flowers and flower gardens 36

FLOWERS AND FLOWER GARDENS BY DAVID LESTER RICHARDSON and PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS AND USEFUL INFORMATION RESPECTING THE ANGLO-INDIAN FLOWER-GARDEN

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flowers and flower gardens notes
Home Gardening Manual
Table of Contents
Gardening
chapter01 point of view what a garden is
chapter02 1 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 2 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 3 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 4 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 5 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 6 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 7 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 8 gardening plans and theory
chapter02 9 gardening plans and theory
chapter03 1 execution of landscape features
chapter03 2 execution of landscape features
chapter03 3 execution of landscape features
chapter03 4 execution of landscape features
chapter03 5 execution of landscape features
chapter04 1 handling the land
chapter04 2 handling the land
chapter04 3 handling the land
chapter04 4 handling the land
chapter04 5 handling the land
chapter05 1 handling the plants
chapter05 2 handling the plants
chapter05 3 handling the plants
chapter05 4 handling the plants
chapter05 5 handling the plants
chapter05 6 handling the plants
chapter05 7 handling the plants
chapter05 8 handling the plants
chapter05 9 handling the plants
chapter06 1 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 2 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 3 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 4 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 5 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 6 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 7 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 8 protecting plants from pests
chapter06 9 protecting plants from pests
chapter07 01 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 02 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 03 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 04 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 05 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 06 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 07 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 08 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 09 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 10 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 11 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 12 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 13 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 14 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 15 growing ornamental plants classes

The same taste for torturing nature into artificial forms prevailed amongst the ancients long after architecture and statuary had been carried to such perfection that the finest British artists of these times can do nothing but copy and repeat what was accomplished so many ages ago by the people of another nation. Pliny, in his description of his Tuscan villa, speaks of some of his trees having been cut into letters and the forms of animals, and of others placed in such regular order that they reminded the spectator of files of soldiers.[121] The Dutch therefore should not bear all the odium of the topiary style of gardening which they are said to have introduced into England and other countries of Europe. They were not the first sinners against natural taste.

The Hindus are very fond of formally cut hedges and trimmed trees. All sorts of verdant hedges are in some degree objectionable in a hot moist country, rife with deadly vermin. I would recommend ornamental iron railings or neatly cut and well painted wooden pales, as more airy, light, and cheerful, and less favorable to snakes and centipedes.

This is the finest country in the world for making gardens speedily. In the rainy season vegetation springs up at once, as at the stroke of an Enchanter's wand. The Landscape gardeners in England used to grieve that they could hardly expect to live long enough to see the effect of their designs. Such artists would have less reason, to grieve on that account in this country. Indeed even in England, the source of uneasiness alluded to, is now removed. "The deliberation with which trees grow," wrote Horace Walpole, in a letter to a friend, "is extremely inconvenient to my natural impatience. I lament living in so barbarous an age when we are come to so little perfection in gardening. I am persuaded that 150 years hence it will be as common to remove oaks 150 years old as it now is to plant tulip roots." The writer was not a bad prophet. He has not yet been dead much more than half a century and his expectations are already more than half realized. Shakespeare could not have anticipated this triumph of art when he made Macbeth ask

    Who can impress the forest? Bid the tree
    Unfix his earth-bound root?

The gardeners have at last discovered that the largest (though not perhaps the oldest) trees can be removed from one place to another with comparative facility and safety. Sir H. Stewart moved several hundred lofty trees without the least injury to any of them. And if broad and lofty trees can be transplanted in England, how much more easily and securely might such a process be effected in the rainy season in this country. In half a year a new garden might be made to look like a garden of half a century. Or an old and ill-arranged plantation might thus be speedily re-adjusted to the taste of the owner. The main object is to secure a good ball of earth round the root, and the main difficulty is to raise the tree and remove it. Many most ingenious machines for raising a tree from the ground, and trucks for removing it, have been lately invented by scientific gardeners in England. A Scotchman, Mr. McGlashen, has been amongst the most successful of late transplanters. He exhibited one of his machines at Paris to the present Emperor of the French, and lifted with it a fir tree thirty feet high. The French ruler lavished the warmest commendations on the ingenious artist and purchased his apparatus at a large price.[122]

Bengal is enriched with a boundless variety of noble trees admirably suited to parks and pleasure grounds. These should be scattered about a spacious compound with a spirited and graceful irregularity, and so disposed with reference to the dwelling as in some degree to vary the view of it, and occasionally to conceal it from the visitor driving up the winding road from the outer gate to the portico. The trees, I must repeat, should be so divided as to give them a free growth and admit sufficient light and air beneath them to allow the grass to flourish. Grassless ground under park trees has a look of barrenness, discomfort and neglect, and is out of keeping with the general character of the scene.

The Banyan (Ficus Indica or Bengaliensis)--

    The Indian tree, whose branches downward bent,
    Take root again, a boundless canopy--

and the Peepul or Pippul (Ficus Religiosa) are amongst the finest trees in this country--or perhaps in the world--and on a very spacious pleasure ground or park they would present truly magnificent aspects. Colonel Sykes alludes to a Banyan at the village of Nikow in Poonah with 68 stems descending from and supporting the branches. This tree is said to be capable of affording shelter to 20,000 men. It is a tree of this sort which Milton so well describes.

