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diff --git a/38904-8.txt b/38904-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1d7fcc1 --- /dev/null +++ b/38904-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,2055 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Flowering Shrubs, by Anonymous + +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: Our Flowering Shrubs + and how to know them + +Author: Anonymous + +Commentator: William Smith + +Illustrator: Charles Kirk + +Release Date: February 16, 2012 [EBook #38904] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR FLOWERING SHRUBS *** + + + + +Produced by Jeroen van Luin, Ben Beasley, jromero and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +Gowans's Nature Books, No. 23 + + +Our Flowering Shrubs + +AND HOW TO KNOW THEM + + +CARSON & NICOL, LIMITED PRINTERS, GLASGOW + +BLOCKS BY ANNAN ENGRAVING CO., LTD. GLASGOW + + + + + +_BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM, PURSH._ + +[Illustration] + +Holly-leaved Barberry +(Mahonia) +(Flower yellow) + +Mahonia a Feuilles de Houx +(Fleur jaune) + +Hulst-Sauerdorn +(Blüte gelb) + + + + +OUR +FLOWERING +SHRUBS + +AND HOW TO KNOW THEM + + +_Sixty photographs by Charles Kirk_ + + +GOWANS & GRAY, Ltd. +5 Robert Street, Adelphi, London, W.C. +58 Cadogan Street, Glasgow +1918 + + + + +_First Edition, August, 1909. Reprinted, May, 1918 (completing 7000)._ + + + + +_The success of "Our Trees and How to Know Them" has encouraged the +publishers to issue the present volume, which deals with a branch of +botany practically untouched by handbooks at a moderate price. They +trust that lovers of plants will show their appreciation of their +efforts by endeavouring to make this new departure very widely known._ + + + + +_BERBERIS DARWINII, HOOK._ + +[Illustration] + +Darwin's Barberry +(Flower yellow) + +Épine-Vinette de Darwin +(Fleur jaune) + +Darwin's Sauerdorn +(Blüte gelb) + + +_BERBERIS STENOPHYLLA, MOORE_ + +[Illustration] + +Narrow-leaved Barberry +(Flower yellow) + +Épine-Vinette à Feuilles étroites +(Fleur jaune) + +Schmaler Sauerdorn +(Blüte gelb) + + +_BERBERIS VULGARIS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Common Barberry +(Flower pale yellow) + +Épine-Vinette +(Fleur jaune pâle) + +Gemeiner Sauerdorn +(Blüte blassgelb) + + +_CISTUS LAURIFOLIUS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Laurel-leaved Cistus +(Flower white) + +Ciste a Feuilles de Laurier +(Fleur blanche) + +Lorbeer-Cistrose +(Blüte weiss) + + +_TAMARIX PALLASII, DESV._ + +[Illustration] + +Pallas's Tamarisk +(Flower pink) + +Tamaris de Pallas +(Fleur rose) + +Fünfmännige Tamariske +(Blüte rosa) + + +_RUTA GRAVEOLENS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Common Rue +(Flower yellow) + +Rue des Jardins +(Fleur jaune) + +Garten-Raute +(Blüte gelb) + + +_CHOISYA TERNATA, H.B.K._ + +[Illustration] + +Mexican Orange-Flower +(Flower white) + +Choisya a Feuilles ternées +(Fleur blanche) + +Echte Zimmerraute +(Blüte weiss) + + +_PTELEA TRIFOLIATA, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Hop Tree or Shrubby Trefoil +(Flower green) + +Ptéléa trifoliolé +(Fleur verte) + +Amerikanischer Hopfenstrauch +(Blüte grün) + + +_CEANOTHUS AZUREUS, DESF._ + +[Illustration] + +Blue Mountain Sweet +(Flower blue) + +Céanot azuré +(Fleur bleue) + +Azur-Säckelblume +(Blüte blau) + + +_CEANOTHUS VEITCHIANUS, HOOK._ + +[Illustration] + +Veitch's Mountain Sweet +(Flower blue) + +Céanot de Veitch +(Fleur bleue) + +Tiefblaue Säckelblume +(Blüte blau) + + +_GENISTA TINCTORIA, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Dyers' Greenweed +(Flower yellow) + +Genêt des Teinturiers +(Fleur jaune) + +Färber-Ginster +(Blüte gelb) + + +_SPARTIUM JUNCEUM, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Yellow Spanish Broom +(Flower yellow) + +Genêt d'Espagne +(Fleur jaune) + +Binsen-Pfriem +(Blüte gelb) + + +_CYTISUS CAPITATUS, JACQ._ + +[Illustration] + +Capitate Broom +(Flower yellow) + +Cytise en Tête +(Fleur jaune) + +Kopfiger Kleestrauch +(Blüte gelb) + + +_INDIGOFERA GERARDIANA, WALL._ + +[Illustration] + +Gerard's Indigo +(Flower pink) + +Indigotier a Grappes +(Fleur rose) + +Blumen-Indigostrauch +(Blüte rosa) + + +_COLUTEA ARBORESCENS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Bladder Senna +(Flower yellow) + +Baguenaudier commun +(Fleur jaune) + +Gewöhnlicher Blasenstrauch +(Blüte gelb) + + +_PRUNUS LUSITANICA, L.F._ + +[Illustration] + +Portugal Laurel +(Flower white) + +Laurier de Portugal +(Fleur blanche) + +Portugiesische Lorbeer-Kirsche +(Blüte weiss) + + +_SPIRÆA DOUGLASI, HOOK._ + +[Illustration] + +Douglas's Spiræa +(Flower red) + +Spirée de Douglas +(Fleur rouge) + +Kalifornischer Spierstrauch +(Blüte rot) + + +_SPIRÆA JAPONICA, L.F._ + +[Illustration] + +Rosy Bush Meadow Sweet +(Flower pink) + +Spirée du Japon +(Fleur rose) + +Japanischer Spierstrauch +(Blüte rosa) + + +_NEILLIA THYRSIFLORA, D. DON_ + +[Illustration] + +Vine-leaved Neillia +(Flower white) + +Neillia a Fleurs en Thyrse +(Fleur blanche) + +Echte Traubenspiere +(Blüte weiss) + + +_KERRIA JAPONICA, D.C., VAR. FLORE PLENO_ + +[Illustration] + +Jew's Mallow +(Flower yellow) + +Kerria du Japon +(Fleur jaune) + +Japanischer Ranunkelstrauch +(Blüte gelb) + + +_RUBUS DELICIOSUS, JAMES_ + +[Illustration] + +Rocky Mountain Bramble +(Flower white) + +Ronce délicieuse +(Fleur blanche) + +Köstlicher Zimt-Beerstrauch +(Blüte weiss) + + +_RUBUS LACINIATUS, WILLD._ + +[Illustration] + +Cut-leaved Bramble +(Flower pinkish-white) + +Ronce a Feuilles Laciniées +(Fleur blanc rosé) + +Geschlitzter Brombeerstrauch +(Blüte rosaweiss) + + +_RUBUS NUTKANUS, MOC._ + +[Illustration] + +Nutka Sound Raspberry or Salmon-Berry +(Flower white) + +Ronce de Noutka +(Fleur blanche) + +Weisser Zimt-Beerstrauch +(Blüte weiss) + + +_POTENTILLA FRUTICOSA, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Shrubby Cinquefoil +(Flower yellow) + +Potentille Arbrisseau +(Fleur jaune) + +Strauch-Fingerkraut +(Blüte gelb) + + +_COTONEASTER MICROPHYLLA, WALL._ + +[Illustration] + +Small-leaved Rockspray +(Flower whitish) + +Cotonéaster a petites Feuilles +(Fleur blanchâtre) + +Kleine Steinquitte +(Blüte weisslich) + + +_COTONEASTER SIMONSII, BAKER_ + +[Illustration] + +Simon's Cotoneaster +(Flower white) + +Cotonéaster de Simons +(Fleur blanche) + +Mennigrote Steinquitte +(Blüte weiss) + + +_DEUTZIA GRACILIS, SIEB. & ZUCC._ + +[Illustration] + +Graceful Deutzia +(Flower white) + +Deutzie grêle +(Fleur blanche) + +Zierliche Silbergerte +(Blüte weiss) + + +_PHILADELPHUS CORONARIUS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Common Mock Orange (sometimes called Syringa) +(Flower white) + +Seringa commune +(Fleur blanche) + +Jasmin-Gertenstrauch +(Blüte weiss) + + +_PHILADELPHUS GRANDIFLORUS, WILLD._ + +[Illustration] + +Large-flowered Mock Orange +(Flower white) + +Seringa à grandes Fleurs +(Fleur blanche) + +Geruchloser Gertenstrauch +(Blüte weiss) + + +_ESCALLONIA PHILIPPIANA, MASTERS_ + +[Illustration] + +Philippi's Escallonia +(Flower white) + +Escallonia de Philippi +(Fleur blanche) + +Philippis Andenstrauch +(Blüte weiss) + + +_ESCALLONIA PUNCTATA, DC._ + +[Illustration] + +Dotted Escallonia +(Flower red) + +Escallonia pointillée +(Fleur rouge) + +Punktierter Andenstrauch +(Blüte rot) + + +_RIBES AUREUM, PURSH._ + +[Illustration] + +Buffalo or Missouri Currant +(Flower yellow) + +Groseillier doré +(Fleur jaune) + +Gold-Ribsel +(Blüte gelb) + + +_RIBES RUBRUM, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Wild or Red Currant or Garnet Berry +(Flower pink) + +Groseillier rouge +(Fleur rose) + +Rote Johannisbeere +(Blüte rosa) + + +_FUCHSIA RICCARTONI, HORT._ + +[Illustration] + +Riccarton Fuchsia +(Flower red) + +Fuchsia Riccartoni +(Fleur rouge) + +Winter-Fuchsie +(Blüte rot) + + +_CORNUS ALBA, L._ + +[Illustration] + +White-fruited Dogwood or Red Osier +(Flower white) + +Cornouillier blanc +(Fleur blanche) + +Weisser Hartriegel +(Blüte weiss) + + +_AUCUBA JAPONICA, THUNB._ + +[Illustration] + +Japanese Aucuba +(Flower whitish-green) + +Aucuba du Japon +(Fleur vert blanchâtre) + +Scheinorange +(Blüte weisslichgrün) + + +_SAMBUCUS CANADENSIS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Canadian Elder +(Flower white) + +Sureau du Canada +(Fleur blanche) + +Kanadischer Holunder +(Blüte weiss) + + +_VIBURNUM TINUS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Laurustinus +(Flower white) + +Viorne-Laurier-Tin +(Fleur blanche) + +Lorbeer-Schlinge +(Blüte weiss) + + +_VIBURNUM TOMENTOSUM, THUNB._ + +[Illustration] + +Tomentose Guelder Rose +(Flower white) + +Viorne tomenteuse +(Fleur blanche) + +Filz-Schlinge +(Blüte weiss) + + +_VIBURNUM TOMENTOSUM, THUNB., VAR. +PLICATUM, MAXIM._ + +[Illustration] + +Japanese Guelder Rose +(Flower white) + +Viorne du Japon +(Fleur blanche) + +Japanischer Schneeball +(Blüte weiss) + + +_SYMPHORICARPUS RACEMOSUS, MICHX._ + +[Illustration] + +Snowberry +(Flower pink) + +Symphorine a Fruits blancs +(Fleur rose) + +Echte Schneebeere +(Blüte rosa) + + +_DIERVILLA FLORIDA, SIEB. & ZUCC._ + +[Illustration] + +Bush Honeysuckle +(Flower pink) + +Diervilla fleurie +(Fleur rose) + +Blumiges Kapselgeissblatt +(Blüte rosa) + + +_OLEARIA HAASTII, HOOK. F._ + +[Illustration] + +Daisy Tree +(Flower white, disc yellow) + +Oléaria de Haast +(Fleur blanche, disque jaune) + +Haasts Duftstrauch +(Blüte weiss, Scheibe gelb) + + +_OLEARIA MACRODONTA, BAKER_ + +[Illustration] + +New Zealand Daisy Tree +(Flower white) + +Oléaria énorme +(Fleur blanche) + +Grosszähniger Duftstrauch +(Blüte weiss) + + +_PERNETTYA MUCRONATA, GAUDICH_ + +[Illustration] + +Prickly Heath +(Flower white) + +Pernettya microné +(Fleur blanche) + +Stachelige Torfmyrte +(Blüte weiss) + + +_CASSANDRA CALYCULATA, D. DON. +ANDROMEDA CALYCULATA, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Leather-Leaf +(Flower white) + +Cassandrie Calycule +(Fleur blanche) + +Kelch-Gränke +(Blüte weiss) + + +_PIERIS FLORIBUNDA, BENTH. & HOOK. F._ + +[Illustration] + +Bundle-flowered Andromeda +(Flower white) + +Pieris multiflore +(Fleur blanche) + +Blumen-Gränke +(Blüte weiss) + + +_LEDUM LATIFOLIUM, AIT._ + +[Illustration] + +Broad-leaved Labrador Tea +(Flower white) + +Ledon à larges Feuilles +(Fleur blanche) + +Breiter Porst +(Blüte weiss) + + +_RHODODENDRON FLAVUM, G. DON. +AZALEA PONTICA, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Common or Yellow Azalea +(Flower yellow) + +Rhododendron jaune +(Fleur jaune) + +Gelbe Alpenrose +(Blüte gelb) + + +_RHODODENDRON FERRUGINEUM, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Rusty-leaved