Garden, what he thinks the method should be upon which a more competent person would do well to proceed. All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another, that they no longer bear any resemblance in respect... The American Gardener's Assistant: In Three Parts - Page 29by Thomas Bridgeman - 1867 - 529 pagesFull view - About this book
| United States. Congress. House - 586 pages
...proceed. All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another that they no longer bear any resemblance, in respect...quality, to their original. Who, for instance, would recognize the wild parent of the Coe's, or Green Gage plum, in the savage Sloe; or that of the Ribston... | |
| George Lindley - 1831 - 648 pages
...proceed. All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another, that they no longer bear any resemblance in respect...for instance, would recognise the wild parent of the Coe's or Green Gage Plum in the savage Sloe, or that of the Ribston and Golden Pippin Apples in the... | |
| George Lindley - 1831 - 674 pages
...proceed. All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another, that they no longer bear any resemblance in respect...for instance, would recognise the wild parent of the Coe's or Green Gage Plum in the savage Sloe, or that of the Ribston and Golden Pippin Apples in the... | |
| William Robert Prince, William Prince - 1831 - 236 pages
..." All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another^ that they no longer bear any resemblance in respect...for instance, would recognise the wild parent of the Coe's or Green Gage Plum in the savage Sloe, or that of the Ribston and Golden Pippin Apples in the... | |
| George Lindley - 1831 - 662 pages
...proceed. All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another, that they no longer bear any resemblance in respect...for instance, would recognise the wild parent of the Coe's or Green Gage Plum in the savage Sloe, or that of the Ribston and Golden Pippin Apples in the... | |
| Thomas Bridgeman - 1844 - 196 pages
...by the cultivator. In this place those practices only need be considered that tend to improvement. It is an indubitable fact, that all our fruits, without...quality to their original. Who, for instance, would recognize the wild parent of the Green Gage Plum in the austere Sloe, or that of the delicious Pippin... | |
| George Lindley - 1852 - 450 pages
...been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another, that they no longer bear any resemblance hi respect of quality to their original. Who, for instance, would recognise the wild parent of the Coe's or Green Gage Plum in the savage Sloe, or that of the Ribston and Goldea.' Pippin Apples in the... | |
| United States. Patent Office - 1858 - 728 pages
...proceed. All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another that they no longer bear any resemblance, in respect...quality, to their original. Who, for instance, would recognize the wild parent of the Coe's, or Green Gage plum, in the savage Sloe; or that of the Ribst^p... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate - 1858 - 636 pages
...proceed. All our fruits, without exception, have been so much ameliorated by one circumstance or another that they no longer bear any resemblance, in respect...quality, to their original. Who, for instance, would recognize the wild parent of the Coe's, or Green Gage plum, in the savage Sloe; or that of the Ribston... | |
| Thomas Bridgeman - 1869 - 574 pages
...gardeners are acquainted. Witness also Mr. Knight's Cherries, raised between the May Duke and the Graffion, and the Coe's Plum already mentioned. It is therefore...delicious Pippin Apples in the worthless acid Crab 1 Or, what resemblance can be traced between our famous Beurre Pears, whose flesh is so succulent,... | |
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