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"Soon
will the high Midsummer pumps come on,
Soon will the musk carnations break and swell, Soon shall we have gold-dusted snapdragon, Sweet-William with his homely cottage smell, And stocks in fragrant blow; Roses that down the alleys shine afar, And open, jasmine-muffied lattices, And groups under the dreaming garden-trees, And the full moon, and the white evening star." —
MATTHEW ARNOLD.
MIDSUMMER POMPS As I sat in my garden one
fine evening
in late June of the year just gone, my eye wandered over near-by heads
of
pale-pink peonies, and beyond other white ones, to a distant corner
where a
rather unusual color effect had appeared. At the back of this flower
group was
a tall dark-blue delphinium, name unknown; to the right stood the
charming one
La France, its round flowerets set thickly and evenly up the stem,
their
general tone a pale pinkish-mauve. Directly below La France the
fingered stems
of the lovely perennial foxglove, Digitalis ambigua, were to be seen.
Beside
the buff foxglove masses of the purple-blue Campanula persicifolia,
erect and
delicate, had place, and the foremost flowers of the group were gay
single
pyrethrums, with a high light in the presence of a few of the common
white
daisies. In the warm evening light the flowers seemed to take on a new
aspect.
The blue of the tall larkspur spires had acquired a translucent
quality; the
little Annchen Mueller roses set thick against opening gypsophila
glowed like
rubies; the great white peonies flushed in the setting sun till one
might fancy
that Festiva maxima had magically become that beauty of beauties in
peonies,
Madame Emile Galle. A few particularly fine
delphiniums
have this. year attained special perfection in the garden, in better
shades of
light blue than any before seen here, except perhaps for the blue of
the old
favorite Cantab and the fine Madame Violet Geslin which a year ago was
a
revelation. La France, elsewhere described, gave great delight.
Kelway's Lovely
was remarkable for its overlaid petals of palest blue and palest
lavender. The
beauteous Persimmon, too, was there; its color so truly sky-blue that
when a
flower was held against the heavenly canopy of a fine summer's day, it
seemed to
disappear, to melt into its own hue. One could wish that handsome
spring-blooming thing, muscari Heavenly Blue, relieved of its present
ill-fitting name and the pretty title bestowed instead upon delphinium
Persimmon. This it in very truth describes. One of those discerning
friends who
send details of flowers seen afar off, wrote from England the first
news of the
two delphiniums shown facing page 164; these were prize-winning flowers
at the
Holland House show of 1913, and first shown in 1908. On the left is a
marvellous spike of palest sky-blue and lavender Statuaire Rude. The
enormous
size of the flowerets and the manner in which they range themselves
loosely up
the stem, joined to a rare beauty in soft color tones, give this
delphinium a
peculiar distinction. In the Make, at the right of illustration, petals
of the
richest blue are overlaid by others of richest violet, affording an
effect
entirely unique and entirely sumptuous: delightful to record, the
flower is
named for an Indian potentate! The celebrated "what" that's in a name
never troubles me so much as in this matter of flower nomenclature.
Most women
gardeners who are readers, too, are sensitive to the fitness of flower
names. I
have been ever averse to the naming of flowers for individuals, unless
the
individual so honored shall have rendered some service to horticulture.
In the
terminations "Willmotti," "Sargentii," and other such, we
rejoice; similarly in "nigella Miss Jekyll," "peony Baroness
Schroeder"; these bring most properly and with a certain mental
stimulus
to our recollection those whose gardens, whose scientific knowledge, or
whose
writings have been of world-wide value to the gardening public. But I
could not
bring myself to buy a Japanese iris yclept Hobart J. Park — no, not
unless some
account of Mr. Park, his tastes and his doings, should accompany his name
in the plant list. Nor do I find
the name of J. G. Slack peculiarly inviting when attached to one of
that same
poetic tribe of iris. Do seedsmen name flowers for good customers? I
mightily
fear it! Names, to be perfection, should first carry some descriptive
quality,
and next they should be words of beauty. Many examples might be given:
Dawn,
most aptly fit for the lovely pale-pink gladiolus which it adorns;
Capri (a
name, of course, to conjure with), a true felicity as a name for a
delphinium
of a ravishing tone of sky-blue; Eyebright, for that wondrous daffodil
with
scarlet centre; Bonfire, for the salvia's burning reds; Lady Gay, the
happiest
hit in names for that sweet little rose which will dance anywhere in
the sun
and wind of June. A sight most lovely is,
of a
summer's evening, to see Delphinium Moerheimi lifting its white spires
of flowers
against a green background of shrubbery with a blue mist of sea-holly
below it,
and in the foreground, rising from gypsophila masses, other spires of
richest
rose-pink hollyhock. White and lavender phloxes in the middle distance
add to
the charm of this picture. Tapis Blanc, and Antonin Mercie, and the
little dark
balls of box-trees, and the blooming standard Conrad F. Meyer roses
with their
formal flavor, are agreeable accessories, really enhancing the beauty
of the
freer flower masses. As each summer appears
and waxes, I
think I have found the companion for sea-holly. One year it was phlox
Coquelicot or its brilliant brother R. P. Struthers; another year phlox
Pantheon was my favorite for the honor; while last year I was entirely
captivated by the effect of the annual Statice bonduelli, primrose or
canary-yellow, with the blue-gray eryngium. But this season a large
group of
the sea-hollies chanced to bloom beside another group of pentstemon,
and a
happy alliance it was, quite the happiest of all. The brilliant color
of the
pentstemon, Pentstemon barbatus Torreyii, found its perfect concomitant
in the
cloudy blues of the eryngium, and the two together formed a satisfying
spectacle. This pentstemon, not one of the newer hybrids, I also liked
for use
in the house, especially when rising from bowlfuls of the creamy heads
of
Hydrangea arborescens; the effect, a severe contrast, was good. The
pentstemon
is a trifle too near scarlet to be welcome in my garden — it must
remain
without the gate; but in gayer gardens than mine it should always have
place.