Alpenrose +(Flower pale red) + +Laurier-Rose des Alpes +(Fleur rouge pâle) + +Rost-Alpenrose +(Blüte blassrot) + + +_RHODODENDRON PONTICUM, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Common or Pontic Rhododendron +(Flower purple) + +Rhododendron de la Mer Noire +(Fleur pourpre) + +Pontische Alpenrose +(Blüte purpurn) + + +_JASMINUM OFFICINALE, L._ + +[Illustration] + +White Jessamine +(Flower white) + +Jasmin blanc (officinal) +(Fleur blanche) + +Echter Jasmin +(Blüte weiss) + + +_SYRINGA VULGARIS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Common Lilac +(Flower lilac, pink or white) + +Lilas commun +(Fleur lilas, rose ou blanche) + +Türkischer Flieder +(Blüte lila, rosa oder weiss) + + +_VERONICA TRAVERSII, HOOK. F._ + +[Illustration] + +Travers's Speedwell +(Flower pale purple) + +Véronique naine +(Fleur pourpre pâle) + +Travers' Ehrenpreis +(Blüte blasspurpurn) + + +_LAVANDULA VERA, DC._ + +[Illustration] + +Common Lavender +(Flower blue) + +Lavande +(Fleur bleue) + +Echter Lavendel +(Blüte blau) + + +_LAURUS NOBILIS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Poet's Laurel or Sweet Bay +(Flower yellowish) + +Laurier Sauce +(Fleur jaunâtre) + +Edler Lorbeerbaum +(Blüte gelblich) + + +_DAPHNE LAUREOLA, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Spurge Laurel +(Flower yellowish-green) + +Lauréole, Laurier des Bois +(Fleur vert jaunâtre) + +Lorbeer-Seidelbast +(Blüte gelblichgrün) + + +_DAPHNE MEZEREUM, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Mezereon +(Flower pink) + +Bois-gentil +(Fleur rose) + +Echter Seidelbast +(Blüte rosa) + + +_RUSCUS ACULEATUS, L._ + +[Illustration] + +Butcher's Broom +(Flower white) + +Bois pointu ou Petit Houx ou Fragon épineux +(Fleur blanche) + +Echter Mäusedorn +(Blüte weiss) + + + + +Some Short Notes + +DESIGNED TO ASSIST THE READER IN IDENTIFYING THE SHRUBS ILLUSTRATED IN +THIS VOLUME. + +BY + +WILLIAM SMITH + + +The study of shrubs has greatly increased during recent years, and this +has no doubt been brought about by the increasing knowledge of nature +study now commonly included in the curriculum of schools and other +establishments, and while shrubs have not as yet received the same +attention as trees yet they offer quite as interesting a field, while +the beauty of certain of the species arrests the attention of even the +most casual observer. + +The term "shrub" means a low, woody-stemmed perennial, but many of the +species attain the dimensions of a fair-sized tree. + +The Holly-leaved Barberry or Mahonia (frontispiece), a North American +shrub, is commonly met with either planted as an undergrowth to +deciduous trees or as a covert plant in woodlands. It is easily +recognised from the leaflets being in two or three pairs, with an odd +one at top, in colour of a glossy dark-green, and the leaves of a +leathery nature. The flowers are borne in much-crowded, erect racemes +which open in early spring, followed later by clusters of purple +berries. + +Darwin's Barberry (page 6) is a densely-branched, spreading evergreen +bush about 8 feet high, with numerous racemose flowers which open in +May, succeeded by purple berries throughout the summer. Leaves are about +one inch long, oval-shaped, with five spiny teeth. A near ally to the +preceding is the Narrow-leaved Barberry (page 7). It forms a shrub of +rare beauty; with slender arching shoots which in early spring are +densely covered with golden blossoms. May be known by the narrow +sharp-pointed leaves. + +A British shrub, the Common Barberry (page 8) usually inhabits dry stony +soils, and forms a tall shrub about 10 feet high. In early spring the +plant is profusely covered with pendulous racemes of yellow flowers, and +later by the scarlet berries which are sometimes used for preserves. +Distinguished by the egg-shaped leaves and three-parted spines at the +axils of the leaves. A photograph showing the flowers on a larger scale +will be found on page 11 of _Wild Flowers at Home, Fourth Series_ +("Nature Book," No. 16). + +The Laurel-leaved Cistus (page 9) is a native of the South of Europe, +and grows over four feet high. The flowers, resembling in appearance +those of the dog-rose, are borne on terminal flower-stalks four and five +together, but are very ephemeral in character. The ovate spear-shaped +leaves are generally covered with a gummy substance. Flowers during July +and August. + +Pallas's Tamarisk (page 10) is one of the shrubs which thrive in bleak +exposed places and in dry sandy soils. The leaves are of a minute +scale-like character, and from May onwards the long, terminal spikes of +rosy-pink flowers are an attractive feature. + +A hardy evergreen, shrubby plant, the Common Rue (page 11) is well known +as a medicinal plant. The leaves are nearly blue and emit a very +unpleasant smell and have a bitter taste. Flowers are produced in late +summer. + +One of the most fragrant shrubs, the Mexican Orange-Flower (page 12), +forms a large glossy-leaved bush with axillary stalks of white flowers +which, from their appearance and fragrance, resemble orange-blossom. The +flowers open in summer, and the leaves are bright-green, long-stalked, +with three leaflets to each. + +The Hop Tree or Shrubby Trefoil (page 13), flowers from May to July and +produces flat-headed