ALPINES & BOG PLANTS REGINALD FARRER ' A e(2 = & Bs ‘ . re bed) aa : . Ea 7 S ey [= = ° k ey EA s Sh] : ' Py Seu EK ‘4 \ ? “A > . Ss 1 » 8 = SET gs ae . =o ae wee ‘ : SL we Si 2 NH j /P> THE NEW YORK BOTANICAL CARDESA| R > FROM THE LIBRARY OF "sgl \¢ CLARENCE LEWIS > i ' 45 } ,——. ae relsy7 HA ~ Ww LU LOn-\e. 3g 43 eS ees ssasaeke$ RaW WN Aa rt aye ihe aw ; . Olea ALS vs Dep yi ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS BY THE SAME AUTHOR MY ROCK-GARDEN Large crown 8vo. With Illustrations. 7s. 6d. net. Second Impression. LONDON: EDWARD ARNOLD VILLOSA. ISACE AN DR ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS BY REGINALD FARRER AUTHOR OF ‘MY ROCK-GARDEN,’ ETC. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS F LIBRARY NEW YORK. BOTANICAL. GARDEN LONDON EDWARD ARNOLD 1908 All rights reserved TO MY MOTHER go. Tovde mAEKTOV aTéhavoy €& axnpaTou AetOvos, @ Séorrowva, Koopnoas Pepa’ ev@ ovre mrowuny agit hépBew Bora (Except rabbits. ) ovr. 7AGE rw oidnpos. Hippotytos, 72-6. . i i [ Ay j ‘7 ; Ty eh pa Si An PREFACE I witt not apologise, this time, for inviting enthusiasts to accompany me round my little territories: for so large a company was kindly enough to take pleasure in My Rock-Garden, that now I am sure that those who enjoyed the earlier book will be pleased to find, in this volume, all the treasured rarities and delights which pressure of space forbade me to include in its predecessor —or, rather, forced me, with bitter lamentations, to excise from its mutilated pages. With all the more joy, then, do I offer this timely reparation, no less to my friends who read than to my friends who are written of —to the countless omitted beauties of my garden, whom I had seemed to pass over in an ungrateful silence. REGINALD FARRER. October 1908. ; id iar an Pip jut pie ily alah ' ni Va tall it im F | <) Lied iid Meets Ay EAD Tn ce ata ae ©) ve ‘it ih ‘ mits nt Oe FED RAY y ' . sue / ih iilWae Mi ' Vine ae ay yee i aye ; ! Nisley raat Ay 4 ¥ ‘ f Nag | in 7 : i pe ui ; aie) u) i AL a Od : is th A 7 ! i a Y yh ag N ; ey Hi " ) on a ‘ Ph { vs f Poe of “ : ; | a | a S Mayr ma iy My ie Ay Ny Me ih a vi NY hoe f MA | ASU i lal / yy . ne my. Cue aT Wt at i} tH ie | M Mena } et. f ty ‘i Yet BN ‘ oa F a eu Pay : Ub hae hye iy } 1) : oi | Pay imi 7 { iA ig f : iT © aA! ppt | amet TAR A yin 4 ’ ih ' ie a Bi a ah" . iii hast Wags Alt ae a patie | | ae | . WV aliva) ua {Hy i) inv and Ob i Riana ve ) ; \ i ay or DI on a0 sh 0) fone Lyk ' Wace! tay CONTENTS CHAP. PAGE I. OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING. : ‘ 1 II. OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN . . : 26 III. RANUNCULACEAE, PAPAVERACEAE, CRUCIFERAE ; 49 IV. A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA : 68 V. BETWEEN DIANTHUS AND EPILOBIUM ; ‘ 04 VI. FROM EPILOBIUM ON THROUGH UMBELLIFERAE AND VIiIl. XII, XIII, COMPOSITAE ; : ; ; 118 OF ODD TREASURES ; : , ; 132 THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES ; : 154 THE GREATER BOG-PLANTS d ; 172 IRIS : ‘ . : ; ; 195 THE MOUNTAIN BOG : , : Zt5 MORE OF THE SMALLER BOG-PLANTS ; Reba if ( THE WATER-GARDEN : ' : 259 INDEX é F ‘ : | : 281 ‘ ve (ie i mie vk i oe ie ik Witeat: ah an an a, ——— a Ui if, a——_"e” ae ia LIST OF PLATES ANDROSACE VILLOSA . ‘ : , . Frontispiece EDRAIANTHUS SERPYLLIFOLIUS MAJOR , to face page 20 INCARVILLEA GRANDIFLORA . : d : He 40 EDRAIANTHUS PUMILIO AND SAXIFRAGA CAESIA ; i 62 CAMPANULA BARBATA AND C, pusitna. Photograph by J. A. Farrer, Esq. . ; } ; ae 82 Diantuus NeEGeLECTUS. Photograph by J. A. Farrer, Esq. : ; A : : ‘ oy 94 OxALIS ENNEAPHYLLA ; ! b ; my 108 ‘CHILDREN oF THE Mist’—Saxirraca Burnati AND SAXIFRAGA COCHLEARIS. Photograph by J. A. Farrer, Esq. “ : : A ae 126 GERANIUM LANCASTRIENSE, ELATINEsS- CAMPANULA, AND ANTIRRHINUM GLUTINOSUM ; : a 148 AQuILEGIa GLANDULOSA. Photograph by J. A. Farrer, Esq. , ‘ ‘ : ! ; un 164 SAXIFRAGA COTYLEDON : , t ; 2 186 Ir1s TEcrorum. Photograph by J. A. Farrer, Ksq. . $3 202 CYSTOPTERIS MONTANA AND MArANTHEMUM BIFOLIUM Gs 222 SAXIFRAGA LINGULATA ; ; b : ie 238 xi xii LIST OF PLATES RAMONDIA NATALIAE , : { to face page 254 PRIMULA INVoLUCRATA, PRIMULA CORTUSOEIDES, PRIMULA DEORUM. : : ; -, 270 The plates, except where otherwise stated, are from photographs by Mr. Horner, of Settle, Yorkshire, and all were taken in the Author’s own gardens. pees bes “el teat ) a %, ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS CHAP Thy I Of Shrubs and their Placing Now, the supreme test of the rock-gardener’s craft lies in the placing of his shrubs. Without expecting of any European the unerring tact of Chinese and Japanese in combining rock-work with shrub-life until a mighty precipice is imitated, to perfect scale, within a space of two or three yards of built-up stone, clothed, at all the right points, with what seems the tormented, wind- flogged vegetation of a thousand years, yet one may deplore the sad fact that too often shrubs are dumped at haphazard into the rock-garden, like punctuation into some women’s letters, with no regard for relevance. As a matter of fact, too much importance can hardly be set on the right placing of big and little bushes among the boulders—as by their wise disposition the scheme of the whole may be keyed up to grandeur and illusion, or reduced to a mean chaos. Of course the rules in this matter are a question for individual observation; yet here, perhaps, it is more possible than elsewhere to point out definite details of right or wrong. For instance. On the top of a mimic cliff plant prostrate overhanging Junipers and Retinosporas—which, by curling reluctantly over its rim, will give an impression of height and ferocity to the rock-face. At the bottom, to one side or to the * other, set pillar Junipers, blue columnar Junipers, any slender upright evergreen; for this, in turn, will add a NEW YC BOTAN . GARDE 2 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS immensely to the height and dignity of the rock. In its face, to preserve and enhance the effect, you may insert Juniperus sanderiana, or lovely little Pinus sylvestris beuvronensis—a perfect Scotch fir in miniature, identical in form and grace with its giant prototype, and therefore, by its suggestion of being a great aged tree, making the rock to which it clings into a very Cheddar Cliff or E] Capitan. The great point to aim at is the preservation of scale. The view should be so arranged that these little shrubs cease utterly to seem little shrubs. And this is no preach- ment of unworthy pretentious artifice, it is the logical carrying out of the artistic principles upon which the Noble and Ancient Craft of the Rock-Garden is based. For, in the beginning, the Rock-Garden, springing, like all our noblest achievements in Art, Religion, and Philo- sophy, out of the East, was far more intimately allied with evergreen shrubs than with the ephemeral glory of flowers. A beautiful Mimésis of Nature was wanted, and, in the rocky glens that the garden set itself to follow, evergreens play a far greater and more permanent part than flowers. It is our risk that we have introduced a complicating note into the rock-garden by looking on it not only (and, I fear, subordinately) as a piece of mimic mountain-scape, but also as a territory designed and adapted for the growing of particular flowers. But the flowers are so beautiful that no real division of our allegiance may fairly be dreaded—so long as we remember that shrubs, together with rock, make