mezereum,</td> +<td> speciosum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> petraea,</td> +<td>Robinia ambigua,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pontica,</td> +<td> dubia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>rupestris</i>,</td> +<td> <i>echinata</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> sericea,</td> +<td> glutinosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Daphniphyllum glaucescens,</td> +<td> <i>Halimodendron</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Date Plum, the,</td> +<td> hispida,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Desfontainea spinosa,</td> +<td> Pseud-Acacia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Desmodium penduliftorum</i>,</td> +<td> viscosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Desmodium</i>. See Lespedeza,</td> +<td>Rock Abelia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Deutzia crenata,</td> +<td>Rock Daphne,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Fortunei</i>,</td> +<td>Rock Rose, the,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> gracilis,</td> +<td>Rosa alba,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>scabra</i>,</td> +<td> <i>arvensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Diervilla <i>amabilis</i>,</td> +<td> <i>bengalensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> floribunda,</td> +<td> bracteata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> grandiflora,</td> +<td> canina,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>multiflora</i>,</td> +<td>Rosa centifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> rosea,</td> +<td> damascena,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Dimorphanthus mandshuricus</i>,</td> +<td> <i>diversifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Dimorphanthus</i>. See Aralia,</td> +<td> <i>Eglanteria</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Diospyros Kaki costata,</td> +<td> ferox,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> lotus,</td> +<td> gallica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> virginiana,</td> +<td> hemisphaerica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Diplopappus chrysophyllus</i>,</td> +<td> indica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Diplopappus</i>. See Cassinia,</td> +<td> indica minima,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Dirca palustris,</td> +<td> indica semperflorens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Discaria longispina,</td> +<td> <i>Lawrenceana</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> serratifolia,</td> +<td> lutea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Dockmackie,</td> +<td> <i>minima</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Dogwood,</td> +<td> <i>pimpinellifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Drimys aromatica,</td> +<td> repens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Winteri,</td> +<td> rugosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Dutchman's Pipe,</td> +<td> sempervirens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Elaeagnus argentea,</td> +<td> <i>semperflorens minima</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>crispa</i>,</td> +<td> spinosissima,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>edulis</i>,</td> +<td> sulphurea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> glabra,</td> +<td> villosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> longipes,</td> +<td>Rose Acacia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> macrophylla,</td> +<td>Rose Bay,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>reflexus</i>,</td> +<td>Rose of Sharon,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> rotundifolia,</td> +<td>Rosmarinus officinalis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Elder, Californian,</td> +<td>Rosemary, common,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Scarlet berried,</td> +<td>Rosemary, wild,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Embothrium coccineum,</td> +<td>Rowan-tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ephedra <i>monastachya</i>,</td> +<td>Rubus arcticus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgaris,</td> +<td> australis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Epigaea repens,</td> +<td> biflorus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ercilla spicata,</td> +<td> deliciosus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Erica carnea,</td> +<td> fruticosus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> ciliaris,</td> +<td> laciniatus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> cineria,</td> +<td> nutkanus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> erecta,</td> +<td> odoratus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> mediterranea,</td> +<td> rosaefolius,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> scoparia,</td> +<td> spectabilis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Tetralix,</td> +<td>Ruscus aculeatus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vagans,</td> +<td> Hypophyllum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>vulgaris</i>,</td> +<td> <i>racemosus</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Eriobotrya japonica</i>,</td> +<td>St. Anthony's Nut,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Eriobotrya</i>. See Photinia,</td> +<td>St. Dabeoc's Heath,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Etna Broom,</td> +<td>St. Peter's Wort,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Eucryphia pinnatifolia,</td> +<td>Sand Myrtle,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Eugenia apiculata</i>,</td> +<td>Sallow thorn,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Luma</i>,</td> +<td>Salt tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Ugni</i>,</td> +<td>Sambucus californica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Euonymus americana,</td> +<td> glauca,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> europaeus,</td> +<td> nigra,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> fimbriatus,</td> +<td> racemosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> latifolius,</td> +<td> rosaeflora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Eurybia Gunniana</i>,</td> +<td>Schizandra chinensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Evergreen Laburnum,</td> +<td> coccinea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Escallonia floribunda,</td> +<td>Schizophragma hydrangeoides,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> illinita,</td> +<td>Scorpion Senna,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> macrantha,</td> +<td>Sea Buckthorn,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>montevidensis</i>,</td> +<td>Sea