inflorescences of a greenish yellow colour, +succeeded in autumn by bunches of flat fruits of a greenish colour. As +the specific name suggests the leaves are in threes, long-stalked, of an +elliptical shape, and terminate in a sharp point. Reaches a height of 8 +feet. + +Generally grown as a wall-plant, the Blue Mountain Sweet (page 14) +flowers freely in that position during July and August. The alternate +leaves are oblong, sharply-serrated, and downy. From the axils of the +leaves spring the elongated spikes of pale blue flowers. A native of +Mexico. + +The Veitch's Mountain Sweet (page 15) is another plant grown as a +wall-shrub, where it often attains a height of 12 feet, and is a most +conspicuous plant during its flowering period from May to July when it +is literally covered by dense clusters of bright blue flowers relieved +by neat, elliptical dark-green leaves. + +Dyers' Greenweed (page 16), so-called from the plant yielding a yellow +dye, is found wild as a native plant in certain parts of Britain, and +flowers most of the summer. The yellow flowers are produced on spicate +racemes, while the leaves are alternate, smooth and spear-shaped. An +erect-growing plant about two feet in height. + +The Yellow Spanish Broom (page 17) is a plant which delights in a dry +sandy loam, and is capable of resisting long periods of drought. This +species is a hardy deciduous shrub with rush-like and nearly leafless +branches, and attains a height of six feet. From July to September its +spikes of fragrant golden-yellow blossoms are particularly attractive. + +One of the European species, the Capitate Broom (page 18) forms a shrub +over two feet high and opens its flowers from June onwards. The leaflets +are egg-shaped, and the whole plant is covered with loose, soft hair. + +Gerard's Indigo (page 19), a native of India, is one of the most +beautiful of the Leguminosæ shrubs and is a low branching species. +Leaves pinnate and of a pale grey-green colour. Flowers open from July +onwards and are borne in many-flowered spikes. + +A native of Europe, the Bladder Senna (page 20) is one of the few plants +that thrive in dry sandy soils. It forms a hardy, deciduous, +free-growing shrub 10 feet high, bearing stalks of yellow pea-shaped +flowers from July to September. The pinnate leaves are prettily divided +into ovate and flat-shaped leaflets. A distinctive feature of this plant +in the autumn is the large inflated seed-pods. + +A popular and well-known evergreen shrub, the Portugal Laurel (page 21) +forms a large spreading bush from 10 to over 20 feet in height. The +ovate and lanceolate-shaped leaves are of a dense dark-green, and in +June the large erect spikes of white flowers are very striking. In +autumn the egg-shaped and dull-red coloured fruits are a noticeable +feature. + +Douglas's Spiræa (page 22) forms a crowded cluster of erect shoots about +6 feet high, and in August the dense terminal spikes of rosy-red flowers +open. Leaves acute, rounded, and downy beneath. + +_Spiræa Japonica_ (page 23) forms a bush 3 to 6 feet high with much +branched shoots terminating in brightly coloured flat flower-heads which +open from July onwards, and are relieved by the small spear-shaped, +abrupt-pointed, and finely-serrated leaves. + +A native of Nepaul, the Vine-leaved Neillia (page 24) is frequently seen +in shrubberies, forming a hardy branching bush about five feet high, the +shoots bearing spikes of white flowers in June. A distinctive feature of +this plant is the heart-shaped, three-lobed, and serrated leaves. + +The Jew's Mallow (page 25) is one of the favourite plants commonly grown +on cottage walls, and the illustration shows the double-flowering form +with the solitary, terminal stalks of flowers, which open in early +summer. The foliage is glabrous, spear-shaped and finely-toothed on the +margins. + +Few shrubs when in flower are capable of arresting attention so much as +the Rocky Mountain Bramble (page 26). In May the large, single, white, +rose-like flowers are a beautiful feature of this bramble, which attains +a height of five feet. The kidney-shaped leaves are three to five-lobed +and finely-toothed. A native of North America, where this plant is said +to produce large fruits of delicious flavour. + +The Cut-leaved Bramble (page 27) is frequently seen in a wild state, and +is known by its finely-cut leaves. Of a pinkish-white colour, the +flowers are borne in loose spikes from June to September, whilst fruit +can be picked during the latter month. It is a robust climbing plant, +and the wood is very prickly. + +The Nutka Sound Raspberry (page 28) is one of the species that send up +annual shoots attaining to a height of two feet, on which are borne the +large ornamental five-lobed leaves. The large, handsome white flowers +open in June, and the large, conical-shaped, red fruits ripen early in +autumn. + +Of a much-branched shrubby habit, the Shrubby Cinquefoil (page 29) forms +a small bush from two to four feet in height, with pinnate leaves and +entire hairy oblong leaflets. A native of the Northern Hemisphere, this +cinquefoil produces flat-headed inflorescences of yellow flowers +throughout the summer months. + +The Small-leaved Rockspray (page 30) forms a prostrate bush about three +feet