the backbone, the salient note of the rock-garden, and that the placing of our shrubs is no less vital than the placing of our rocks. Let no one tell me I am preaching too high a gospel. If you are going to build a rock-garden, it is quite as easy and quite as satisfactory to build it right as to build it wrong. And the space at your disposal makes OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 3 no difference whatever. It is as easy to be right, and as fatal to be wrong, in four feet of ground—or four inches —as in four acres. Critics, public and private, said of My Rock-Garden that it would depress the gardener whose opportunities were small, by insisting on vast un- attainable perfections. ‘Therefore let me here make my vehement Apologia by declaring that such an accusation ought to be, and surely is, absurd. For, as a matter of fact, the smaller the rock-garden the easier it is to build it beautifully and in harmony. It is in dealing with big ambitious spaces that the designer can most readily go astray. But in a ten-yard strip at Brixton or Balham you can triumphantly enjoy a thing of beauty as perfect as the Kencho-ji or the Koraku-en—yes, and a paradise as rich in lovelinesses as any upland prairie of the Alps. And the key to all this perfection is not space, or money, or ambitious stonework. ‘The key is simply the one word, proportion. Proportion, above all, in placing the stone you have, proportion in adjusting to your stones the miniature pines and firs you set among them. With six stones, two conifers, and four Alpines, I would engage to make in a yard of ground a view that should be beautiful and satisfying and harmonious. This is not the vain boast of a hierophant, but the plain statement of one who loves alike both tree and rock. Anybody in the world with eyes to see, with five shillings to spend, and six feet or so of soil to spend it on, can easily do as well, and very likely a great deal better—seeing that I only speak from affection and experience—not from any secret store of occult wisdom. If any reader doubts me, Jet him take two plain block- shaped mossy stones, of which the one is larger than the other. Let him lay the smaller on a downward slope from left to right; let him lay the other, the larger, behind it, on a downward slope from right to left, so that their ends + ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS overlap by three or fourinches. Then,at the innerextremity of the nearer block—the smaller—let him set a tiny pillar Juniper. (He must proportion the size of this for himself, of course, according to the size of his boulders.) Thus the point of the V formed by the two stones will be two inches or so to the tree’s left. Then let him fill the fore- ground with, say, Helvine Soleiroli, Veronica canescens, or some tiny Alpine, with, perhaps, to left or right, nestling under the rock, a tuft of Saaifraga burseriana Gloria. And there—let him try the experiment—in a yard or so, he will have a lovely, perfect picture, set up by his own skill, at the cost of half-a-crown or so. And he will not be the creator of that beauty, nor will the stones, nor I that preach. The little shrub will be the keynote of the whole. Oh, but pity fights in me with anger when people lament to me, ‘ We can do so little because our garden is so small. It is all very well for you, with plenty of room, but what can one do with a miserable little bed like ours?’ O fortunati, sua si bona norint! But a little garden, the littler the better, is your richest chance of happiness and success! Far, far happier, far far easier to deal, as I have said, and say again, and shall shortly shout if these complaints continue, to have a minute compact plot of loveliness to scheme and deal with, than, like hapless me, a great unwieldy tract of stone, necessary for the multitude of my plants, but, thanks to walls and houses and such jars, incapable of being lugged into any real coherent picture of beautiful design and proportion. If I have not yet said much of deciduous shrubs, it is because I cannot find much place for them in the rock- garden. The rock-garden, it seems to me, imperiously demands permanence of its inmates. Especially do you require vegetation that will fill the dark long void of winter. Therefore all deciduous shrubs are best banished, in my view, to the outskirts and upper reaches of the OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 5 rock-garden. If your space is small, exclude them alto- gether, would be my precept; otherwise a bank of Japanese Maples may be allowed in the middle distance, but very great care must always be taken, whatever deciduous shrubs you employ, and wherever you plant them, absolutely to ignore them in the permanent scheme of the garden, to place no reliance on them as features in the design, no matter how lovely they may be while in flower. Nevertheless the fact of their loveliness in flower introduces a complicating factor. You cannot do with- out them; and yet, for three-quarters of the year you have to be doing without them. And thus I arrive at my conclusion; they must be so cunningly placed that while in flower they strike forcibly, proportionately on the eye; and yet, when out of flower, usurp no prominent place with their barrenness and decay, but fall naturally into the background of the picture. And thus all points in the foreground must be closed against deciduous shrubs. They must alternate, up at the back, with evergreens, so that the fall of their blossom means no loss. And, as salient features in the scheme of the rock-garden, they have no possibilities, and must resolutely be refused. There is one exception, though, to this rule. And I make it with reference to a thing which is less a shrub, indeed, than incarnate beauty itself. Paeconia Moutan can never be out of place on the rock-work (granted space, of course). And yet the Tree-Paeony blooms for but a short while, is leggy and gawky through the winter, leaden and dull through the autumn. But, during the flaring hours of its glory, it so holds the garden spellbound that no sacrifice is too heavy to make for its presence. I speak by book. Our masters, the Chinese, allow to Paeonia Moutan a supremacy in the rock-garden which they concede to no other flower. Remember how its beauty is made to crown the horror of that brilliant, 6 ; ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS memorable horror, ‘Les Jardin des Supplices.”