Lovely it would surely be above mounds of cream-white zinnias in full
bloom
with a sweet pea like Barbara rising back of the pentstemon. Sea-holly! I could sing
its praises
for pages! Sea-holly has never seemed to me to find its perfect
companion for
cutting until, in the trial garden, acquaintance was luckily made with
the
annual Stance sinuata bonduelli. Stance ineana has here been known and
loved;
Statice latifolia, that beautiful violet statice which ladies buy on
Edinburgh
streets; but Stance bonduelli, with its delicate yellow blooms, became
in a day
a prime favorite. The loveliness of its foot-high branching stems
covered with
tiny canary-yellow flowers, when cut and held against the bluish
sea-holly, can
hardly be imagined. Gypeophila paniculoia, the double variety, is good
with the
two, but possibly the pair are best alone. For out-of-door effect the
statice
should not be overlooked; though its stems are rather sparse, its
leaves
entirely basal, it is nevertheless a treasure, and a charming result
occurs
when the later mauve variety blooms, with many heads of a new
pale-yellow
centaurea gently forcing their way to the sun through the tiny lavender
statice
blossoms. Gladiolus primulinus
hybrids are a
delight to the "garden soul." Exquisite soft tones of pale yellow
with now and again , some spikes of a pale flame-pink, they are most
lovely as
they grow, while for cutting, used with Stance bonduelli and the double
gypsophila, nothing could be more attractive. Add to your arrangement
of these
flowers a cluster of that enchanting sweet pea, Sterling Stent, you
shall
rejoice in what you have created. Sterling Stent! I betray a valuable
gardening
secret when I tell of him. His color, according to the French chart, is
Lague
de Garance from 1 to 4 with occasional tones of Rouge pêche 4.
Beautiful beyond
description is he, and he fadeth not in sun! And now a word concerning
a certain
double rose-colored annual poppy, a poppy which has become a rose-pink
essential to this garden. One of Sutton's hollyhocks, a double pink of
the
exact tone of these poppies (chart, all shades of Rose Nilsson), has
made a
picture here and there, lifting its tall stems set with rich pink
bosses of
rosy petals above the rounding gypsophilas in whose lacy masses some
poppies
softly bloom. So like are the poppies to the individual hollyhock
flowers that
it is as if some of the former had whimsically decided to grow along a
hollyhock stalk. If one were to try for this effect, a new gladiolus,
Display,
should be freely used within the range of vision here; and the
beauteous
sea-holly would again prove its high garden value if groups should be
set in
this picture. Among the pink poppies I very much fancy the white
platycodon, P.
grandiforum album; the pearly tone of these flowers charming with the
gay
poppy-blooms, and the platycodon's smooth pointed cups affording an
interesting
contrast to the other's soft fulness of fringed silk. Gladiolus Display
among
sea-holly could not but be excellently effective. It is a gladiolus of
rare
beauty. Let us not pass by the
Oriental
poppy in our consideration of the flowers of the poppy tribe. In the
latitude
of Boston the fresh pale-green tufts of the former may be discovered in
early
April, a heartening and lovely sight as the last snows of winter are
vanishing
before the spring sun. These have formed in the previous autumn, but
this
perennial has a constitution to withstand the severest of winters. Here
is a flower
which does well in any good garden soil, though sunlight is its prime
necessity. Equally vital to its well-doing is its transplanting when
dormant in
August or September, or so I used to think. I know now, after some
experimenting, that the Oriental poppy can be safely moved in spring as
well. Until two years ago, when
some of
the varieties of this flower of recent introduction were revealed to
me, I was
ignorant of the development of the flower. "Then felt I like some watcher of the skies When a new planet swims into his ken." Princess Victoria Louise,
the huge
bloom of a delicious rosy-salmon hue, was a sensation. One who enjoys
the
delicate suggestion of thin flame should stand before this flower
transported
with delight. And now the list of Bertrand H. Farr, of Wyomissing,
Pennsylvania, gives us no less than thirty varieties of Oriental
poppies in
only five of which the word "scarlet" enters into the descriptions.
