The Juvenile GardenerHarvey and Darton, 1824 - 129 pages |
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Page 25
... blossoms would all have become fruit , had they been left on the trees ; but Wil- liam told him , that there were too many flowers to come to perfection , and had every blossom produced fruit , it would have been very. THE JUVENILE ...
... blossoms would all have become fruit , had they been left on the trees ; but Wil- liam told him , that there were too many flowers to come to perfection , and had every blossom produced fruit , it would have been very. THE JUVENILE ...
Page 26
... blossom , as the shelter af- forded them by this means makes them flower long before trees of the same kind in the orchard . ella ada dening When William was sowing the early vegetables , Frank desired him to teach him how to ...
... blossom , as the shelter af- forded them by this means makes them flower long before trees of the same kind in the orchard . ella ada dening When William was sowing the early vegetables , Frank desired him to teach him how to ...
Page 28
... blossom . Besides the crocus and snowdrop , there were aconites of a golden hue , in the form of a buttercup , which , with their leaves and roots , are very poison- ous . Mrs. Vernon charged Frank and his sister never to taste any ...
... blossom . Besides the crocus and snowdrop , there were aconites of a golden hue , in the form of a buttercup , which , with their leaves and roots , are very poison- ous . Mrs. Vernon charged Frank and his sister never to taste any ...
Page 29
... blossoms of deli- cate pink colour . Frank gathered his mamma some sweet - scented violets from his own garden , and Mrs Vernon allowed him to take some large purple double vio- lets , from a bank which was covered with them , and which ...
... blossoms of deli- cate pink colour . Frank gathered his mamma some sweet - scented violets from his own garden , and Mrs Vernon allowed him to take some large purple double vio- lets , from a bank which was covered with them , and which ...
Page 38
... blossoms : a few small cucumbers were already formed ; so much does artificial heat assist us , in raising the luxuries of the table . Frank helped William to transplant from the hot - beds , some of the mignionette plants , which he ...
... blossoms : a few small cucumbers were already formed ; so much does artificial heat assist us , in raising the luxuries of the table . Frank helped William to transplant from the hot - beds , some of the mignionette plants , which he ...
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Common terms and phrases
aconite admire amongst amusement appeared apricot aunt auricula autumn Azalea basket beans beautiful berries birds bloom blossoms botany branches bunches called colour covered currants deadly nightshade delicate delight dried early earth elegant esteemed fish flower-garden flower-roots flower-seeds flowers fragrant Frank and Agnes fruit gathered glass grass green grew ground grow hyacinths kind larkspurs leaf leaves little boys Maclaren mamma medlars mignionette names natives nectarine never nosegay papa and mamma pears peas perfume pink plants pleased pleasure potatoes pots pretty produce promised purple radishes rhododendrons roots rose-trees samphire Seaview seeds seen shells showed showy shrub sister snowdrop soon stalks sugar summer sweet sweet-scented taste tell thing took trees tulips variety vegetable Vernon told walk weather weeds West Indies white flowers wild rose William winter yellow flowers young gardener
Popular passages
Page 78 - tis, to cast one's eyes so low ! The crows, and choughs, that wing the midway air, Show scarce so gross as beetles : half way down Hangs one that gathers samphire, — dreadful trade ! Methinks he seems no bigger than his head : The fishermen, that walk upon the beach, Appear like mice ; and yon tall anchoring bark, Diminish'd to her cock ; her cock, a buoy Almost too small for sight : the murmuring surge, That on th' unnumber'd idle pebbles chafes, Cannot be heard so high.
Page 52 - Consider the lilies of the field; they toil not, neither do they spin: yet Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
Page 1 - Then she sang Handel's song — " What though I trace each herb and flower That decks the morning dew? Did I not own Jehovah's power, How vain were all I knew...
Page 122 - The berries and fruit are somewhat of an oval shape, about the size of a cherry, and of a dark-red color when ripe. Each of these contains two cells, and each cell a single seed, which is the coffee as we see it before it undergoes the process of roasting. — Coffee is an article of but recent introduction.
Page 66 - ... Richmond, at the battle of Bofworth Field ; and to exemplify the atrocity of Richard, I have introduced his Falfe Accufation of Haftings on the one fide, and the Death of the two Young Princes in the Tower on the other. " To contraft with thefe preceding tragical fubjects, I have in the centre reprefented the Marriage of Henry the Seventh, with the Daughter of Edward the Fourth, the Union of the White and Red Rofes ; and on one hand, as an image of peace and happinefs, I have introduced young...