. And, where they, Lords of the World in matters of art, permit the advantages of the blossom to outweigh all the disadvan- tages of the plant, we need not be ashamed or afraid to follow their example. They have even, with their deep skill, trained the growth to their wish; on how many old plates of Famille rose or Famille verte will you not see the gorgeous peony, ancient, gnarled, and bossy in growth, flaunting the ardent satin of its flowers from some fretted hollowed rock of a Chinese composition? Perhaps we may never hope so to domi- nate the 'I'ree-Paeony ; remains the untutored loveliness of its bloom for us to enjoy. And so, if your space be large enough, surrender one rich corner against a cliff for one great specimen of Mowtan. Around and underneath plant Helleborus Niger to fill the autumn, and perhaps daffodils for the early hours of the spring. And so, in flowering time, you will understand the Japanese sacred passion for beauty which impels a whole nation to make pilgrimage, in due season, to Iris Kaempferi at Horikiri, to the Cherries at Mukojima, to Wistaria multyuga at Kameido, to Paeonia Moutan at Daikonshima—there to spend whole hours and days in adoration, writing little psalms of praise and worship to the flowers. But, remember, only the Japanese and Chinese ‘l'ree- Paeony can claim the true Japanese ecstasy of affection. Where the West has touched the products of the Kast a disastrous degradation has resulted; and Europe now swarms with truly horrible European 'Tree-Paeonies— lumpish, double, semi-double, in tones of washy lilac and magenta. Of these Western creations let us hear no more; away with all the Mrs. Erasmus Potters, the Madame Hector de Telle-Quelles, the Frau Oberhof- gaerterin Schlagenbuschenheims. What can you expect of creatures named like this? ‘The Tree-Paeony of the OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 7 East is a loose arrogant splendour; the flowers are vast, satiny in texture and sheen, sometimes torn and fringed at the edges, sometimes double, sometimes single—but always of the most imperious yet well-bred loveliness, in every pure shade of colour, from the white snows of Fuji at dawn, through faintest shades of pearl and pale rose to the growing ardours of coral, salmon, scarlet, vermilion, sanguine; and so on, into the deep tones of crimson, claret, and a maroon that deepens almost to black. All these marvels of gorgeousness did I mark down and collect when I was in Japan, and now, through June, the rows of Japanese 'T'ree-Paeonies make my garden a blaze of be- wildering colour. About the culture of the Tree-Paeony, too, much vain “nonsense has been talked, and many people are deterred from the culture of a most magnificent happiness by purely visionary terrors. Paeonia Moutan is absolutely hardy, in the first place, hardy beyond cavil, absolutely resistent to our climate. The only safeguard which can help the plant, and which is really by no means essential, is that it should not be put (in dangerous districts) in such a position as to encourage premature growth which may be nipped by a late frost. But as a matter of fact, in my damp perilous corner of West Yorkshire, where late frosts are almost a certainty, I have never had any difficulty or any sort of disaster with all my hundreds of 'Tree-Paeonies, planted as they are in every sort of situation and aspect. The only advice I should give would be to plant them in cool and shady places. Not only does this keep back young growth (Paeonia Moutan is a very early starter), but it also brings out the full brilliancy of the flowers, which against a cool background shine with a dazzling refulgence which they can barely attain in the full glare of the sun, against the uncompromising background of a wall. Too often, too often is a sunny wall made the 8 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS background to Paconia Moutan. Here the European Tree-Paeonies, and even the Orientals, may thrive and be glorious; but they will be far more congruous and beau- tiful against a mossy rock or some quiet curtain of leaves. For green (I wish this were as generally realised as it is generally ignored) is a far more enhancing background than glare. Some of the commoner Michaelmas Daisies, leaden, dull, and utterly boring in the border, become perfectly beautiful, lucent, clear, and purely blue when planted out in the grass. And beyond this, the only requirement of the 'Tree-Paeony is repeated heavy feeding with the richest of manure—incongruous as such treat- ment may seem for such sylph-sounding creatures as Hope of Glory, Moonfoam, Clouds at Dawn, Fire-F lash, Leaping Lion, Bridal Dream. Another shrub for the big rock-garden whose treat- ment I believe, on no authority of mine, to be generally mistaken, is the great Californian 'Tree-Poppy, not alto- gether unlike Paeonia Moutan, white-flowered,on a smaller, frailer, freer scale of flower, and a larger, lusher scale of growth. Romneya Coulteri is usually cultivated under a wall. It is so that I have always grown it, with the most persistent disappointment. very year it came up ranker and more rank, and, in late summer, made abun- dance of buds, which developed sporadically into flower one at a time, producing no effect, and passing away frustrate, before the advance of autumn frosts. Nothing I could do seemed of any avail. I protected the old wood, and I cut it off—with equal futility. Lomneya Coulteri was written down a failure. It was only last winter, when the key was given me, that I remembered my first impression of the plant as a rounded, open- ground bush in Mr. Woodall’s garden at Scarborough, white with its huge filmy blossoms from crown to base. And now information received leads me to understand OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 9 that Romneya Coulteri is an open-ground shrub, that it becomes bored and lazy if grown under a wall, that only in an unprotected place, swept by every wind and frost that befalls, will the great Californian Poppy show the florifer- ousness of its true character. Add to this a dressing of lime rubble, and you will probably be picking blooms of Romneya from June to November. And those blooms are worth the winning—large and frail, built of the thinnest crumpled white silk, almost diaphanous, like the strange ghostly confections in a woman’s summer hat, with a central boss of golden stamens, and a warm little delicate fragrance like that of the Rose Maréchale Niel. In hopes of such a harvest my Romneyas are all to move out into the open, and abundance of their root-cuttings shall be struck, too, in spring, to repeat the experiment in every situation. Of small deciduous shrubs for the rock-garden there are many ; but few are fitted for a limited space. Cornus and Rubus each give minute species. Cornus swecica, our own rare native, I have never grown, nurseries always sending me Cornus canadensis instead. ‘This is a very attractive tiny thing, which I myself have collected abun- dantly in the Canadian Rockies. It grows about six inches high, and runs freely in any quiet peaty place on the rock-work. The whorled leaves are ovate, dark- green; the microscopic flowers look like the crowded stamens to an apparent flower made up of four big, snow- white bracts. Swecica is similar, but not nearly so attractive, I believe. The two Brambles, delightful for any peaty ledge or nook (the spiny, leafless-looking Rubus australis is not hardy),are Rubus arcticus and Rubus pedatus —the first an upright little shrub of six or eight inches, with flowers of bright carmine—which are brighter still in the fruit-bearing variety, arcticus fecundus; the second a very pretty, palmate-leaved trailer, with large white 10 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS flowers, which hails from North America. And the last of these minute Brambles—which it seems almost an insult to one’s intelligence to think of as shrubs—is our own native, Rubus Chamaemorus. The Cloudberry dwells in great colonies on all the high moors of Northern England, Scotland and Scandinavia, hardly descending or bearing any descent below two thousand feet. It abounds on the saddle of Ingleborough, and again immediately below the precipitous western face, but I have never yet made any success with it in my garden, short as it must find the journey thither. It has lived several seasons, indeed, but rarely flowered, and never fruited. And the fruit is its great attraction. The plant