All the rest verge upon the salmon, apricot, amaranth, and
deep-mulberry
shades. The lighter colors of these newer poppies are, as has been
suggested,
very like those of the Shirley poppy, and how remarkable to find in the
larger,
stronger, and more enduring flowers the charming color characteristics
of that
poppy, whose one defect is its ephemeral quality! From a color-plate in the
list of
the plantsman just mentioned a very beautiful combination of poppies
should be
got by using the rich amaranth Mahony, described as "deep
mahogany-maroon," but which I should call a blackish mulberry, with
Rose
Queen, a fine satiny rose-pink. The revolution in color in these
poppies
transforms them at once into subjects of the greatest interest for the
formal
or informal garden, the garden which precludes the use of scarlet,
orange, or
any deep yellow. The rich darkness of Mahony would be a heavenly sight
with the
Dropmore anchusa rising back of it, but for real nobility of effect the
two
should be used alone. Some plants seem a bit
dull in their
beginnings; not so with this, for from the first the lovely form and
curve of
each leaf is apparent, aside from the fresh yellow-green of the
leaf-group. To
fill the wide spaces of earth which should occur between plants
destined for so
rapid and so large a growth, tulips are suggested; to follow the poppy
bloom
and act again as a ground cover, seed of salpiglossis sown early, or of
tall
marigold, whose foilage and bloom will in August and September seem to
be the
only inhabitants of this part of the border or the garden. If the
objection be
raised that the poppy leaves must shade such seeds in May and June, I
reply
that it is easy so to stake aside a leaf or two of the poppy in many
places as
to allow the sun full access to the little seedlings of annuals. Shall I be forgiven for
returning to
the subject of sea-lavenders, or statices, for a moment? Seeds of
several
varieties started under glass not only made a pretty effect in rows but
became
a necessity for cutting. The variety bonduelli already mentioned was
tried for
the first time, taken on faith and the word of Sutton & Sons. It
found
favor at once. Statice sinuata, mauve, came true to its name, bearing
pale-mauve flowers in what might be called tiny boughs or branches
about a foot
from the ground. Statice sinuata Mauve proved to be of many lovely
tones of pale
mauve, bluish mauve, and cream-white. But, oh, the pale-yellow variety,
S.
sinuata bonduelli, again! In this we have almost a primrose-yellow
Gypsophila
paniculata for the making delicate of our bowls and jars of July
flowers. One
should see it with sea-holly. On its fitness for use with Gladiolus
primulinus
hybrids I have already dwelt; indeed, there is hardly one flower whose
beauty
it might not enhance. And then — amusing to me who dislike dried
flowers for
decorative uses — the texture of all these statices is like that of
tissue-paper. Draw the finger lightly across their flower clusters when
in full
bloom and hear the soft rustle of them! Stance bonduelli against
brown-seeding
gypsophila, the single, with the great orange lily, Lilium superbum, is
exceedingly
good in effect because of the yellow-green of the statice and of the
lily-buds.
The decorative value of seeds ripe, but not too ripe, is seldom dwelt
upon, but
I can assure the reader that the three things mentioned make together a
most
lovely planting for early August and are equally beautiful when cut. It may be of interest to
set down
here a brief account of trials of some newer gladioli, only of those
which made
themselves uncommonly welcome. In Display, mentioned above as a fine
neighbor for
the rose-colored poppy, I noticed a flower of very beautiful form — a
broad,
well-opened flower of most decided character and good looks; on its
outer
petals is a suffusion of Rose begonia No. 1, deepening toward the outer
edges
to Rose vieux No. 2. The anthers bore a distinct lavender tone, and a
fine
cream-white on the lower petals of the gladiolus connected the darker
shades of
rose above and below it. The marvellous Mrs. Frank
Pendleton
I also saw a year since for the first time, and this was an experience
apart.
The flower, a broad, finely opened one of white, carried petals all
flushed
toward the tips with Rose malvacê; the markings of lower petals were of
extraordinary richness and depth of color. In chart colors the nearest
to this
tone was Rouge carombier No. 4, but the plate was really neither dark
nor
velvety enough. Rouge Andrinople No. 1 is the tone of these large oval
markings. Mrs. Pendleton is a gladiolus in a thousand, and its American
origin
should be a matter for pride to all in this country who cherish their
gardens. The longer I garden, the
more deeply
do I prize all flowers in tones of violet or deep, rich purple. We need
more
such as foils for paler colors, yes, and for richer too. The Buddleia
is a
garden godsend and, pleasant to record, is rapidly becoming better
known. The
grace of its habit, the charming lavenders and purples of its flowery
racemes,
not to mention its gray-green foliage and its absolutely constant bloom
make it
already of value high and wide. At the thought of the violet gladioli
the
vision of those enchanting wreaths of lavender held out from every
Buddleia
plant floats before my too imaginative eye. The illustration shows a
group of
Buddleias blooming above gladiolus America, which in its turn is grown
among hardy
French chrysanthemums partly for support from the latter, partly for
succession
of bloom in the trial garden. Phcebus, Nuage, Abyssine,
Colibri,
and Satellite are the lavender or violet flowers I would now name. The
first,
possessed of long, narrow petals, whose general tone is of Violet de
campanule
No. Q, has markings on the inferior petals of Violet vineux No. 3.
