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"Though
not a whisper of her voice he hear,
COVENTRY
PATMORE.The buried bulb does know The signals of the year And hails far Summer with his lifted spear." A SMALL SPRING FLOWER BORDER THE tale of this border
is soon told
not the pleasure of it, for I can assure the reader that from early
spring to
late autumn, from the hour when peony, shoots and bulb leaves first
pushed
their way through the ground, there has been no moment when this place
had not
a peculiar interest. A slight description written immediately after the
original planting was made, and first printed in the Bulletin of the
Garden
Club of America, may here be introduced, thanks to the courtesy of that
society. The border in question is
a double
one, a balanced planting on either side of a walk of dark brick about
two and a
half feet wide. The space allotted to flowers flanking the walk is some
three
feet.:Eight subjects are used; combinations of color, periods of bloom,
form
and height of flowers and plants, all are considered. At those edges of the
borders
farthest from the walk are peonies of white and palest pink Madame
Emile
Gall& that flower of enchantment predominating. Next the peonies
toward the
walk, comes a row of Iris pallida Dalmatica, then an alternating line
of Iris
Kaempferi and Spircea astilbe Arendsii Die Walktire; next these the
Darwin
tulip Agneta planted alternately with English iris Mauve Queen; then
the double
early tulip Yellow Rose with myosotis. Bleu Celeste, the double
early tulip
which Miss Jekyll calls the bluest of tulips, was to have bloomed with
the
vivid flower of tulip Yellow Rose. But because of Miss Jekyll's
commendation of
Bleu Celeste, or possibly for the more prosaic reason of crop failure
in
Holland, my very late order remained unfilled, and Mr. Van Tubergen
substituted
for it the Darwin Agneta. This, he assures me, is nearly the color of
Bleu
Celeste. Alas! unfortunately for me, Agneta blooms after Yellow Rose,
thus I
may not look for the lovely bands of clear yellow and dull blue which
were to
have adorned my border in early May. Close to the brick itself are
mounds of
Myosotis dissitiflora and Sutton's Royal Blue, an early and a late,
while back
of these are lines of Alyssum sulphureum, the hardy one of
primrose-yellow. I count on the Japanese
iris as an
ally of the English one (though, oddly enough, this was arranged long
before
war broke out), the latter said to be a delicious shade of pinkish
mauve. The
cool pink spirea, too, should create a delicate foil for the
broad-petalled
Iris Kaempferi, and my faint and perhaps foolish hope is that a few
forget-me-nots may be tricked into blooming on till iris Mauve Queen
shows its
color; for of all garden harmonies I dearly love the pale blues and
mauves,
brilliant blues and deep violets, set over against each other. How charming were the
flowers along
my little brick walk about the 15th of May! Myosotis half in bloom, and
the
soft yellow-green buds of Yellow Rose among and above it; tulip Agneta
only
ranks of pointed buds back of these. One week later great blooms of
yellow
tulip (was ever tulip better named?) were in clusters among the
myosotis while,
above this canary color and blue, Agneta lifted beautiful lilac cups.
The
effect was indescribably gay and original. Leaves of Iris pallida
Dalmatica
were now broadening back of the tulips, spirea spreading its delicately
cut
green and brown-madder foliage between the iris spears, and young
peonies
repeated these tones of spirea leaves in a vigorous row farthest from
the walk. A SPRING FLOWER BORDER IN PALE BLUE, YELLOW, AND MAUVE SPRING FLOWER BORDER The form and habit of
Yellow Rose
make it a tulip particularly fit for use with myosotis, but its yellow
is too strong
in tone for the lilac and sky-blue of the other flowers. Moonlight,
however, is
too near Agneta in height. Perhaps Brimstone (Safrano) would be the
better
subject here, but Brimstone blooms earlier than Yellow Rose. In using
Brimstone, however, off should go its head so soon as the rose-pink
flush
begins to show, since that pink would doubtless to some extent
interfere with
the effect of the three pale colors here desired, blue, yellow, and
lavender.