is about six inches in height, with two or three rounded leaves, Black-currant-like, thick and solid. ‘The big white flower stands solitary at the top of the stem, staring upwards. And there, in time, forms the fruit, ripening about August—an enormous raspberry of fewer and larger carpels, russet-red at first, then ripening to a soft, golden amber—when its taste has the sparkling acidity of the Pomegranate. Unfortunately the grouse so share my love for its juices that it is very rarely, on Ingleborough, that I have enjoyed the Cloudberry ; and I have never been permitted that Enough which is so fallaciously described as being as good as a feast. Of big brambles there are many—vast invasive weeds for the most part, which must be banned by all who do not possess unlimited acreage of wilderness. Rubus leuco- dermis is handsome—tall, with white-washed stems; the new flagelliformis has whip-cord shoots of eight or ten feet ; hypargyrus | only have in seedlings ; nutkanus and biflorus are magnificent plants for the wild garden, but cannot be allowed in any choice territory. ‘They are much alike, tall, dense growers, fearfully rampant, with big, green currant-like leaves, and very big flowers, which OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 11 in nutkanus are rose-red, and in biflorus, pure white. But they are such prolific spreading pests that I have had to banish both—and banish them, too, not merely to the wilderness-garden, but out into the wild wood itself, to sink or swim as they choose. Last of the Brambles, though, comes a real jewel, in Rubus deliciosus. The epithet, so often, so direly mis- leading, is in this case justified up to the hilt. Rubus deliciosus is very beautiful indeed—a middle-sized, woody, deciduous shrub, producing long arching shoots, which, in June, are weighed down, all along their line, by enormous brilliant flowers of the purest white, like some strange variety of wild-rose, only more floriferous than the most generous of roses. Rubus deliciosus thrives perfectly in any fair soil and situation, and is a frail shrub of the greatest possible merit for the rock-garden, quite admis- sible to the background even where space is limited. Since we are now in the cousinhood of Rosa, we may as well continue with Spiraea and Potentilla. Most of the Spiraeas and all the herbaceous species must be dealt of with the greater and lesser bog-plants; but of the shrubby kinds, while most—Ariaefolia, mongolica, ar- guta, Margaritae, Douglasi, Aitchisoni—are magnificent shrubs far too large for all but the largest rock-gardens, Bumalda and crispifolia are small enough to be made welcome. Bumalda is the larger, and has heads of big pink flowers—ruby-red in the form Antony Waterer ; crispifolia is neater and smaller, with rusty-looking little flower-heads, and screwed-up curly dark leaves. They have a caterpillared look which repels me, and I find a repel- lent chalky tone too in the pinks of Bumalda and Antony Watercr (indeed in almost all the pink Spiraeas). So that, without enthusiasm, I pass on to a front-rank rock- garden treasure in the very rare and little-known Sporaca Hacquetti (very close, if not identical with S. decumbens) 12 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS from the Dolomites. Hacquetti is as easy-tempered in good soil anywhere on the rock-work as a weed, and resembles a minute spreading arguta not three inches high, with heads and garlands of little snow-white flowers. It is a neat, tidy little grower, which all who possess it should set to work propagating from cuttings, the beauty and value of it being pre-eminent. I prefer it, so far, to all I have yet seen of the newer, tinier Spiraea caespitosa, which is nearly as dwarf as a moss and, I think, less inspiring. As for the Reine des Pres, Spiraca Aruncus, this great herbaceous species is usually grown as a border plant, in dense clumps. Grown thus, in huge masses, though it is glorious in flowering time with its sheaves and plumes of creamy bloom, it gives you no idea of its wonderful beauty when occurring on some barren wet rock in one single crown, carrying three, perhaps, of its graceful arch- ing leaves, and one feather of flower on a four-foot stem. It was thus that I first saw it years ago in the awful gloom of the Georges de ‘Trient, with three hundred sheer feet of damp cliff on either hand, interlapping as they mounted, to intercept the few faint ghostly rays of day- light that filtered down into that gleaming den of dark- ness. ‘The air was eternally cold with twilight and the spume of a roaring torrent, but, wherever plant could find lodgment in the crannies, there Spiraea Aruncus had sown itself, and its isolated spires of whiteness wavered like phantoms in the chill gloaming. So, in my garden, Aruncus, from two huge clumps in the borders above, has sown itself here and there in tiny crevices that admit no increase in the size or number of its crowns, and thus, in single spikes, the plant has a rare grace and charm. I am trying, too, following this delightful hint, to make it germinate over the sixty feet or so of creviced limestone precipice that overhangs the lake at Ingleborough where OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 13 | I am establishing a wild cliff-garden, which, when fairly started, will be a wonderful sight of natural beauty. Of the Potentillas there are two or three that are genuine shrubs, and admirably fitted for the rock-garden. Of front-rank among these comes our own native, Poten- tilla fruticosa, a plant curiously rare, and yet curiously abundant where it occurs. Thus you will find it above the High Force in Teesdale, that gardener’s Paradise, where the botanist grows crazy for Viola arenaria and Arenaria uliginosa, and the gardener’s bones are melted within him by the ecstasy of Gentiana verna and spread- ing miles of purple pansy. On either side the river, in the sand, grows Potentilla fruticosa, a close, woody, wiry shrub of two to three-foot height, covered all over with abundance of big, brilliant yellow flowers. This treasure is invaluable for any garden, and absolutely easy in any soil. The only thing it requires is to be cut over, hard, if ever it shows signs of becoming leggy. It will break out anew from below, and re-form into a compact bush. Very similar to this again is Potentilla floribunda—in- deed hardly, to me, distinguishable, unless its flowers are a little smaller. P. Salesowt is a newcomer, reported to have whitish flowers. So far I only find it a small shrub of rather ugly leaf and growth. ‘The sulphur-blooming dwarf Potentilla Friedrichseni I have not yet tried, though, on the whole, I hear it well reported of. But the triumph of the race is Potentilla nitida—though I don’t know if I can fairly call this a shrub, seeing that its height is only about two inches at the very most. Potentilla nitida lives in the Alps of Tyrol and North Italy, in the higher, sunny moraine- and débris-slopes — a minute, woody trailer, with cloverish leaves, of a pure grey, brilliantly silver on the reverse, and very large flowers of a rich cherry pink, differing in depth of colour in different plants. If the ordinary rosy type were not so beautiful, the snowy- 14 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS bloomed nitida alba, pure white against the pure silver of the foliage, would be one of the loveliest little plants of the rock-garden. All forms of Potentilla nitida, too, grow