These
markings are long, pointed blotches terminating in spaces of tenderest
creamy
yellow; the whole a very handsome flower of the hooded type. In Nuage
the
throat markings are of Violet rougeatre No. 4, turning below to Violet
petunia
No. 3; the petals are of a grayish lavender, Violet franc No. 1.
Abyssine is a
small gladiolus whose general tone is Violet prune No. 4; a flower one
would not
be without, so velvet-soft, so wonderful in color. Baron Hulot has long
been
indispensable to us all; Abyssine ranks with Baron Hulot. Colibri is a flower of
many lovely
tones of mauve and violet, not large but in color unique. On its three
inner
petals are narrow central markings of yellowish cream. The dark edges
of the
petals are of Violet pourpre No. 1; a lighter tone is seen toward the
centre,
though all is so veined and touched with mauve and violet as to be
difficult to
describe. Satellite is the last of
this
dark-hued list. Here the general tone is Violet prune' No. 4 relieved
by tones
of Amarante in all its shades in the chart. Two perfectly rounded lower
petals
of Violet pen-see No. 4 give an astonishing beauty to the flower. In my
notes
concerning it I find this entry: "No gladiolus to compare with this,"
coupled with an admonition to myself to grow it with delphinium Mrs. J.
S.
Brunton, or, for a richer effect, among or beyond the tall phlox
Goliath. For
those who would know accurately the color of the delphinium just
mentioned, I
may add that the first two shades of Bleu de cobalte factice exactly
represent
its petal colors, while its eye is white tinged with canary-yellow and
palest
lavender. Yet another gladiolus,
the last; and
this is of those lasts which shall be firsts, for it is a giant in size
of
flower and height of stem — a superb addition to the ranks of gladioli.
London
is its imposing name. In color almost the counterpart of America, its
cool pink
eminently fits it for use with the beautiful lavender gladiolus
Badenia. The
flowers of the two are of almost equal size, measuring four inches on
each side
of the triangle made by the petals; and they are quite ravishing
together.
Badenia, the purple verbena Dolores, and that charming hardy phlox
Braga used
together in a garden should make a most happy color arrangement.
Gladiolus
Satellite, too, is exceedingly good with phlox Goliath. I spoke just now of
verbena Dolores.
To be explicit as to its color, it has over its fine trusses or
panicles of
bloom the darker shades of Bleu d'aniline, but the flower is much
darker than
No. 4 of this shade, and has that velvety texture which gives the dark
verbenas
a richness possessed only by the darkest snapdragons. In the trial garden a few
new hardy
phloxes asserted themselves last year: two or three dozen planted in
the spring
of the year before rose in their might the second season and sent forth
glorious trusses of flowers to proclaim their presence. A first cousin
in color
to the lovely Elizabeth Campbell, and very beautiful with it, is
Rhynstrom, a
recent acquaintance. Rhynstrom has a wonderfully large floweret of a
delicious
pink; perfect it is before phlox Pantheon, as it is dwarf and of a tone
of rose
to positively accentuate the loveliness of the taller of the two. Baron
von
Dedem has decidedly the most dazzling hue of all phloxes. Its opening
flowers
are nearly if not quite as brilliant as Coquelicot in full bloom, and
the
expanse of its great blossoms makes it in the garden a far more telling
phlox
than the latter. Widar and Braga, two beauties in themselves, lend
themselves
well to use as foregrounds for the taller lavender phloxes E.
Danzanvilliers
and Antonin Mercie, again needing to complete the picture that good
verbena
Dolores. Phlox Braga is entrancing with ageratum Stella Gurney and with
the
same humble but most useful annual, Widar, discreetly used, may afford
an
effect as subtle as it is lovely. The recent vogue of
lavender in all
sorts of feminine accessories is known to us all. There is in this hue
a
certain refinement, a charm, which makes it a special favorite for the
woman no
longer young. Can it be, I wonder, that the suggestion is taken
unconsciously
from Nature's own use of the tone in the waning of summer, from those
flowers
which embroider the roadsides with lavender-purple in September —
aster,
ironweed, the tall liatris? Be this or not a foolish fancy, there is no
flower
of more value and of greater beauty in the September garden than the
Buddleia.
It is at every stage of growth most lovely, and in its fulness of bloom
a thing
to marvel at. For an autumn picture, set the variety known as Magnifica
back of
phlox Antonin Mercie (in its second bloom, all first flowers having
been cut
immediately upon passing), with masses of green-white zinnias also in
the
foreground. Phlox Jeanne d'Arc, the tall late white, creates a
beautiful
background for these Buddleias, the graceful lavender plumes of the
latter very
delicate against the round white mounds of the phlox trusses. Mr. E. H.