high, and is distinguished by the branches being densely covered by +small, acute, and dark-green glossy leaves. The small, white, solitary +flowers are borne in the axils of the leaves during April and May. This +plant is often grown as a wall plant, in which position it is +conspicuous in winter with its bright-scarlet fruits. + +Simons's Cotoneaster (page 31) forms a much-branching, usually evergreen +shrub about six feet high. In April, solitary, white, and sessile +flowers are borne on lateral branches. Foliage angular-shaped and silky +beneath. Its bright scarlet fruits are conspicuous in late autumn. + +_Deutzia gracilis_ (page 32) is a well-known Japanese shrub seen in +florists' shops in early spring. It forms a compact-growing bush two +feet high, producing in April terminal spikes of pretty white blossoms +set amidst the small egg-shaped and narrow-pointed leaves. + +The Common Mock Orange (page 33) is an erect-growing shrub, from six to +ten feet high, profusely covered in May with white and strongly +orange-scented flowers. The ovate-shaped leaves are said to have the +odour and taste of cucumbers when crushed. A native of the South of +Europe. + +On page 34 is illustrated the Large-flowered Mock Orange, a shrub from +the Southern United States. It differs from the Common Mock Orange in +its taller growth (fully 12 feet), and in the large white blossoms, +which open in midsummer, being practically scentless. The leaves also +are more narrow at the point and more rounded at the base. + +Philippi's Escallonia (page 35) forms a straggling bush, and in July the +shoots are densely covered with panicles of small white flowers set +amidst small dark-green leaves. + +The Dotted Escallonia (page 36) is a much-branched evergreen bush, five +to six feet high, with the shoots terminated by deep-red-coloured +flowers which open in July. The common name of this plant is derived +from the leaves having little dot-like swellings (glands) on the lower +side of the leaves, which are sharp-pointed, ovate in form, and very +glossy on the upper surface. + +Early in May the Buffalo or Missouri Currant (page 37) one of the North +American Currants, opens its golden-yellow flowers, which are borne in +drooping clusters on short shoots arising from the main stems. It is a +loosely-growing plant, about four feet high, with long-stalked, +three-lobed leaves. + +One of the European (British) shrubs, the Wild or Red Currant (page 38) +is found in the woodlands, where its red-coloured and acid-tasted fruits +are found in late summer. It throws drooping clusters of green-coloured +flowers in early spring, and the three to five-angled leaves are a +distinctive feature of this plant. It is from this plant that the garden +forms of the Red Currant have arisen. + +To those familiar with the West Coast of Scotland, the Riccarton Fuchsia +(page 39) will have been noticeable to them there as forming hedges +often over six feet in height. It is a handsome plant, with its shoots +laden in summer and autumn with drooping red-coloured flowers. + +The White-fruited Dogwood (page 40) is usually found in moist +situations, and opens its flat-shaped flower-heads in May. They are +succeeded in autumn by clusters of small, white-coloured, fruits. A +plant that is easily recognisable by its bright-red-coloured shoots and +large ovate-shaped and sharp-pointed leaves. + +One of the most ornamental evergreen shrubs, the Japanese Aucuba (page +41), is grown in mostly all gardens. The leaves are pale green in colour +and beautifully spotted with yellow; in form, spear-shaped, leathery to +the feel, and very glossy. The flowers open in early spring, but are +inconspicuous, and hidden by the foliage. + +The Canadian Elder (page 42) is a plant frequently seen in shrubberies, +opening its large, white-coloured flower-heads in late July, followed in +autumn by clusters of purple-coloured berries. The illustration is very +typical, the large flower-heads being shown among the pinnate leaves and +oblong-shaped leaflets. + +A native of South Europe, the Laurustinus (page 43) flowers throughout +the winter, according to situation, and may be known by the flat corymbs +of white flowers. It is an evergreen shrub, with shining, dark-green, +and oval-shaped leaves. + +In the Tomentose Guelder Rose (page 44) the flowers are barren around +the margin of the truss, and open in early summer, while the leaves are +flat, rounded, dark-green in colour, and very wrinkled. + +The Japanese Guelder Rose (page 45) has large, rounded, barren trusses +of white flowers, which open in May. It forms a spreading bush from +three to four feet high. + +The Snowberry (page 46) is familiar through its large, white fruits +hanging on the branches most of the winter. In late summer it opens its +flowers, which are borne in loose spikes at the end of the branches, and +forms a loose-growing bush about four feet high. + +[A]One of the most ornamental free-flowering shrubs, the Bush +Honeysuckle (page 47), produces in early summer large clusters of +bell-shaped and rose-coloured flowers, set amidst light-green, +ovate-shaped leaves, and attains a height of over six feet. + +[Footnote A: Page 69, the Bush Honeysuckle is generally known by +gardeners under its old Latin name of _Weigela_, which