PAGE
[A]
Alder timber valuable for piles;[45]
Amazons, spears of the;[49]
Aspen described;[204]
Autumn, the Season of Landscape;[16]
[B]
Bees, their fondness for the Linden flower;[136]
Birch wine;[66]
Blasted tree, its effect;[22]
Bryony berries, ornamental, in their various stages;[23]
[C]
Cadenham Oak;[172]
Clump of trees;[25]
Consecrated Yew-trees, ancient value of;[280]
Copse, its use;[29]
Cowper's Address to the Yardley Oak;[181]
Cowthorpe Oak, near Wetherby;[180]
[E]
Edlington;[9]
Elm-tree, anciently considered as a funeral tree;[86]
Ezekiel's (the Prophet) description of the Cedar-tree;[71]
[F]
Forests and woodlands in the United Kingdom;[281]
[G]
Gilpin, grave of the Rev. W. ——;[140]
Glen, its character;[32]
God's First Temples, Bryant's;[36]
Gog and Magog;[181]
Grove, its character;[33]
[H]
Harefield Park in 1663, Silver Firs at;[218]
Hawthorn, Queen Mary's;[94]
Hern's Oak, Windsor Forest;[177]
Holly-tree, supposed origin of the name;[107]
—— Persian tradition and custom connected with the;[108]
Honeysuckle, wild, its ornamental effect;[23]
Hop, its effect when supported by a tree;[24]
Hornbeam Maze, at Hampton Court;[110]
Horse-chestnuts, finest at Bushy Park;[119]
[I]
Inscription for the entrance into a wood, Bryant's;[40]
Ivy on Trees;[22]
[L]
Larch-tree, durability of its timber;[130]
Leafing of Trees;[13]
Leonard, Legend of St.;[60]
Lightness a characteristic of beauty in Trees;[19]
Lime-tree avenues;[133]
Lover's Tablet, the;[56]
[M]
Magdalen College, Oxford, founded near "the great Oak";[168]
Maple-tree crusca and mollusca;[142]
—— the Sugar;[143]
Mole, the;[42]
Moss, its picturesque effect on the trunk of an aged Oak;[21]
Motion, a source of picturesque beauty;[24]
Mountain-Ash, Supersititions connected with the;[149]
Mulberry-tree, Shakspeare's;[153]
[N]
Norway Spruce Fir, the loftiest of European trees;[223]
Nutting, pleasures of;[99]
[O]
Oak-tree, the emblem of grandeur, strength, and duration;[158]
Ornamental appendages to Trees;[22]
[P]
Pine timber, character and value of;[215]
Poplar dedicated to Hercules;[206]
Pyramus and Thisbe, Fable of;[155]
[Q]
Queen Mary's Thorn;[94]
[R]
Ravenna Pines at Hampstead, near London;[216]
Reynolds, Tribute to Sir J;[133]
Rufus, tradition respecting the place of his death;[170]
[S]
Scotch Fir or Pine, durability of its timber;[215]
Shire-Oak, near Worksop;[170]
Swilcar Oak, in Needwood Forest;[179]
Sycamore, Wordsworth's allusion to the;[229]
[T]
Tamer, the finest Chestnut trees on the;[80]
Traveller's joy ornamental;[23]
Tree as a single object;[18]
[V]
Venice Turpentine, how obtained;[127]
Vernal Melody in the Forest;[15]
Vine-clad branches of Trees;[23]
[W]
Wallace's Oak;[176]
Walnut tree, a miraculous;[238]
Water-pipes, Elm;[89]
Willow bark, a substitute for Jesuit's bark;[267]
Woodlands and forests in the United Kingdom;[281]
[Y]
Yardley Oak;[180]
Yew-tree, Wordsworth's description of a noted;[278]
[Z]
Zoroaster, the Holly and the disciples of;[108]

GLASGOW:
W. G. BLACKIE AND CO., PRINTERS,
VILLAFIELD.


[Transcriber's Note]

Although hyphenation was standardized, some words have both hyphaned and seperate words (for example, "light-green" and "light green") which were retained due to usage or being in qouatations. Non-standard formatting of scientific names was not changed (example, both Abies Larix and Abies Larix appear). The Linnean system terminology was NOT standardized with the exception of Monœc. as an abbreviation for the term monœcious.

The alphabetical letters for the Index, the quick link section and the background colors were added to assist the reader.