Another suggestion is, as substitute for the Darwin Agneta the use of
the fine
tulip Gudin, certainly one of the most ravishing of all the Darwin
tribe; or of
William Copeland (Sweet Lavender), the beauty whose charming portrait
was shown
in the colored plate with the issue of the "Gardeners' Chronicle"
(English)
for November, 1914. Brilliant, telling, as
these spring
flowers were, running from arch to arch and seen against green lawns,
after ten
days the picture was yet sweeter, for the yellow tulips' race was run,
the
myosotis had lifted delicate blue-clad stems in air, and the Darwin
pink-lavender petals were atop of the straightest, tallest of green
shafts, so
many, so exquisitely erect, that a memory of Velasquez's great canvas
"The
Lances" flashed into the mind. Blue and lavender, delicious colors near
each other, made this walk a place of beauty for days after the yellow
tulip
blooms had fled. As I have said, this is a
beauty of
lavender, deep yellow, and pale blue for perhaps two weeks. The early
tulip
first departs, leaving no void, for the mauve and pale blue then
present a
picture interesting if more quiet. About the nth of May tulip petals
fall,
leaving the myosotis a band of misty blue on either side the walk; and
as
Agneta fades the deep blue-purple Iris Germanica, which has for some
days held its
shafts of buds closed and ready beside the Darwins, suddenly bursts
into great
flowers. Unfortunately for my complete satisfaction, there was one of
those
mistakes in the identity of roots which must sometimes occur in
gardens, and
only a few of these proved of the variety and the tone required for
this
setting. There is for a week, the
first week
of June, a lull. Not, however, uninteresting, for the blue-greens of
tulip
leaves are still fresh, the iris swords are fine to see, and the
delicately cut
yellow-green of spirea foliage is charming, covering the earth where
irises
have sprung. Back of these are the young peonies all filled with
rounded buds,
straight, handsome, and distinct against the smooth-shaven grass beyond
the
border on either side. July, and the tardy
spirea Die
Walktlre in this border has not flowered yet. Brownish buds are held
above
every plant and soon there will be bloom. Although there are now no
flowers
along the walk, the effect of various types of plant foliage is
exceedingly good.
Blue-green leaves of Iris pallida Dalmatica rise among all the spireas
at
regular intervals to be exact, eighteen irises on either side; back
of these,
away from the walk, are dark-green peony leaves; toward the walk are
lines of
drying stems of English iris, pale-gray mounds of the hardy alyssum,
which I
shall have to confess failed to do well this year, but which shall have
another
invitation to this spot, next time by means of seed-sowing, not
transplanting. In May zinnias in those
pale tones I
so much fancy were sown among the myosotis leaves; by mid-July they
were
opening their first flowers; and from that time on, the walk was gay
till late October,
the rather shallow roots seeming not in the least to affect the welfare
of
other subjects near them. The illustration shows them in September.
Back of
these borders of flowers since this description was written have since
been set
close rows of Spircea van Houtteii, whose boughs, in time to come, are
to be
permitted to fall naturally on the side away from the walk, but to be
kept
close-shaven on that toward the flower-borders so that a formal green
background may be supplied. To leave the border now
for a few
generalizations on the flowers of spring and early summer. The blooms
of tulip
Jubilee are of varying heights, which gives this tulip a peculiar
value, even
as the twisting of stem in certain gladioli makes them more valuable
for some
purposes. Avis Kennicott, on the other hand, seems to keep the
yardstick always
in mind, and her flowers are a regiment of golden magnificence.
Ordinarily, I
should never place Avis Kennicott near Jubilee and La Fiancee, as they
are
here; nor should I allow Le Wye to neighbor these. The perfect place
for Le Wye
is in company with Mertenzia Virginica alone, as has often been
suggested
before. Each year this combination grows upon me. The effect of sunlight
through the
cups of La Fiancee and Jubilee as they stand together up a little slope
fairly
well covered with young hemlock spruces, is exceedingly nice. The deep
violet
of Jubilee and rich lavender-rose of La Fianc้e make of them excellent
comrades
in the border. A drift of tall gold flowers stands farther up, and
beyond the
group of spruces, which are from three to ten feet high, Heloise shines
in the
picture with one of the tallest and richest of flowers of a fine
deep-red.