with the most perfect ease and good humour in any fair soil, in any sunny spot, and multiply from cuttings like any bedding Viola. ‘The plant’s only fault, and one to be very carefully guarded against, is a tendency to go to sleep in rich soil, and prove to be painfully shy about flowering. ‘This, however, can be remedied by planting it in rubble and dust. I have not yet tried it in the Moraine-garden, but it will probably succeed there and bloom abundantly. Very similar, too, in habit is the rare newcomer, apennina, of which my one _ plant looks a twin of nitida, though I believe the flowers are white. Over such diverse-seeming species as Potentilla, Rubus and Spiraea does Rosa extend the shelter of its great name, and now, in due course, we come to deal with the roses. For the most part these are middling shrubs (1 shall scarcely talk of the garden kinds, the doubles, and hybrids), very welcome on the upper banks of the rock- garden. But the first in merit for big and little terri- tories alike is Rosa alpina, a small, neat, dense shrub, finely thorny, with abundant lovely flowers of a deep velvety crimson, and sweetly, richly fragrant beyond any rose I know. Ona warm day the hot, deep sweetness of this rose’s scent is something almost vertiginous. Then, when the flowers are fallen, succeed long scarlet heps that prolong the charm of the plant till far into the autumn. Rosa alpina is so easy-going and sturdy a species that it will fend freely for itself if cast out unprotected in the woods (indeed I wonder that it has never appeared as a native), and, at the same time, it is so concise and modest in growth that no one need be afraid to admit it into even the smallest of gardens. Similar in size, but much OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 15 less in charm—to my taste—are Rosa lucida, and Rosa Maly. Of the greater roses, any big garden will be glad of such Ramblers as Dorothy Perkins and Lady Gay, of the Wichuraiana hybrids—especially Gardenia, Jersey Beauty, and dreamlike René André; of such huge wild species as the fiercely thorny, crimson-blossomed acicularis, of the beautiful four-petalled sericea, of ferruginea with its grey and purple foliage and its large pink flowers, of caroliniana, smaller in growth and delighting in very wet ground, of rugosa and lovely new yesoensis, of the brilliant Austrian briars, and above all, in favoured corners, of those fanatic sun -lovers, berberidifolia, sulfurea and bracteata. Alas, that lovely little shrub, Rosa berberidi- folia, with its golden blooms basally spotted with chocolate, is of no use to my damp climate; and bracteata, the glorious Camellia-rose, with its solid shining leaves and its immense snowy blooms, perpetually lingers on the edge of death, blossoming indeed, but late, and always cowering earthwards in the winter. Yet it is not cold that is fatal to these sun-craving roses, so much as the absence of ripening sun in summer. I have actually kept Rosa gigantea alive in the open for two successive winters unprotected. As for Rosa bracteata, its variety Anemone has all the beauty of the type, if not more, with twice the general usefulness and trustworthiness. Rosa bracteata (or sinica) Anemone seems to be a robust sport from the parent, differing in its far greater vigour and resisting power, as well as in the colour of its enormous saucer-like blossoms, which are of a particularly entrancing soft pink. All these roses, of course, need no special help beyond fair or rich soil. As for Rosa gigantea, I believe no one has ever flowered this Lord of Roses in the open in - England—nor, I fear, will any one succeed in doing so. 16 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS This Burmese giant of his race is a tremendous tropical Liane, whose trunk is girthed like a man; his flowers, nearly a foot across, if not more, are, says report, of a gentle yellow. He has flowered indoors, I believe, at Syon, and rumour whispers of a marvellous hybrid that he has made out of doors in favoured Portugal, with Gloire de Dijon. Shall we ever be privileged to see, or fortunate in acclimatising, this portentous offspring of two parents so august? As for the other large roses, arkan- sana is only a young seedling with me, and seems, as a matter of fact, inclined to be small; but I reserve a corner for graceful great Rosa microcarpa, carrying enormous arching boughs bent down by tremendous heads of little white flowers, that in autumn are succeeded by showers of scarlet fruit, very delicate and effective. The same effect, only lovelier, do I expect from my latest novelty, the coral-clustered Rosa yesoensis. Of course, in big gardens, the great cluster-roses all make pictures of unrivalled effect. Never shall I forget, high in the mountains of Japan, one blazing day in summer, how I came on Rosa polyantha making a blinding snowstorm above a little trickling beck in a nook of the jungle. Even so, over craggy boulders, might one shower it in England—or any of the roamers, indeed, such as the exquisite ‘ Blush Rambler.’ And here, to close my roses, I must put in a friendly word for my own ignored countryman, the rare and charming Rosa villosa. Rosa villosa, though I call it rare, is, as a matter of fact, almost as common in the north of England as Rosa canina. But it never wanders southward; its range is limited, and its charm is far greater. It makes a much smaller, frailer bush than the Dog-rose, admirable in size for the rock-garden. The foliage is faintly grey with fine pubescence, the big flowers are of a blazing crimson as they open, OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 17, and, even at their fullest, are many shades darker and more brilliant than the pale blooms of canina. To my mind Rosa villosa, in point of colour, is nearer to alpina than to the Dog-rose; there are many shrubs, many roses in our gardens, of less merit and beauty than this neglected native. ‘There is also an attractive Albino form of villosa, but this cannot really challenge the beauty of the type. Passing now from the roses, no gardener fortunate enough to possess a cliff of his own, will ignore the great Wistaria of the Kast. With memories of Wistaria multyuga my heart is full. In the Garden of Asia stands recorded the beauty of the wild plant as I saw it among the thousand islets of Matsushima, trailing down those violet garlands over each fretted fantastic cliff of sandstone, blending its cool grey softness with the golden flare of Azalea mollis, while the still green water, swelling lazily against the rocks, sent back in shifting catches of colour the image of that riotous loveliness. Or Wistaria multijuga again, at Kameido — arcades and trellises of it everywhere, built out on long par- titioned galleries over the waters of the temple lake, while the worshippers, having each engaged his partition for the day, sit at peace beneath the four-foot plumes of pale purple, and adore the misty loveliness of the canopy overhead. Do you want four-foot plumes of Wistaria multijuga in England? Then give it all the sun you can and all the richest food. It is far from being a difficult plant to deal with, much less a hopeless one; and remember always that the ordinary Wistaria sinensis, even at her best, is but a poor pallid widow compared with the bridal opulence of Wistaria multi- juga. , Now that my heart is back in far Japan, it becomes impossible for me any longer to keep silence on the other B 18 