    The fig tree, not that kind for fruit renowned,
    But such as at this day, to Indians known
    In Malabar or Deccan, spreads her arms
    Branching so broad and long, a pillared shade,
    High over arched, and echoing walks between
    There oft the Indian herdsman, shunning heat,
    Shelters in cool, and tends his pasturing herds
    At loop holes cut through the thickest shade those leaves,
    They gathered, broad as Amazonian taige;
    And with what skill they had together sewed,
    To gird their waste.

Milton is mistaken as to the size of the leaves of this tree, though he has given its general character with great exactness.[123]

A remarkable banyan or buri tree, near Manjee, twenty miles west of Patna, is 375 inches in diameter, the circumference of its shadow at noon measuring 1116 feet. It has sixty stems, or dropped branches that have taken root. Under this tree once sat a naked fakir who had occupied that situation for 25 years; but he did not continue there the whole year, for his vow obliged him to be during the four cold months up to his neck in the water of the Ganges![124]

It is said that there is a banyan tree near Gombroon on the Persian gulf, computed to cover nearly 1,700 yards.

The Banyan tree in the Company's Botanic garden, is a fine tree, but it is of small dimensions compared with those of the trees just mentioned.[125]

The cocoanut tree has a characteristically Oriental aspect and a natural grace, but it is not well suited to the ornamental garden or the princely villa. It is too suggestive of the rudest village scenery, and perhaps also of utilitarian ideas of mere profit, as every poor man who has half a dozen cocoanut trees on his ground disposes of the produce in the bazar.

I would recommend my native friends to confine their clumps of plaintain trees to the kitchen garden, for though the leaf of the plaintain is a proud specimen of oriental foliage when it is first opened out to the sun, it soon gets torn to shreds by the lightest breeze. The tattered leaves then dry up and the whole of the tree presents the most beggarly aspect imaginable. The stem is as ragged and untidy as the leaves.

The kitchen garden and the orchard should be in the rear of the house. The former should not be too visible from the windows and the latter is on many accounts better at the extremity of the grounds than close to the house, as we too often find it. A native of high rank should keep as much out of sight as possible every thing that would remind a visitor that any portion of the ground was intended rather for pecuniary profit than the immediate pleasure of the owner. The people of India do not seem to be sufficiently aware that any sign of parsimony in the management of a large park or pleasure ground produces in the mind of the visitor an unfavorable impression of the character of the owner. I have seen in Calcutta vast mansions of which every little niche and corner towards the street was let out to very small traders at a few annas a month. What would the people of England think of an opulent English Nobleman who should try to squeeze a few pence from the poor by dividing the street front of his palace into little pigeon-sheds of petty shops for the retail of petty wares? Oh! Princes of India "reform this altogether." This sordid saving, this widely published parsimony, is not only not princely, it is not only not decorous, it is positively disgusting to every passer-by who himself possesses any right thought or feeling.

The Natives seem every day more and more inclined to imitate European fashions, and there are few European fashions, which could be borrowed by the highest or lowest of the people of this country with a more humanizing and delightful effect than that attention to the exterior elegance and neatness of the dwelling-house, and that tasteful garniture of the contiguous ground, which in England is a taste common to the prince and the peasant, and which has made that noble country so full of those beautiful homes which surprize and enchant its foreign visitors.

The climate and soil of this country are peculiarly favorable to the cultivation of trees and shrubs and flowers; and the garden here is at no season of the year without its ornaments.

The example of the Horticultural Society of India, and the attractions of the Company's Botanic Garden ought to have created a more general taste amongst us for the culture of flowers. Bishop Heber tells us that the Botanic Garden here reminded hint more of Milton's description of the Garden of Eden than any other public garden, that he had ever seen.[126]

There is a Botanic Garden at Serampore. In 1813 it was in charge of Dr. Roxburgh. Subsequently came the amiable and able Dr. Wallich; then the venerable Dr. Carey was for a time the Officiating Superintendent. Dr. Voigt followed and then one of the greatest of our Anglo-Indian botanists, Dr. Griffiths. After him came Dr. McLelland, who is at this present time counting the teak trees in the forests of Pegu. He was succeeded by Dr. Falconer who left this country but a few months ago. The garden is now in charge of Dr. Thomson who is said to be an enthusiast in his profession. He explored the region beyond the snowy range I think with Captain Cunningham, some years ago. With the exceptions of Voigt and Carey, all who have had charge of the garden at Serampore have held at the same time the more important appointment of Superintendent of the Company's Botanic Garden at Garden Beach.

There is a Botanic Garden at Bhagulpore, which owes its origin to Major Napleton. I have been unable to obtain any information regarding its present condition. A good Botanic Garden has been already established in the Punjab, where there is also an Agricultural and Horticultural Society.