Purslane,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Phillipiana,</td> +<td>Service tree, true,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pterocladon,</td> +<td>Sheepberry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> rubra,</td> +<td>Sheep Laurel,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Exochorda grandiflora,</td> +<td>Shepherdia argentea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fabiana imbricata,</td> +<td> canadensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>False Acacia,</td> +<td>Shrubs for seaside planting,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fatsia japonica,</td> +<td> for town planting,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fendlera rupicola,</td> +<td>Siberian Crab,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fiery Thorn,</td> +<td>Siberian Pea tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fire Bush,</td> +<td><i>Sida pulchella</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Flacourtia japonica</i>,</td> +<td>Silk grass,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Florida Dogwood,</td> +<td>Silver Berry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Forsythia <i>Fortunei</i>,</td> +<td>Skimmia Fortunei,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Sieboldii</i>,</td> +<td> japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> suspensa,</td> +<td> Laureola,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> viridissima,</td> +<td> <i>oblata</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fothergilla alnifolia,</td> +<td> rubella,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fraxinus <i>argentea</i>,</td> +<td>Smilax aspera,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Ornus,</td> +<td>Smoke Plant,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Ornus serotina alba,</td> +<td>Snowberry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Ornus serotina violacea,</td> +<td>Snowdrop Tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Mariesii,</td> +<td>Soap Tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fremontia californica,</td> +<td>Solanum crispum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Fuchsia <i>globosa</i>,</td> +<td> Dulcamara,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> macrostemma globosa,</td> +<td>Sophora japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Riccartoni,</td> +<td> tetraptera,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Garland Flower,</td> +<td><i>Sorbus Americana</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Garrya elliptica,</td> +<td> <i>domestica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Gaultheria <i>nummulariae</i>,</td> +<td>Sorrel-tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> nummularioides,</td> +<td>Spanish Broom; White,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> procumbens,</td> +<td>Spanish Chestnut, Sweet,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>repens</i>,</td> +<td>Spartium junceum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Shallon,</td> +<td> <i>acutifolium</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Genista aetnensis,</td> +<td> <i>aetnensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> anxantica,</td> +<td> <i>radiatum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> capitata,</td> +<td>Spindle tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> cinerea,</td> +<td>Spiraea altaica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> daurica,</td> +<td> <i>altaicensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>elatior</i>,</td> +<td> <i>ariaefolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> ephedroides,</td> +<td> bella,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> germanica,</td> +<td> Blumei,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> hispanica,</td> +<td> bullata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> lusitanica,</td> +<td> <i>callosa</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> monosperma,</td> +<td> cana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pilosa,</td> +<td> cantoniensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> prostrata,</td> +<td> ceanothifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> radiata,</td> +<td> chamaedrifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>ramosissima</i>,</td> +<td> <i>confusa</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> sagittalis,</td> +<td> <i>crispifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> tinctoria,</td> +<td> decumbens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> tinctoria elatior,</td> +<td> discolor ariaefolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> triangularis,</td> +<td> Douglasii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>triquetra</i>,</td> +<td> fissa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Gleditschia triacanthos,</td> +<td> <i>flagellata</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> triacanthos pendula,</td> +<td> <i>Fortunei</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> sinensis,</td> +<td> <i>grandiflora</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>horrida</i>,</td> +<td> hypericifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Glycine chinensis</i>,</td> +<td> japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>frutescens</i>,</td> +<td> laevigata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>sinensis</i>,</td> +<td> Lindleyana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Gordonia Lasianthus,</td> +<td> media,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pubescens,</td> +<td> nana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Grabowskia boerhaaviaefolia,</td> +<td> <i>oblongifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Griselinia littoralis,</td> +<td> <i>opulifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ground Cistus,</td> +<td> prunifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ground Laurel,</td> +<td> <i>Reevesiana</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Groundsel Tree,</td> +<td> rotundifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Guelder Rose,</td> +<td> salicifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Gum Cistus,</td> +<td> sorbifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Gymnocladus canadensis,</td> +<td> Thunbergii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> chinensis,</td> +<td> tomentosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hagberry,</td> +<td> <i>triloba</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Halesia diptera,</td> +<td> trilobata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> hispida,</td> +<td> umbrosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> parviflora,</td> +<td>Spurge