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Japanese treasures that I nurse in my rock-garden. And nothing—not even if they grew to the size of St. Paul’s— should deprive me of the Japanese Cherries, single and double, rosy, white, and yellow (though the Yellow Cherry, indeed, is more alluring in idea than in reality, being of a faint, greenish-sulphur shade, which is very effective on a big, well-flowered tree, but mean and depressing on a small, young specimen). Of the other Cherries, the dwarf rare Cerasus pro- strata, is best for the rock-garden, while of the Plums, glorious Mumé is, I begin to fear, of uncertain flower- ing in my climate, like several of the Pyruses, which perhaps I don’t treat properly, especially Pyrus spec- tabilis, the most beautiful of all, of which young plants from Japan blossomed last season till their frail branches creaked beneath their burden of rose and ruby snow—and this year are nothing but shoot and leatage. Perhaps pruning will help the Japanese Plum. Or does it require more summer ripening? In Japan it makes so bewildering a spectacle of beauty through grey, icy March, that one would spare no pains to have it in England doing likewise, if possible. The two giant plants in my shrubbery are two specimens I bought for a shilling each at a night-fair in Tokio. ‘They lived in my house for a fortnight—sheer indistinguishable balls of white and pink. Now they have shot up and about like Jack’s beanstalk, waving enormous whip-cord shoots. And they each average perhaps five blooms a year. The same trouble attends my culture of Chimonanthus fragrans, that most heavenly- scented of all heaven- scented flowers. Long had I known of it, and never seen it, till one day I walked in a certain lovely garden on the Genoese Riviera. And there, in a cold, shaded corner, chill with January’s frost in unsunned aspects, I was transplanted to heaven on the wings of an ineffable OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 19 fragrance. Of course it was Chimonanthus fragrans—a great bush of it, clothed all over with those dull pale, waxy flowers, of which one is enough to fill a whole big house with bliss. But though I have great bushes now at home—bushes that shoot and thrive and ramp—yet I have not yet had even that one flower annually for which I would almost compound. Not only, by the way, are the blossoms of Chimonanthus thus scented, but if ever any one has noticed the curious musty sweetness that hangs characteristically about everything imported from Japan, and has wondered what the cause may be, let me advise him to pick off and pulverise some dry, dead twig of the Chimonanthus. Immediately, and with no money spent on train or steamer, he will find himself standing in the avenue that leads up to the temple of K’annon Bodhisat’ at Asak’sa, in the full roaring tide of Japanese life. So poignant, so instant is the call of a fragrance. Another Japanese shrub of high rank for the rock- garden (for the Calycanthus-cousins of Chimonanthus awake no zeal in me, nor will I linger over half-hardy Serissa foetida, whose pretty little blue stars do most un- utterably stink) is the heavenly Bamboo, Nandina domes- tica, which unites the delicate leafage of an immense Vancouveria or Spiraea with loose, lovely showers of white or scarlet berries, which Europeans in the East use at Christmas as a substitute for Holly. Nandina is a very holy plant in the East; it is always planted by every verandah, at the place where the bowl stands on its stoop for the washing of hands. And in England, with me, despite sad prophecies, I have found Nandina perfectly easy and perfectly hardy. It loses much of its leafage in winter (hence I class it here as deciduous), but never fails to continue thriving robustly. Of course it does not fruit, and never will fruit, but the beauty of the ‘ fronds’ is so conspicuous as to set it in the front 20 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS rank of small shrubs for the rock-garden. Especially is it lovely when, with spring, the young green of the dawning leaves contrasts with the russet and ruby of last year’s persisting sprays. But perhaps, of all shrubs introduced in the last twenty years, Buddleia variabilis, in its varieties, takes the first place. Almost tropically luxuriant is this wonderful great ragged bush, which is hardier and more easy-going and more rampant than many a Lilac or Syringa (not to mention, too, that it blooms in August, when all other flowering shrubs are long since over and done with). Almost tropically gorgeous, too, with its countless fox- brush spikes of dense violet flowers, golden-eyed and sweetly-scented (which last so much longer if only they can be protected from the ravages of bees). Buddleia variabilis requires hard pruning, and its flowers do not stand in water, otherwise the plant has no fault of any kind, for any position in the whole garden. There is now a prostrate form of it, too, which I am trying this year. If it proves as magnificent as its description, this should be as invaluable for the rock-garden as type variabilis is for the garden in general. Globosa I have not yet grown, it being too large; and the almost dizzily sweet asiatica is a cold greenhouse plant. Remains Buddleia Colvillet, reported as a miracle of beauty and difficulty, delicate, miffy, shy,—but glorious, in its native Himalyas, with showers of big rosy trumpets over soft grey leaves. I foolishly and desperately resolved last year that I would have a try at Buddleia Colvillei. I ordered a plant which, when it arrived, turned out to be at least three inches high. In utmost trepidation and scorn of my own rashness, I planted it out none the less, under a wall, in good soil. Immediately the most fearful storms, sleets, and frosts swept down across the north, followed by a blighting drought accompanied by unceas- EDRAIANTHUS SERPYLLIFOLIUS MAJOR. OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 21 ing east winds. I said good-bye, in my heart, to Buddleia Colvillet. But Buddleia Colvillet was not to be got rid of. It grew all through that weather, as I have rarely seen a plant grow; and by autumn it was three feet across, bushy and robust, and about two feet high. I sheltered it with gorse as our last dreadful winter grew on, but, so far as I can see, Buddleta Colvillei, though cut back, seems inclined to break again, more vigorous than ever, regardless of inclement seasons. When or whether it will flower remains, of course, a different question. Now comes the last great race of deciduous shrubs (for Azalea is to be lumped, nowadays, with Rhododendron) for the rock-garden. The one crime of which all the Magnolias except summer-blooming glauca are guilty, is of flowering within reach of late frosts which reduce their pure and waxy fragrance to a mass of brown feculent rottenness. Otherwise they are all rivals in beauty and charm. Glorious Ywlan and its kin are perhaps too large for small gardens ; even Kobus and Watsoni develop into trees. But surely they are so delicious that every garden must allow them room to the last possible moment. All are easy, all are fragrant, all are magnificently, regally beautiful. I grow Kobus, Watsoni, glauca, rustica rubra, Yulan, obovata, hypoleuca (the great forest-Magnolia of the Japanese Alps), stellata, tripetala, and the very rare salicifolia. Stellata, of course, is the jewel of jewels for the rock-garden—quite a small, close shrub, three