The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 19, No. 533, February 11, 1832 by Various
page 14 of 50 (28%)
page 14 of 50 (28%)
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tomb of the immortal Kutusoff, representing the Kremlin, the church of
Ivan Blagennoi, and a procession of priests marching out of the former by the Holy Gate towards the latter. Kutusoff's tomb is shaded by banners taken from the Poles, the Prussians, and the French, having at the ends of their staffs, the eagles of the two former, and the horse of the latter." * * * * * LE JARDIN DES PLANTES. Mrs. Watts's charming Juvenile Annual, the _New Year's Gift_, furnishes the following admirable model of a descriptive letter from the French capital. "The day following the one on which we were at Versailles, we spent in visiting the Garden of Plants; this institution (if I may so call it) is a little on the same plan as our Zoological Garden, and is said to be quite unrivalled in the whole world. It contains curiosities of every age, and from every quarter of the globe. The gardens, which cover more than a hundred acres of ground, are filled with every plant that can be reared in France, either naturally or by artificial means, from the lordly palm to the humble potato. "One enclosure is filled with every specimen of shrub that is capable of being made to form a fence, from the prickly holly, of forty feet high, to the dwarf-box, scarcely an inch above the ground. "In another place, we see specimens of all the various modes of training |
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