Wilson,
an authority upon Buddleias as well as upon all other Chinese plants,
shrubs,
and trees, suggests the planting of Sorbaria arborea and its varieties
by the
brook or pond side in combination with Buddleia. "The effect is
everything
the most fastidious could wish for." Also in mid-September, a
great group
of flowers then in perfection in the trial garden gave excellent
suggestion for
a planned planting. This, altogether a happening in arrangement, was
seen against
a trellis covered with leaves of the vine. Close against the green
stood in
slender dignity a group of blooming Helianthus orgyalis, Miss Mellish,
ten feet
tall, its blooms of clear yellow shining against the upper blue. Below
the
Helianthus, Sutton's Dwarf Primrose sunflower raised its pale-yellow
heads with
dark-brown centres, the yellow-green leaves forming a spreading
background for
tall white zinnias arrayed in groups below. The semi-dwarf lavender
phlox
Antonin Mercie, with fragrant creamy-white Acidanthera bicolor before
it, made
the foreground of this picture, and those who would have tones in
flowers
ranging from pure chrome-yellow through primrose to lavender and
cream-white
will do well to plan this simply made and satisfying group. Introduce a
few
hardy asters such as James Ganly, with a bit of low-growing verbena
Dolores in
the extreme foreground, and a delicacy of form and a rich color accent,
too,
are at once added to such a scheme as this. To return to midsummer
flowers — three
brief suggestions and I have done. A rich royal-purple Antirrhinum,
Purple King
by name, was excellent when cut, with Stance bonduelli; the new giants
of
double zinnias, rose-colored ones only, were permitted to show their
stout
heads among the early-flowering white cosmos, the dwarf variety; and
more
lovely even than these was the picture before touched upon of
pearly-white
platycodon with fluffy heads of the double rose-pink poppy encompassing
it
about. These arrangements may strike the expert flower gardener as too
commonplace to be entertained. I offer them as points of departure and
already
think with satisfaction of the loveliness that may spring from them in
better
hands than mine. DELPHINIUM LA FRANCE, CAMPANULA PERSICIFOLIA, DIGITALIS AMBIGUA AND PYRETHRUM should accompany his name
in the plant list. Nor do I find
the name of J. G. Slack peculiarly inviting when attached to one of
that same
poetic tribe of iris. Do seedsmen name flowers for good customers? I
mightily
fear it! Names, to be perfection, should first carry some descriptive
quality,
and next they should be words of beauty. Many examples might be given:
Dawn,
most aptly fit for the lovely pale-pink gladiolus which it adorns;
Capri (a
name, of course, to conjure with), a true felicity as a name for a
delphinium
of a ravishing tone of sky-blue; Eyebright, for that wondrous daffodil
with
scarlet centre; Bonfire, for the salvia's burning reds; Lady Gay, the
happiest
hit in names for that sweet little rose which will dance anywhere in
the sun
and wind of June. A sight most lovely is,
of a
summer's evening, to see Delphinium Moerheimi lifting its white spires
of flowers
against a green background of shrubbery with a blue mist of sea-holly
below it,
and in the foreground, rising from gypsophila masses, other spires of
richest
rose-pink hollyhock. White and lavender phloxes in the middle distance
add to
the charm of this picture. Tapis Blanc, and Antonin Mercie, and the
little dark
balls of box-trees, and the blooming standard Conrad F. Meyer roses
with their
formal flavor, are agreeable accessories, really enhancing the beauty
of the
freer flower masses. As each summer appears
and waxes, I
think I have found the companion for sea-holly. One year it was phlox
Coquelicot or its brilliant brother R. P. Struthers; another year phlox
Pantheon was my favorite for the honor; while last year I was entirely
captivated by the effect of the annual Statice bonduelli, primrose or
canary-yellow, with the blue-gray eryngium. But this season a large
group of
the sea-hollies chanced to bloom beside another group of pentstemon,
and a
happy alliance it was, quite the happiest of all. The brilliant color
of the
pentstemon, Pentstemon barbatus Torreyii, found its perfect concomitant
in the
cloudy blues of the eryngium, and the two together formed a satisfying
spectacle. This pentstemon, not one of the newer hybrids, I also liked
for use
in the house, especially when rising from bowlfuls of the creamy heads
of
Hydrangea arborescens; the effect, a severe contrast, was good. The
pentstemon
is a trifle too near scarlet to be welcome in my garden — it must
remain
without the gate; but in gayer gardens than mine it should always have
place.
Lovely it would surely be above mounds of cream-white zinnias in full
bloom
with a sweet pea like Barbara rising back of the pentstemon. Sea-holly! I could sing
its praises
for pages! Sea-holly has never seemed to me to find its perfect
companion for
cutting until, in the trial garden, acquaintance was luckily made with
the
annual Stance sinuata bonduelli. Stance ineana has here been known and
loved;
Statice latifolia, that beautiful violet statice which ladies buy on
Edinburgh
streets; but Stance bonduelli, with its delicate yellow blooms, became
in a day
a prime favorite. The loveliness of its foot-high branching stems
covered with
tiny canary-yellow flowers, when cut and held against the bluish
sea-holly, can
hardly be imagined. Gypeophila paniculoia, the double variety, is good
with the
two, but possibly the pair are best alone. For out-of-door effect the
statice
should not be overlooked; though its stems are rather sparse, its
leaves
entirely basal, it is nevertheless a treasure, and a charming result
occurs
when the later mauve variety blooms, with many heads of a new
pale-yellow
centaurea gently forcing their way to the sun through the tiny lavender
statice
blossoms. Gladiolus primulinus
hybrids are a
delight to the "garden soul." Exquisite soft tones of pale yellow
with now and again , some spikes of a pale flame-pink, they are most
lovely as
they grow, while for cutting, used with Stance bonduelli and the double
gypsophila, nothing could be more attractive. Add to your arrangement
of these
flowers a cluster of that enchanting sweet pea, Sterling Stent, you
shall
rejoice in what you have created. Sterling Stent! I betray a valuable
gardening
secret when I tell of him. His color, according to the French chart, is
Lague
de Garance from 1 to 4 with occasional tones of Rouge pêche 4.