or four feet in height, with myriads of pearly goblets that open out into stars. Rustica rubra is a variety of uncertain origin, akin to soulangeana, with big chalices of soft deep rose. (Alas, that the supreme beauty of all, Magnolha Campbelliae, is of no use over the greater part of England, and even in favoured corners of Ireland and the south only deigns to show its huge coralline cups occasionally, 22 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS in certain seasons, between tracts of barrenyears.) Watsone is a straggler, akin to parviflora, but bigger and far hardier, with round snow-white balls, whose central cone is ringed in by a circle of vivid scarlet anthers. Glauca is a small American shrub, loving wet places, and pro- ducing its creamy, fragrant blossoms in July and August. It has, so far, though a success, been less of a joy to me than Kobus, stellata, and Watsoni, which all do wonders. Kobus is my particular joy. It is an astonishingly dense, vigorous shrub, rapidly growing on into a tree ; its flowers are not enormous, nor very solid, but are borne in the most splendid abundance when the tree gets on in years. It is a thing of obviously first-class merit, and I wonder that it has not been more widely proclaimed. As for salicifolia, it is due to have remarkable purity and brilliance and beauty. So far, though, my healthy plants are but babies, and will not flower for some years. All I can say at present is that every part of the plant— leaves, stem, and bark—are deliciously fragrant. And, to conclude, any light cool soil, peaty or not, will suit all these Magnolias. Remains now only the race of Knotweeds, to which duty, rather than affection, bids me concede a place in my gardens. I make an exception, however, in favour of Polygonum vaccinifolium, which is a rock-garden plant of very high value, as all who grow it can bear witness— a trailing, rock-hugging mat of woody, small-leafed branches which in autumn are covered with an inexhaust- ible profusion of erect little rosy spikes four inches high or so. Its generosity is no less valuable than its time of blooming, and its exemplary ease and good temper no less conspicuous than either. It grows eagerly in almost any soil, in any open aspect, and multiplies readily when pulled to pieces. As small as this is the linear-leaved P. Emodi, which, however, does not spread so fast or so OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 23. far, but makes a spider’s web of growth, from which come up the heads of deep pink flowers. This is a rare, new species, but has no charm or preciousness to compare with vaccinifolium. The equally rare P. sphaerostachyon —though, by the way, this is frankly herbaceous, not a shrub at all—is, to my taste, downright ugly—an un- distinguished little plant eight inches high or more, too leafy for its dull globes of rosy blossom. Half the size of this, to continue my divagation, is our own rare native, P. viviparum, very similar, but much prettier, with spikes of pearl-white flowers that produce their young ones ready born. It is reported from our alpine meadows to the east of Ingleborough, and I have found it abundantly in upper Teesdale. In the garden it thrives quite happily almost anywhere, even if it prove of no very solid permanence. Returning to the greater, shrubby Knotweeds, they are, for the most part, only fitted for the largest, wildest garden, so commanding is their stature, so invasive and violent their development. Polygonum saghalinense is the most really tropical of all our cultivated plants—and this though it hails from so bleak and untropical a corner of the world as the undesirable convict island which is the contended bone between Russia and Japan. It rises to twelve feet or more, in single arching boughs, clothed with great leaves like magnified Hazel. It dies clean down in winter, and runs vehemently about underground, so that, in rich favourable, sheltered glades (in which alone it can attain its fair development) it becomes the most stately of weeds. Rather smaller in leaf, size, and habit, is P. cuspidatum, which, instead of the single sprays, sends up abundance of boughs from a yearly- thickening central crown. This, no less easy and hardy than saghalinense, is perhaps a safer plant to admit within sight of the rock-garden—though in such choice 24 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS territory the only Polygonum which must always be in- dispensable is vaccinifoliwm. Oxyphyllum is still smaller than cuspidatum, with a profusion of snowy plumes in autumn; and a climber of great merit is baldschuanicum, which makes curtains of greenery in no time over a bush or stump, and then, before it dies down, glorifies October with a cloud of white. The Fuchsias, brilliant race, do not, of course, do very much for me in my damp, ill-wintered climate. The little hybrid, Bouquet, thrives well, and Riccartoni persists. And these are of high value for the rock-garden, particu- larly Bouquet—a tiny, tidy little herbaceous shrub, if one may use so paradoxical a term, which always keeps its position and proportion. But in gardens where the sun is lord, many more of the Fuchsias may be used. I shall never forget my first realisation of what a hardy Fuchsia means. It was on the western coast of Ireland. Be- neath the august cone of Croagh Patrick lies a tiny little ruined abbey, buried almost to its eaves in the encroach- ing sands of the shore. Far away beyond, a great square island, blue and very pale, stands up on the uttermost rim of the great pale sea. And, in this remote corner of peace and death, Fuchsia Riccartoni has made itself a beautiful shroud for the dead shrine. Everywhere, amid the walls and ruins and sand-banks, wave its long slender arms, and a million scarlet trumpets in the sunlight dance up and down with every faint cool breath that hovers land- wards over the face of the water. Only their incessant flicker disturbs the immemorial tranquillity which holds this heart of long-dead holy activities, as it lies buried in the shifting sand, embalmed in the golden tranquillity of a burning summer afternoon. And, looking back in memory, I scorn the specific. To Liccartoni, far down in the years, I refuse to swear; Fuchsia is all that matters. And, as for tiny trailing Fuchsia procumbens, for the OF SHRUBS AND THEIR PLACING 25 rock-garden, with its dull wee flowers and huge scarlet berries, Mr. Eden Phillpotts may luxuriate in its hardi- ness, but with me it is a delicacy to be nurtured (without ecstasy) in the vinery. Even on his promise I can hardly dare believe that it will ever prove winter-hard with us. 26 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS CHAPTER 1 DE Shrubs, mostly Ebergreen Mostty, I head this chapter, because in the great ever- green races there occur deciduous species, and vice versa. And it would be jerky and pedantic to keep my reader hopping backwards and forwards from chapter to chapter in order to join up the disconnected ranks of Magnolia or Azalea. Nor will I make apology for using this latter name. It is hard that, where botany swarms with ugly names, hideous, hard, teutonic, latinised Russ and bastard Greek, a name so simple, gracious and euphonious as Azalea should be torn from us, and we be left with no refuge but the lumbering if orotund syllables of Rhodo- dendron. ‘Therefore, since no one can be in doubt what is meant by Azalea, I will continue in the old, superseded