they often +pronounce "Vigilia."] + +A native of New Zealand, the Daisy Tree is one of the most popular +free-flowering shrubs. The illustration (page 48) shews the foliage +completely hidden by the numerous small white and yellow-disked flowers. +It is a box-like plant, and grows over six feet high. The leaves are +crowded, about one inch long, dull-green colour above and whitish +beneath, and acute at each end. + +The New Zealand Daisy Tree (page 49) has large holly-like leaves, which +are silvery on the underside, and large flower-heads, which are white, +with a red centre, and open in July. Forms a loose-growing plant. + +A densely-growing bush, the Prickly Heath (page 50) flowers from May to +July, and the small white flowers are succeeded by berries of various +colours borne in the axils of the small, dark-green, rigid, shining +leaves. It rarely grows over four feet high. + +The Leather-Leaf (page 51) is a sparse-growing, dwarf, evergreen shrub +from North America. It flowers from April to May, the small, +cylindrical-shaped, snow-white flowers being produced from the under +sides of the branches. Leaves scarce, narrowed to each end, and +rusty-coloured beneath. + +At page 52 is illustrated the Bundle-flowered Andromeda, a shrub growing +about six feet high, which flowers in April, completely covering the +plant with spikes of lily-of-the-valley-like blossoms. A plant +recognised by the long, egg-shaped and sharply-pointed leaves, leathery +in touching, and of a very dark green colour. + +The Labrador Tea (page 53) derives its common name from the leaves +having been used as a substitute for tea. It grows about three feet +high, of compact, rounded form, and in early May is profusely covered +with trusses of white flowers set amidst narrow rusty-looking foliage. + +One of the best known shrubs is _Rhododendron flavum_ (page 54) +(commonly known as _Azalea pontica_), and in early summer it is one of +the freest-flowering plants. A plant easily known by its trusses of +yellow-coloured and clammy blossoms with long protruding stamens. The +large and shiny leaves are sparsely produced. + +The Rusty-leaved Alpenrose (page 55) is a European plant rarely growing +over three feet high, of compact growth, with shining dotted leaves. +From May onwards plants are conspicuous in rock gardens with their small +trusses of scarlet and yellow-dotted flowers. For a photograph on a +larger scale, see _Alpine Plants at Home_, First Series ("Nature Book" +No. 20), page 39. + +Few plants are so well known as the Common or Pontic Rhododendron (page +56), and in many parts of Britain it has naturalised itself in the +woodlands. It forms a tall-growing plant, frequently over 12 feet high, +producing trusses of purple-coloured flowers in May, relieved by large, +light-green, spear-shaped foliage. + +From the delicacy and fragrance of its flowers the Common White Jesamine +(page 57) ranks as one of the most popular plants of the garden. It +forms a slender-growing, climbing plant, with feather-shaped leaves and +acutely-pointed leaflets, and flowers from May to October. + +The Common Lilac (page 58) is familiar with its purple or white-coloured +spikes of flowers, which open in May. It forms a tall-growing plant, +with large heart-shaped leaves. + +Travers's Speedwell (page 59) is a charming evergreen shrub about four +feet high, with short racemes of pale-mauve-coloured flowers, which open +in June and July. The leaves are arranged four-rowed along the shoots, +with short footstalks, narrow-oblong in shape, and dark-green in colour. + +A plant peculiar to cottage gardens is the Common Lavender (page 60), +which produces long-stalked spikes of blue flowers throughout the +summer. These flowers are usually cut and dried for their lasting +fragrance, whilst the much-appreciated lavender water is distilled from +the flowers. It forms a dense-growing bush about two feet high, with +long narrow-shaped leaves. + +On page 61 is illustrated the Poet's Laurel or Sweet Bay, a beautiful +evergreen shrub from South Europe. In many parts of Britain it grows +over 21 feet high, but it is usually grown in tubs for floral +decoration. The leaves, which are spear-shaped, have an agreeable, +slightly bitter taste, and are used in cooking and for confections. The +flowers, which are borne in the axils of the leaves, are yellowish in +colour, but inconspicuous, and appear in early spring. + +The Spurge Laurel (page 62), one of the European (British) shrubs, forms +an evergreen bush about three feet high, with thick, shining, +spear-shaped leaves. The sweet-scented flowers, of a greenish-yellow +colour, appear in February and March, but are inconspicuous, and are +borne in drooping clusters at the base of the leaves. Fruit of this +plant is highly poisonous. + +The Mezereon (page 63) is a conspicuous plant early in March through the +leafless branches being covered with red, fragrant blossoms, succeeded +later in summer by scarlet berries set amidst lance-shaped and +acute-pointed leaves. The Mezereon forms an erect-shaped bush, about +four feet high, of which the bark is used medicinally. A white-flowering +form of this plant is in cultivation and bears yellow-coloured berries +in summer. + +Another of the British shrubs is illustrated at