Beyond Heloise comes Herzogin von Hohenberg, of a medium blue-purple
tone, a
wonderfully valuable color in Darwins, rising from quantities of
myosotis; and
far up the rise of ground stands a group of tulip Couleur Cardinal.
Beyond
these again, and to the right, a whole colony of Tulip retrojlexa
gleams from
among the dark gray-green boughs of hemlock and of young white pine.
Two or
three years ago some charming pictures in the bulb-list of Messrs. E.
H.
Krelage and Sons, of Haarlem, filled me with a desire to see tulips
grown among
evergreens. The pictures from Holland showed this effectively done for
a great
flower-show at Haarlem, and it seemed to me that nothing could be more
lovely,
more striking, too, in effect, than the use of bulbs among small
conifers of
formal habit. The true place for daffodils, as we all know, is in
spring
meadows; but tulips require a less careless handling, and, while it is
true
that I have grown them nearly always in loose groups and masses, I am
fast
coming to the belief that the tulip, from its own aspect, calls for
design in
planting. Do not for a moment think that I favor the planting
suggestions for
tulips found in some of the representative bulb-lists of America! Far
from it! Iris Crusader is a
magnificent
flower. As many as four blooms are open at one time, the lowest a foot
below
the topmost; for these flowers occur at four places, four angles on the
stem.
The single flower is a glory, its prevailing tone (Ridgway) a deep
bluish-violet. There is something in the spring of the long curves of
this
flower both in standard and fall which gives it a unique beauty. The
brownish
pencilling at the top of each fall, the orange-yellow beard which
surmounts
those charming tones of blue-violet which suffuse the whole, make it a
distinguished flower. It is a knight among irises; and, bloom occurring
just
before the pallicla section, it seems to herald a company of nobles of
the
garden. No flower could bear a fitter name than does this iris; whoever
named
it had a sense of fitness all too rare. The Rembrandt tulip has
for the last
two or three seasons cast its spell upon me. "America is biting, "
says an English tulip authority in words better calculated to give
pleasure to
our friends, the Dutch growers, than to us! Yet this is true: the charm
of the
Rembrandt is beginning to make itself felt in the land. One of the most
interesting of this group is Bougainville Duran, the tones of whose
markings
are (Ridgway) light vinaceous-purple and neutral red these laid upon a
ground
of delicious ivory-white. For richness of color and general beauty of
appearance this is the finest Rembrandt I have seen. Its use below
lilacs,
especially below a group of young low-flowering bushes, is sure to give
pleasure before Toussaint l'Ouverture, Souvenir de Ludwig Spaeth,
those rich
red-violets in lilacs, and those bluer ones, President Grevy for
instance.
Semele is another fine tulip in this class Rucellin-purple, flaked
pomegranate-purple. A planting of these four
tulips
(names below) over or back of a low-flowering plant such as the
deep-purple
aubrietia, or that new variety which is so warmly commended, Lavender,
might
make a good spring picture, the tulips to be Reverend H. Ewbank, Bleu
Celeste,
Morales, and a very few white ones, such as Innocence or La Candeur.
Another
plan is to plant well in front of that grand tulip Flava the beautiful
lavender
&ilia campanulata Excelsior; and between this and the tulip the
wonderful
mauve iris of about fifteen inches' height, Mrs. Alan Gray. There would
be a
sight whose loveliness the "scant gray meshes of words" could never
catch and show. A fine delicacy of effect this palest primrose tulip,
blue-lavender scilla, and pinkish lavender in the iris blooms. A wondrous new all-yellow
iris in
the Germanica tribe, named by its originator for Miss C. P. Sherwin, is
treasure-trove for the June garden. Aquilegia chrysantha in connection
with
this iris, or groups of the latter planted below the perfect sprays of
that
perfect rose known as spinosissima, or, for a livelier picture, the new
iris
before the vivid blue of the anchusa beauty could not fail the
gardener here. The "lily-flowered"
tulips
just announced from Holland and never yet shown in America will create
great
interest here. Sirene, Adonis, Argo, marvellous tones of satiny rose,
rich
rose, golden yellow, salmon-rose, all with the reflexed petals and tall
habit
of Tulipa retroflexa, will be welcomed with enthusiasm if they prove as
beautiful as their just-named parent. |