I regret that it should have been deemed necessary to make stupid pedants of Hindu malees by providing them with a classical nomenclature for plants. Hindostanee names would have answered the purpose just as well. The natives make a sad mess of our simplest English names, but their Greek must be Greek indeed! A Quarterly Reviewer observes that Miss Mitford has found it difficult to make the maurandias and alstraemerias and eschxholtzias--the commonest flowers of our modern garden--look passable even in prose. But what are these, he asks, to the pollopostemonopetalae and eleutheroromacrostemones of Wachendorf, with such daily additions as the native name of iztactepotzacuxochitl icohueyo, or the more classical ponderosity of Erisymum Peroffskyanum.

    --like the verbum Graecum
    Spermagoraiolekitholakanopolides,
    Words that should only be said upon holidays,
    When one has nothing else to do.

If these names are unpronounceable even by Europeans, what would the poor Hindu malee make of them? The pedantry of some of our scientific Botanists is something marvellous. One would think that a love of flowers must produce or imply a taste for simplicity and nature in all things.[127]

As by way of encouragement to the native gardeners--to enable them to dispose of the floral produce of their gardens at a fair price--the Horticultural Society has withdrawn from the public the indulgence of gratuitous supplies of plants, it would be as well if some men of taste were to instruct these native nursery-men how to lay out their grounds, (as their fellow-traders do at home,) with some regard to neatness, cleanliness and order. These flower-merchants, and even the common malees, should also be instructed, I think, how to make up a decent bouquet, for if it be possible to render the most elegant things in the creation offensive to the eye of taste, that object is assuredly very completely effected by these swarthy artists when they arrange, with such worse than Dutch precision and formality, the ill-selected, ill- arranged, and tightly bound treasures of the parterre for the classical vases of their British masters. I am often vexed to observe the idleness or apathy which suffers such atrocities as these specimens of Indian taste to disgrace the drawing-rooms of the City of Palaces. This is quite inexcusable in a family where there are feminine hands for the truly graceful and congenial task of selecting and arranging the daily supply of garden decorations. A young lady--"herself a fairer flower"-- is rarely exhibited to a loving eye in a more delightful point of view than when her delicate and dainty fingers are so employed.

If a lovely woman arranging the nosegays and flower-vases, in her parlour, is a sweet living picture, a still sweeter sight does she present to us when she is in the garden itself. Milton thus represents the fair mother of the fair in the first garden:--

                    Eve separate he spies.
    Veil'd in a cloud of fragrance, where she stood,
    Half spied, so thick the roses blushing round
    About her glow'd, oft stooping to support
    Each flower of slender stalk, whose head, though gay,
    Carnation, purple, azure, or speck'd with gold,
    Hung drooping unsustain'd; them she upstays
    Gently with myrtle band, mindless the while
    Herself, though fairest unsupported flower,
    From her best prop so far, and storm so nigh.
    Nearer he drew, and many a walk traversed
    Of stateliest covert, cedar, pine, or palm;
    Then voluble and bold, now hid, now seen,
    Among thick woven arborets, and flowers
    Imborder'd on each bank, the hand of Eve[128]
Paradise Lost. Book IX.

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chapter07 16 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 17 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 18 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 19 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 20 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 21 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 22 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 23 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 24 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 25 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 26 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 27 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 28 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter07 29 growing ornamental plants classes
chapter08 01 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 02 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 03 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 04 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 05 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 06 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 07 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 08 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 09 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 10 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 11 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 12 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 13 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 14 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 15 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 16 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 17 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 18 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 19 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 20 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter08 21 growing ornamental plants instructions
chapter09 1 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 2 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 3 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 4 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 5 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 6 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 7 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 8 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter09 9 growing fruit plants fruits
chapter10 1 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 2 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 3 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 4 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 5 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 6 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 7 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 8 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter10 9 growing vegetables plants vegetable gardening
chapter11 1 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 2 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 3 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 4 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 5 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 6 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 7 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 8 gardening seasonal reminders
chapter11 9 gardening seasonal reminders

home vegetable gardening

home vegetable gardening contents

INTRODUCTION

WHY YOU SHOULD GARDEN

REQUISITES OF THE HOME VEGETABLE GARDEN

THE PLANTING PLAN

IMPLEMENTS AND THEIR USES

MANURES AND FERTILIZERS

THE SOIL AND ITS PREPARATION

STARTING THE PLANTS

SOWING AND PLANTING

THE CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES

THE VEGETABLES AND THEIR SPECIAL NEEDS - Root Crops

THE VEGETABLES AND THEIR SPECIAL NEEDS - Leaf Crops

THE VEGETABLES AND THEIR SPECIAL NEEDS - Fruit Crops

BEST VARIETIES OF THE GARDEN VEGETABLES

INSECTS AND DISEASE, AND METHODS OF FIGHTING THEM

HARVESTING AND STORING

THE VARIETIES OF POME AND STONE FRUITS

PLANTING; CULTIVATION; FILLER CROPS

PRUNING, SPRAYING, HARVESTING

BERRIES AND SMALL FRUITS

A CALENDAR OF OPERATIONS

Home Vegetable Gardening CONCLUSION

my summer in a garden

my summer in a garden 01

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