Beautiful beyond
description is he, and he fadeth not in sun! DELPHINIUMS THE ALAKE AND STATUAIRE RUDE And now a word concerning
a certain
double rose-colored annual poppy, a poppy which has become a rose-pink
essential to this garden. One of Sutton's hollyhocks, a double pink of
the
exact tone of these poppies (chart, all shades of Rose Nilsson), has
made a
picture here and there, lifting its tall stems set with rich pink
bosses of
rosy petals above the rounding gypsophilas in whose lacy masses some
poppies
softly bloom. So like are the poppies to the individual hollyhock
flowers that
it is as if some of the former had whimsically decided to grow along a
hollyhock stalk. If one were to try for this effect, a new gladiolus,
Display,
should be freely used within the range of vision here; and the
beauteous
sea-holly would again prove its high garden value if groups should be
set in
this picture. Among the pink poppies I very much fancy the white
platycodon, P.
grandiforum album; the pearly tone of these flowers charming with the
gay
poppy-blooms, and the platycodon's smooth pointed cups affording an
interesting
contrast to the other's soft fulness of fringed silk. Gladiolus Display
among
sea-holly could not but be excellently effective. It is a gladiolus of
rare
beauty. Let us not pass by the
Oriental
poppy in our consideration of the flowers of the poppy tribe. In the
latitude
of Boston the fresh pale-green tufts of the former may be discovered in
early
April, a heartening and lovely sight as the last snows of winter are
vanishing
before the spring sun. These have formed in the previous autumn, but
this
perennial has a constitution to withstand the severest of winters. Here
is a flower
which does well in any good garden soil, though sunlight is its prime
necessity. Equally vital to its well-doing is its transplanting when
dormant in
August or September, or so I used to think. I know now, after some
experimenting, that the Oriental poppy can be safely moved in spring as
well. Until two years ago, when
some of
the varieties of this flower of recent introduction were revealed to
me, I was
ignorant of the development of the flower. When a new planet swims into his ken." Princess Victoria Louise,
the huge
bloom of a delicious rosy-salmon hue, was a sensation. One who enjoys
the
delicate suggestion of thin flame should stand before this flower
transported
with delight. And now the list of Bertrand H. Farr, of Wyomissing,
Pennsylvania, gives us no less than thirty varieties of Oriental
poppies in
only five of which the word "scarlet" enters into the descriptions.
All the rest verge upon the salmon, apricot, amaranth, and
deep-mulberry
shades. The lighter colors of these newer poppies are, as has been
suggested,
very like those of the Shirley poppy, and how remarkable to find in the
larger,
stronger, and more enduring flowers the charming color characteristics
of that
poppy, whose one defect is its ephemeral quality! From a color-plate in the
list of
the plantsman just mentioned a very beautiful combination of poppies
should be
got by using the rich amaranth Mahony, described as "deep
mahogany-maroon," but which I should call a blackish mulberry, with
Rose
Queen, a fine satiny rose-pink. The revolution in color in these
poppies
transforms them at once into subjects of the greatest interest for the
formal
or informal garden, the garden which precludes the use of scarlet,
orange, or
any deep yellow. The rich darkness of Mahony would be a heavenly sight
with the
Dropmore anchusa rising back of it, but for real nobility of effect the
two
should be used alone. Some plants seem a bit
dull in their
beginnings; not so with this, for from the first the lovely form and
curve of
each leaf is apparent, aside from the fresh yellow-green of the
leaf-group. To
fill the wide spaces of earth which should occur between plants
destined for so
rapid and so large a growth, tulips are suggested; to follow the poppy
bloom
and act again as a ground cover, seed of salpiglossis sown early, or of
tall
marigold, whose foilage and bloom will in August and September seem to
be the
only inhabitants of this part of the border or the garden. If the
objection be
raised that the poppy leaves must shade such seeds in May and June, I
reply
that it is easy so to stake aside a leaf or two of the poppy in many
places as
to allow the sun full access to the little seedlings of annuals. Shall I be forgiven for
returning to
the subject of sea-lavenders, or statices, for a moment? Seeds of
several
varieties started under glass not only made a pretty effect in rows but
became
a necessity for cutting. The variety bonduelli already mentioned was
tried for
the first time, taken on faith and the word of Sutton & Sons. It
found
favor at once. Statice sinuata, mauve, came true to its name, bearing
pale-mauve flowers in what might be called tiny boughs or branches
about a foot
from the ground. Statice sinuata Mauve proved to be of many lovely
tones of pale
mauve, bluish mauve, and cream-white. But, oh, the pale-yellow variety,
S.