page 64 in the Butcher's +Broom, a plant growing about two feet high, with rigid, spiny, widened +branches on which are borne the small, white solitary flowers, which +open in March and April. For a photograph on a larger scale, see _Wild +Flowers at Home_, Fourth Series ("Nature Book" No. 16), page 58. + +-------------------- + +The Latin nomenclature adopted for the shrubs in this volume is that of +the "Hand-list of Trees and Shrubs" (1902) issued by the Royal Botanic +Gardens, Kew. The English and French names are compiled from various +sources; where none existed, suitable appellations have been coined. The +German names are due to the kindness of Herr Andreas Voss. + + + + +Gowans's Nature Books + + +The object of these little books is to stimulate a love for nature and a +desire to study it. + +Each Volume contains Sixty Photographs by the best Nature Photographers, +and is printed on the finest paper obtainable. + +No. 1.--WILD BIRDS AT HOME. Sixty Photographs from Life, by Chas. Kirk, + of British Birds and their Nests. + +No. 2.--WILD FLOWERS AT HOME. First Series. Sixty Photographs from + Nature, by Cameron Todd. + +No. 3.--WILD FLOWERS AT HOME. Second Series. By the Same. + +No. 4.--BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS AT HOME. Sixty Photographs from Life, by + A. Forrester. + +No. 5.--WILD BIRDS AT HOME. Second Series. By Chas. Kirk. + +No. 6.--FRESHWATER FISHES. Sixty Photographs from Life, by Walford B. + Johnson and Stanley C. Johnson, M.A. + +No. 7.--TOADSTOOLS AT HOME. Sixty Photographs of Fungi, by Somerville + Hastings, F.R.C.S. + +No. 8.--OUR TREES AND HOW TO KNOW THEM. Sixty Photographs by Chas. Kirk. + +No. 9.--WILD FLOWERS AT HOME. Third Series. By Somerville Hastings, + F.R.C.S. + +No. 10.--LIFE IN THE ANTARCTIC. Sixty Photographs from Life, by Members + of the Scottish National Antarctic Expedition. + +No. 11.--REPTILE LIFE. Sixty Photographs from Life, by Walford B. + Johnson and Stanley C. Johnson, M.A. + +No. 12.--SEA-SHORE LIFE. Sixty Photographs by the Same. + +No. 13.--BIRDS AT THE ZOO. Sixty Photographs from Life, by W.S. + Berridge, F.Z.S. + +No. 14.--ANIMALS AT THE ZOO. Sixty Photographs by the Same. + +No. 15.--SOME MOTHS AND BUTTERFLIES AND THEIR EGGS. Sixty Photographs by + A.E. Tonge, F.E.S. + +No. 16.--WILD FLOWERS AT HOME. Fourth Series. By Somerville Hastings. + +No. 17.--BRITISH MAMMALS. Sixty Photographs from Life, by Oxley Grabham, + M.A., T.A. Metcalfe, Sydney H. Smith, and Chas. Kirk. + +No. 18.--POND AND STREAM LIFE. Sixty Photographs from Life, by Walford + B. Johnson and Stanley C. Johnson, M.A. + +No. 19.--WILD BIRDS AT HOME. Third Series. By Chas. Kirk. + +No. 20.--ALPINE PLANTS AT HOME. First Series. Sixty Photographs by + Somerville Hastings, F.R.C.S. + +No. 21.--FOSSIL PLANTS. Sixty Photographs by E.A. Newell Arber, M.A., + F.L.S., F.G.S. + +No. 22.--ALPINE PLANTS AT HOME. Second Series. By Somerville Hastings. + +No. 23.--OUR FLOWERING SHRUBS AND HOW TO KNOW THEM. Sixty Photographs by + Chas. Kirk. + +No. 24.--WILD BIRDS AT HOME. Fourth Series. Sixty Photographs by Peter + Webster. + +No. 25.--TOADSTOOLS AT HOME. Second Series. By Somerville Hastings. + +No. 26.--WILD LIFE IN THE FALKLAND ISLANDS. Sixty Photographs from Life, + by Arthur F. Cobb, B.A. + +No. 27.--BIRDS AT THE ZOO. Second Series. By W.S. Berridge. + [_In Preparation._ + +No. 28.--ANIMALS AT THE ZOO. Second Series. By W.S. Berridge. + +No. 29.--WILD BIRDS AT HOME. Fifth Series. Sixty Photographs by Arthur + Brook. + +_Others in Preparation._ + + +SPECIAL NOTE + +WILD BIRDS AT HOME, Series I.-IV., can now be had bound in one volume, + in cloth gilt, price 2/6 net; postage, 3d. + +PRICE 6D. Net Each Volume: Postage 1d. Each. + + +GOWANS & GRAY, Ltd., London & Glasgow + + + + +CHEFS-D'OEUVRE DE POCHE + +Sous la direction de +AUGUSTE DORCHAIN + + +This series has been inaugurated with the object of providing readers of +French all the world over with some of the great masterpieces of French +literature in an attractive form. The cheap reprints that are published +in France are not always neat, according to British tastes, and the +publishers believe that their attempt to supply reprints at once cheap +and pretty will be appreciated. + + +_Ready_ + +1. BALZAC. Eugénie Grandet. + +2. A. DE MUSSET. La Confession d'un Enfant du Siècle. + +3. BALZAC. Ursule Mirouët. + +4. MME DE LA FAYETTE. La Princesse de Clèves. + + +_Price of each volume: +cloth, gilt top, 1s. net; leather limp, gilt top, 2s. net; +postage 2d. extra._ + + +LONDON & GLASGOW: GOWANS & GRAY, LTD. + + + + +MEISTERWERKE +IN TASCHENAUSGABEN + +Mit Einleitungen von +RICHARD M. MEYER, +Professor an der Universität Berlin. + + +This series is intended to supply readers of German with some of the +greatest works of German literature, and these only, printed in an +attractive, handy, and cheap form in accordance with English tastes, but +edited by a great German critic. + +The volumes are printed in Roman type; as there is no doubt the study of +German in this country has been much hindered hitherto by fear of damage +to the eyes from reading Gothic type. + + +_Ready_ + +1. GOETHE. Die Wahlverwandschaften. + +2. LUDWIG. Zwischen Himmel und Erde. + + +_In Preparation_ + +3. SCHILLER. Der Geisterseher und andere Erzählungen. + +_Others will follow_ + + +_Price of each volume: +cloth, gilt top, 1s. net; leather limp, gilt top, 2s. net; +postage 2d. extra._ + + +LONDON & GLASGOW; GOWANS & GRAY, LTD + + + + +LES CHEFS-D'OEUVRE +DE LA POÉSIE +LYRIQUE FRANÇAISE + +Selected, with Biographical Introductions, by +AUGUSTE DORCHAIN, +the well-known French Poet and Critic. + + +_In Preparation_: + +1. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques de VILLON, de MAROT, et des autres Poètes +antérieurs a Ronsard. + +9. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques de VICTOR HUGO. + + +_Ready_: + +2. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques de RONSARD et de son École. + +3-4. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques de MALHERBE et de l'École classique [de +Ronsard à Chénier]. _Deux volumes._ + +5. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques d'ANDRÉ CHÉNIER. + +6. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques de MARCELINE DESBORDES-VALMORE. + +8. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques d'ALFRED DE VIGNY. + +12. Les Chefs-d'OEuvre lyriques d'ALFRED DE MUSSET. + +_Others will follow_ + + +These pretty little volumes contain the best poems, and those only, of +the authors included. + + +_Price of each volume: +in parchment cover, 6d net; in cloth, 1s net; +in leather, 2s net; postage, 1d extra._ + + +LONDON & GLASGOW: GOWANS & GRAY, LTD. + + + + +DIE MEISTERSTÜCKE +DER DEUTSCHEN LYRIK + +Mit Einleitungen und Anmerkungen von +RICHARD M. MEYER, +Professor an der Universität Berlin + + +This new series will contain only the finest lyrics in the German +language. Believing that, other things being equal, a native critic is +the best judge of his country's writers, the publishers have entrusted +the editing of the series to Dr. Meyer, of Berlin University, one of the +most eminent living authorities on German literature. The _format_ is +uniform with that of "Les Chefs-d'OEuvre de la Poésie lyrique +française," which have already proved very successful, not least in +France itself. + + +_Ready._ + +1. Die Meisterstücke des deutschen VOLKS- UND KIRCHENLIEDES. + +2. Die Meisterstücke der VORGOETHISCHEN LYRIK. + +3-4. Die lyrischen Meisterstücke von GOETHE. _Zwei Bände._ + + +_In Preparation._ + +5-6. Die lyrischen Meisterstücke von SCHILLER. _Zwei Bände._ + + +_Price of each volume: +in parchment cover, 6d. net; in cloth, 1s. net; +in leather, 2s. net; postage, 1d. extra._ + +LONDON & GLASGOW: GOWANS & GRAY, LTD + + + + +The First Three of Gowans's +Practical Picture Books + +Price in Parchment Cover, 6d. net each, post free 7d. + + +No. 1. Ambulance Illustrated. + +BY WM. CULLEN, M.D. + +Sixty Photographs by W.M. Warneuke, illustrating First Aid, with Concise +Notes by the Author. + + +NO. 2. Golfing Illustrated. + +BY G.W. BELDAM. + +Sixty Action-Photographs of Famous Golfers, illustrating the Different +Strokes in the Game, with Short Notes on the Players' Styles by John L. +Low. + +None of these Photographs has appeared in "Great Golfers." + + +No. 3. Cricket Illustrated. + +BY G.W. BELDAM. + +Sixty Action-Photographs of Famous Cricketers--Forty of Batters, and +Twenty of Bowlers--with Short Notes on the Players' Styles by the +Author. + +None of these Photographs has appeared in "Great Bowlers" or "Great +Batsmen." + + +London and Glasgow Gowans & Gray, Ltd. + + + + +GOWANS'S +ARCHITECTURE BOOKS + + +Each volume contains Sixty Reproductions of very fine Photographs of +famous examples of the art. + + +_Ready_ + +No. 1. MASTERPIECES OF SPANISH ARCHITECTURE. Sixty Photographs by J. +Lacoste. With short notes on the buildings by S.H. Capper, M.A., +A.R.I.B.A., Professor of Architecture in the University of Manchester. + + +_In Preparation_ + +No. 2. MASTERPIECES OF MOORISH ARCHITECTURE. + +_Others will follow_ + + +_Price of each volume: +in paper cover, 6d. net.; in cloth, 1s. net.; +postage, 1d. extra._ + +LONDON & GLASGOW: GOWANS & GRAY, LTD. + + + + +Nature Pictures + + +A Magnificent Volume, size of Page, 12-1/2" x 10", containing SEVERAL +HUNDREDS of ILLUSTRATIONS, every one from life, _and quite different +from those in our "Nature Books_," by the best nature-photographers, of +birds, animals, fishes, flowers, fungi, insects, etc. + + +Bound in Cloth Gilt, 7/6 net + +Can also be had in Twelve 6d. Parts, which can be purchased separately. + + +_Special Features of some of the Parts_: + +Part 3 contains a beautiful series of plates of the Oyster-catcher, Part +4 of the Kittiwake Gull, Part 7 of the Sandwich Tern, Part 10 of the +Gannet and of the Little Tern, and Part 11 of the Common Tern, but every +part is full of beautiful photographs. + +LONDON & GLASGOW: GOWANS & GRAY, LTD. + + + +Transcriber's Note: In "Some Short Notes," the page reference for the +Bladder Senna was corrected from page 19 to page 20. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Flowering Shrubs, by Anonymous + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR FLOWERING SHRUBS *** + +***** This file should be named 38904-8.txt or 38904-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/9/0/38904/ + +Produced by Jeroen van Luin, Ben Beasley, jromero and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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