Laurel,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>reticulata</i>,</td> +<td>Stag's Horn Sumach,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> tetraptera,</td> +<td>Staphylea colchica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Halimodendron argenteum,</td> +<td> pinnata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hamamelis japonica,</td> +<td> trifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> japonica arborea,</td> +<td>Stauntonia haxaphylla,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> japonica Zuccariniana,</td> +<td> <i>latifolia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> virginica,</td> +<td>Strawberry Tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hare's Ear,</td> +<td>Stuartia grandiflora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hawthorn, the,</td> +<td> <i>marylandica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hazel, the,</td> +<td> pentagyna,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Heather, the Common,</td> +<td> pseudo-Camellia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hedysarum multijugum,</td> +<td> virginica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Heimia salicifolia</i>,</td> +<td><i>Styphnolobium japonicum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Heimia</i>. See Nesaea,</td> +<td>Styrax americana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Helianthemum <i>formosum</i>,</td> +<td> <i>japonica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> halimifolium,</td> +<td> officinalis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> laevipes,</td> +<td> pulverulenta,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> lasianthum,</td> +<td> serrulata virgata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> lavendulaefolium,</td> +<td>Sumach,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> libanotis,</td> +<td>Swamp Dogwood,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pilosum,</td> +<td>Swamp Honeysuckle,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> polifolium,</td> +<td>Sweet Amber,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>pulverulentum</i>,</td> +<td>Sweet Fern,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>serpyllifolium</i>,</td> +<td>Sweet Gale,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> umbellatum,</td> +<td>Sweet Viburnum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare,</td> +<td><i>Symphoria racemosus</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare nummularium,</td> +<td>Symphoricarpus occidentalis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare barbatum,</td> +<td> racemosus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare mutabile,</td> +<td> vulgaris,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare grandiflorum,</td> +<td>Syrian Mallow,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare ovalifolium,</td> +<td>Syringa chinensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare hysopifolium,</td> +<td> <i>dubia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hemp Tree,</td> +<td> <i>rothomagensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hippophae rhamnoides,</td> +<td> Emodi,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Holboellia latifolia,</td> +<td> japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Holly, the,</td> +<td> <i>amurensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Honey Locust,</td> +<td> Josikaea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Honeysuckles,</td> +<td> persica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hop tree,</td> +<td> vulgaris,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hornbeam,</td> +<td>Symplocos japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Horse Chestnut,</td> +<td> tinctoria,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td><i>Hortensia opuloides</i>,</td> +<td>Tamarix gallica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Humming Bird's Trumpet,</td> +<td> <i>africana</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hybiscus syriacus,</td> +<td> parviflora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> syriacus vars.,</td> +<td> tetrandra,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hydrangea arborescens,</td> +<td>Tam Furze,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> hortensis,</td> +<td>Tansy-leaved Thorn,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> hortensis vars.,</td> +<td><i>Tasmania aromatica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> quercifolia,</td> +<td>Tea, Labrador,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> scandens,</td> +<td>Tea tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> paniculata,</td> +<td>Tecoma grandiflora,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> paniculata grandiflora,</td> +<td> radicans,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hydrangea, climbing,</td> +<td>Thyrsanthus frutescens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hymenanthera crassifolia,</td> +<td>Tilia <i>europea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Hypericum Androsaemum,</td> +<td> <i>intermedia</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> aureum,</td> +<td> vulgaris,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> calycinum,</td> +<td>Tree Mallow,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> elatum,</td> +<td>Tree of Heaven,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> hircinum,</td> +<td>Trees for seaside planting,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Moserianum,</td> +<td> for town planting,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> oblongifolium,</td> +<td>Trumpet Flower,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>Hookerianum</i>,</td> +<td>Tulip tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>nepalensis</i>,</td> +<td>Tutsan, the,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> prolificum,</td> +<td>Ulex europaeus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> uralum,</td> +<td> nanus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Idesia polycarpa,</td> +<td>Vaccinium corymbosum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ilex Aquifolium,</td> +<td> Myrtillus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Aquifolium vars.,</td> +<td> pennsylvanicum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> opaca,</td> +<td> Vitis-Idea,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Illicium anisatum,</td> +<td>Veronica pinquifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> floridanum,</td> +<td> Travereii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>religiosum</i>,</td> +<td>Vinca major,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Indian Azalea,</td> +<td> minor,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Indigofera Dosua,</td> +<td>Vinegar tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>floribunda</i>,</td> +<td>Venetian Sumach,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Gerardiana,</td> +<td>Verbena, Lemon-scented,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Itea virginica,</td> +<td><i>Verbena triphylla</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Jamesia americana,</td> +<td>Viburnum acerifolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Japanese Storax,</td> +<td> Awafukii,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Japan Medlar, or Quince,</td> +<td>Viburnum daburicum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Jasminum fruticans,</td> +<td> dentatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> humile,</td> +<td> <i>Fortunei</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> nudiflorum,</td> +<td> laevigatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> officinale,</td> +<td> Lantana,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> pubigerum glabrum,</td> +<td> Lentago,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> revolutum,</td> +<td> macrocephalum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Wallichianum,</td> +<td> nudum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Jerusalem Sage,</td> +<td> Opulus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Job's Tears,</td> +<td> pauciflorum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Judas tree,</td> +<td> plicatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>June Berry, the,</td> +<td> prunifolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Kadsura japonica,</td> +<td> pyrifolium,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Kalmia angustifolia,</td> +<td> reticulatum,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> glauca,</td> +<td> Tinus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> hirsuta,</td> +<td><i>Virgilia lutea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> latifolia,</td> +<td><i>Virgilia</i>. See Cladrastis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> latifolia vars.,</td> +<td>Virgin's Bower,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Kentucky Coffee Tree,</td> +<td>Vitex Agnas-castus,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Kerria japonica,</td> +<td>Vitis heterophylla humulifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Koelreuteria paniculata,</td> +<td>Wayfaring tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Labrador Tea,</td> +<td><i>Weigelia</i>. See Diervilla,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Laburnum Adami,</td> +<td><i>Weigelia amabilis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> alpinum,</td> +<td> <i>floribunda</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> caramanicum,</td> +<td> <i>rosea</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vulgare,</td> +<td>White Bean tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lady's Bower,</td> +<td>White Kerria,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lapageria rosea,</td> +<td>Whortlebury,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lardizabala biternata,</td> +<td>Wig tree,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Laurel, Alexandrian,</td> +<td>Wild Rosemary,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> American Great,</td> +<td><i>Wintera aromatica</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Cherry,</td> +<td>Winter Flower,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Ground,</td> +<td>Winter's Bark,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Mountain,</td> +<td>Wistaria chinensis,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Portugal,</td> +<td> frutescens,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Sheep,</td> +<td> japonica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Spurge,</td> +<td> multijuga,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Laurustinus,</td> +<td> <i>sinensis</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lavender, common,</td> +<td>Witch Hazel, the,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lavandula <i>Spica</i>,</td> +<td>Wolf Berry,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> vera,</td> +<td>Woody Nightshade,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lavatera arborea,</td> +<td>Xanthoceras sorbifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Leather Wood,</td> +<td>Xanthoriza apiifolia,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Ledum <i>buxifolium</i>,</td> +<td><i>Xylosteum dumetorum</i>,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>groenlandicum</i>,</td> +<td>Yellow root,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> latifolium,</td> +<td>Yellow wood,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> palustre,</td> +<td>Yucca filamentosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Leiophyllum buxifolium,</td> +<td> gloriosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> <i>thymifolia</i>,</td> +<td>Yulan, the,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lemon Scented Verbena,</td> +<td>Zauschneria californica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Lespedeza bicolor,</td> +<td>Zenobia speciosa,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td>Leucothoë axillaris,</td> +<td>Zelkova acuminata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Catesbaei,</td> +<td> crenata,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> Davisiae,</td> +<td> cretica,</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> floribunda,</td> +<td> <i>japonica</i>.</td></tr> +<tr> +<td> recurva,</td> +<td> </td></tr></table> +<p> </p> +<center><a href="Images/L01.jpg" target="new"><img src= +"Images/S01.jpg" alt="Ad 1" width="206" height="330" hspace="4" +vspace="8" border="1"></a> <a href="Images/L02.jpg" target= +"new"><img src="Images/S02.jpg" alt="Ad 2" width="211" height="330" +hspace="4" vspace="8" border="1"></a></center> +<center><a href="Images/L03.jpg" target="new"><img src= +"Images/S03.jpg" alt="Ad 3" width="208" height="330" hspace="4" +vspace="8" border="1"></a> <a href="Images/L04.jpg" target= +"new"><img src="Images/S04.jpg" alt="Ad 4" width="203" height="330" +hspace="4" vspace="8" border="1"></a></center> +<center><a href="Images/L05.jpg" target="new"><img src= +"Images/S05.jpg" alt="Ad 5" width="201" height="330" hspace="4" +vspace="8" border="1"></a> <a href="Images/L06.jpg" target= +"new"><img src="Images/S06.jpg" alt="Ad 6" width="203" height="330" +hspace="4" vspace="8" border="1"></a> <a href="Images/L07.jpg" +target="new"><img src="Images/S07.jpg" alt="Ad 7" width="200" +height="330" hspace="4" vspace="8" border="1"></a></center> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hardy Ornamental Flowering Trees and +Shrubs, by A. 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