sinuata bonduelli, again! In this we have almost a primrose-yellow
Gypsophila
paniculata for the making delicate of our bowls and jars of July
flowers. One
should see it with sea-holly. On its fitness for use with Gladiolus
primulinus
hybrids I have already dwelt; indeed, there is hardly one flower whose
beauty
it might not enhance. And then — amusing to me who dislike dried
flowers for
decorative uses — the texture of all these statices is like that of
tissue-paper. Draw the finger lightly across their flower clusters when
in full
bloom and hear the soft rustle of them! Stance bonduelli against
brown-seeding
gypsophila, the single, with the great orange lily, Lilium superbum, is
exceedingly
good in effect because of the yellow-green of the statice and of the
lily-buds.
The decorative value of seeds ripe, but not too ripe, is seldom dwelt
upon, but
I can assure the reader that the three things mentioned make together a
most
lovely planting for early August and are equally beautiful when cut. It may be of interest to
set down
here a brief account of trials of some newer gladioli, only of those
which made
themselves uncommonly welcome. In Display, mentioned above as a fine
neighbor for
the rose-colored poppy, I noticed a flower of very beautiful form — a
broad,
well-opened flower of most decided character and good looks; on its
outer
petals is a suffusion of Rose begonia No. 1, deepening toward the outer
edges
to Rose vieux No. 2. The anthers bore a distinct lavender tone, and a
fine
cream-white on the lower petals of the gladiolus connected the darker
shades of
rose above and below it. The marvellous Mrs. Frank
Pendleton
I also saw a year since for the first time, and this was an experience
apart.
The flower, a broad, finely opened one of white, carried petals all
flushed
toward the tips with Rose malvacê; the markings of lower petals were of
extraordinary richness and depth of color. In chart colors the nearest
to this
tone was Rouge carombier No. 4, but the plate was really neither dark
nor
velvety enough. Rouge Andrinople No. 1 is the tone of these large oval
markings. Mrs. Pendleton is a gladiolus in a thousand, and its American
origin
should be a matter for pride to all in this country who cherish their
gardens. The longer I garden, the
more deeply
do I prize all flowers in tones of violet or deep, rich purple. We need
more
such as foils for paler colors, yes, and for richer too. The Buddleia
is a
garden godsend and, pleasant to record, is rapidly becoming better
known. The
grace of its habit, the charming lavenders and purples of its flowery
racemes,
not to mention its gray-green foliage and its absolutely constant bloom
make it
already of value high and wide. At the thought of the violet gladioli
the
vision of those enchanting wreaths of lavender held out from every
Buddleia
plant floats before my too imaginative eye. The illustration shows a
group of
Buddleias blooming above gladiolus America, which in its turn is grown
among hardy
French chrysanthemums partly for support from the latter, partly for
succession
of bloom in the trial garden. Phcebus, Nuage, Abyssine,
Colibri,
and Satellite are the lavender or violet flowers I would now name. The
first,
possessed of long, narrow petals, whose general tone is of Violet de
campanule
No. Q, has markings on the inferior petals of Violet vineux No. 3.
These
markings are long, pointed blotches terminating in spaces of tenderest
creamy
yellow; the whole a very handsome flower of the hooded type. In Nuage
the
throat markings are of Violet rougeatre No. 4, turning below to Violet
petunia
No. 3; the petals are of a grayish lavender, Violet franc No. 1.
Abyssine is a
small gladiolus whose general tone is Violet prune No. 4; a flower one
would not
be without, so velvet-soft, so wonderful in color. Baron Hulot has long
been
indispensable to us all; Abyssine ranks with Baron Hulot. Colibri is a flower of
many lovely
tones of mauve and violet, not large but in color unique. On its three
inner
petals are narrow central markings of yellowish cream. The dark edges
of the
petals are of Violet pourpre No. 1; a lighter tone is seen toward the
centre,
though all is so veined and touched with mauve and violet as to be
difficult to
describe. Satellite is the last of
this
dark-hued list. Here the general tone is Violet prune' No. 4 relieved
by tones
of Amarante in all its shades in the chart. Two perfectly rounded lower
petals
of Violet pen-see No. 4 give an astonishing beauty to the flower. In my
notes
concerning it I find this entry: "No gladiolus to compare with this,"
coupled with an admonition to myself to grow it with delphinium Mrs. J.
S.
Brunton, or, for a richer effect, among or beyond the tall phlox
Goliath. For
those who would know accurately the color of the delphinium just
mentioned, I
may add that the first two shades of Bleu de cobalte factice exactly
represent
its petal colors, while its eye is white tinged with canary-yellow and
palest
lavender. Yet another gladiolus,
the last; and
this is of those lasts which shall be firsts, for it is a giant in size
of
flower and height of stem — a superb addition to the ranks of gladioli.
London
is its imposing name. In color almost the counterpart of America, its
cool pink
eminently fits it for use with the beautiful lavender gladiolus
Badenia. The
flowers of the two are of almost equal size, measuring four inches on
each side
of the triangle made by the petals; and they are quite ravishing
together.
Badenia, the purple verbena Dolores, and that charming hardy phlox
Braga used
together in a garden should make a most happy color arrangement.
Gladiolus
Satellite, too, is exceedingly good with phlox Goliath. BUDDLEIA VARIABILIB MAGNIFICA, WHITE ZINNIA BELOW I spoke just now of
verbena Dolores.
To be explicit as to its color, it has over its fine trusses or
panicles of
bloom the darker shades of Bleu d'aniline, but the flower is much
darker than
No. 4 of this shade, and has that velvety texture which gives the dark
verbenas
a richness possessed only by the darkest snapdragons. In the trial garden a few
new hardy
phloxes asserted themselves last year: two or three dozen planted in
the spring
of the year before rose in their might the second season and sent forth
glorious trusses of flowers to proclaim their presence. A first cousin
in color
to the lovely Elizabeth Campbell, and very beautiful with it, is
Rhynstrom, a
recent acquaintance. Rhynstrom has a wonderfully large floweret of a
delicious
pink; perfect it is before phlox Pantheon, as it is dwarf and of a tone
of rose
to positively accentuate the loveliness of the taller of the two. Baron
von
Dedem has decidedly the most dazzling hue of all phloxes. Its opening
flowers
are nearly if not quite as brilliant as Coquelicot in full bloom, and
the
expanse of its great blossoms makes it in the garden a far more telling
phlox
than the latter. Widar and Braga, two beauties in themselves, lend
themselves
well to use as foregrounds for the taller lavender phloxes E.
Danzanvilliers
and Antonin Mercie, again needing to complete the picture that good
verbena
Dolores. Phlox Braga is entrancing with ageratum Stella Gurney and with
the
same humble but most useful annual, Widar, discreetly used, may afford
an
effect as subtle as it is lovely. The recent vogue of
lavender in all
sorts of feminine accessories is known to us all. There is in this hue
a
certain refinement, a charm, which makes it a special favorite for the
woman no
longer young. Can it be, I wonder, that the suggestion is taken
unconsciously
from Nature's own use of the tone in the waning of summer, from those
flowers
which embroider the roadsides with lavender-purple in September —
aster,
ironweed, the tall liatris? Be this or not a foolish fancy, there is no
flower
of more value and of greater beauty in the September garden than the
Buddleia.
It is at every stage of growth most lovely, and in its fulness of bloom
a thing
to marvel at. For an autumn picture, set the variety known as Magnifica
back of
phlox Antonin Mercie (in its second bloom, all first flowers having
been cut
immediately upon passing), with masses of green-white zinnias also in
the
foreground. Phlox Jeanne d'Arc, the tall late white, creates a
beautiful
background for these Buddleias, the graceful lavender plumes of the
latter very
delicate against the round white mounds of the phlox trusses. Mr. E. H.
Wilson,
an authority upon Buddleias as well as upon all other Chinese plants,
shrubs,
and trees, suggests the planting of Sorbaria arborea and its varieties
by the
brook or pond side in combination with Buddleia. "The effect is
everything
the most fastidious could wish for." Also in mid-September, a
great group
of flowers then in perfection in the trial garden gave excellent
suggestion for
a planned planting. This, altogether a happening in arrangement, was
seen against
a trellis covered with leaves of the vine. Close against the green
stood in
slender dignity a group of blooming Helianthus orgyalis, Miss Mellish,
ten feet
tall, its blooms of clear yellow shining against the upper blue. Below
the
Helianthus, Sutton's Dwarf Primrose sunflower raised its pale-yellow
heads with
dark-brown centres, the yellow-green leaves forming a spreading
background for
tall white zinnias arrayed in groups below. The semi-dwarf lavender
phlox
Antonin Mercie, with fragrant creamy-white Acidanthera bicolor before
it, made
the foreground of this picture, and those who would have tones in
flowers
ranging from pure chrome-yellow through primrose to lavender and
cream-white
will do well to plan this simply made and satisfying group. Introduce a
few
hardy asters such as James Ganly, with a bit of low-growing verbena
Dolores in
the extreme foreground, and a delicacy of form and a rich color accent,
too,
are at once added to such a scheme as this. To return to midsummer
flowers — three
brief suggestions and I have done. A rich royal-purple Antirrhinum,
Purple King
by name, was excellent when cut, with Stance bonduelli; the new giants
of
double zinnias, rose-colored ones only, were permitted to show their
stout
heads among the early-flowering white cosmos, the dwarf variety; and
more
lovely even than these was the picture before touched upon of
pearly-white
platycodon with fluffy heads of the double rose-pink poppy encompassing
it
about. These arrangements may strike the expert flower gardener as too
commonplace to be entertained. I offer them as points of departure and
already
think with satisfaction of the loveliness that may spring from them in
better
hands than mine. |