ways. If all races were so unmeaningly, so sweetly named, our gardens would be happier, our labels less deforming. But we are at the mercy of chance, it seems, in these matters. It was mere luck that the eponymous hero of the Yulans was able, being a M. Magnol, to supply so appropriate and fragrant a generic name as Magnolia. On such a frail coincidence does the question of nomenclature depend. Suppose the Magnolias were Smithias, Von Borkias, Mulliganias? And it is mere luck that they aren’t. If their discoverer had had his life saved by the Mulligan (of Ballymulligan), and had nourished due gratitude, Heaven knows what might have OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 27 happened! Nothing could well have saved us from Mulligania. Which leads me to a despairing proposition. Fitting, fair, and honourable it is (as Sir John Hooker points out) that great gardeners, explorers, lovers of these delights, should be commemorated and honoured in the names of flowers. But Sir John slides over the great difficulty of the question: we are not all Magnols, and since no man has power over his own name, and since a lovely, floral soul may be clothed in such syllables as Smee or O'Higgins, why not alter our system of nomen- clature, and avoid the danger of having to damn a plant eternally under the style and title of O'Higginsia or Smeea? There is actually—think of it!—a rock-garden plant called Boehninghausenia. On the same principle, too, mountains great, divine and glorious, must be saved from the indignity of being labelled Mount Baker or Mount Bullock Workman. My plan would be to adopt the Japanese, the savage principle, of naming for fitness ; and, when a plant comes up for name, my compliment to the great horticulturist would take the form, not of ask- ing him or her to stand god-parent to a possible Badlock- Workmannia Fanniae, but of giving him the right to choose the novelty’s name himself. Personally I should value this right far more than the ascription of a species under my own syllables, and take more pleasure in regis- tering Saxifraga Gloria than Saxifraga Farreri. Azalea, then, leads off with Azalea procumbens, which, to be correct, ought to be spoken of rather as Loiselewria procumbens. ‘The Alpine Azalea is the strangest and, I think, with the exception of Pyxidanthera and Andromeda hypnoeides, the smallest of all northern shrubs. It is as flat as any lichen or any starved mat of thyme. Indeed, but that its tiny leaves are leathery, bright green and glossy, the plant is not unlike a thin tangle of wild thyme. On this appear, in spring, abundant flowers, gazing upwards 28 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS into the eye of day, comparatively enormous little cups, waxy, coral-pink, delightful. You will find the Alpine Azalea all over the higher ranges of Scotland, and every- where in the upper Alps. It makes a great part in that fine, close lawn which you reach below the lowest lip of the moraines ; and its frail, hard woody branches go trail- ing far and wide, making warp and woof for the Andro- saces carnea, vitaliana and Chamaejasme, for the alpine clovers, Oxytropids and Phacas, for the gentians verna, brachyphylla and nivalis. Unfortunately it is a very diffi- cult plant to collect, and not by any means an easy plant to grow. It is strange that a native should be perverse, but Azalea procumbens requires a good deal of care—perfect roots to start with (a sufficiently hard proviso), then a cool, open space, in light, cool peaty soil, rich with vegetable humus. At present, I believe, I have only one thriving plant, and that but small. Nor is it easy to get more. This year, however, I am trying the experiment of bringing down a quantity of the fine powdered black humus, decay of decay of decay from the very beginning of things, which is to be collected from peat-hags high on the saddle of Ingleborough. Of the chemical properties of this pulverised stuff I leave wiser heads than mine to speak ; in a way the nutritive qualities of this extinct rottenness must have changed or failed. And yet it plays an incalculably great part in the life of the higher Alpine vegetation, contributing some mysterious gift essential to the well-being of such things as the arctic Andromedas, and the mountain Azalea. Possibly, though not in itself food, it provides some substitute for food—of which the truly Alpine plants are very impatient in any excessive or obvious degree—perhaps, that is, the humus acts as a sub- tilised nutrition inoffensive to the dainty tastes of these mountaineers, and yet satisfactory to their needs. Of the other Azaleas my song is still sorrow. ‘There OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 29 are, in my limy soil—limy in spite of all the most elaborate diggings and delvings and drainings (for lime is no less difficult to exorcise than love)—only two exceptions to the general rule of sickliness among my Azaleas. Bog-haunt- ing viscosa have I tried, fragrant with white flowers in late summer; fiery orange calendulacea, tawny sinensis, rosy apple-blossomed Vaseyi, profuse magenta-flowered amoena. And all, all are modified failures here, in the course of a year or two. One exception is the living fire of Azalea mollis, most blazing and diverse of all flame- flowers. And the other, by a strange unexpected freak, is the delicate Azalea indica itself. Now Azalea indica is the ordinary greenhouse Azalea; and, when I imported a quantity from Japan, I laughed at myself for daring to plant them out in the open immediately. Not one of them in five years has ever suffered from cold or drought or lime or damp; rarely have any of them failed to pro- duce abundance of bloom. And this though they are planted in merely ordinary garden soil, permeated with lime, and though quite unsheltered and unprotected. Some are under a wall, it is true, but the rest, among which are some of the most brilliant, stand out in the open, dead level, heavy-soiled plain of the bog-garden. And this once more encourages me to proclaim my gospel. Half-hardy plants, imported from cold districts, prove often to be as hardy as the most robust of natives. From the icebound plain of Tokio all importations of delicate species are, a fortiori, perfectly willing and able to resist the utmost rigours of our far less rigorous winters. I even have hopes that I may prove this of Nelumbium speciosum. Lam importing the Holy Lotus from its most northerly limit of distribution, in the trust that thus its tubers may be victorious over our pale climate. In point of fact, I cherish a dream that all gardeners are far too little venturesome about attempting paradoxical 30 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS experiments. Last year I hurled out all the old green- house Cyclamens—huge lumping old corms—on to a light-soiled bank beneath the shelter of thickly planted deciduous honeysuckles. They all lived and continued to thrive, though the weather, for the next six weeks, was nothing short of appalling. More than a year has passed, and it looks as if some of them might yet live awhile. This, of course, is a platitude in warm Cornwall, but a paradox in frost-swept Yorkshire Alps. And such experi- ments cost little; one tries, perhaps, the corpora vilia of superfluous plants. And then what is the amazed joy of success! In this last autumn I threw away, in a pet, a worthless plant of Odontoglossum crispum, vexed at having overlooked it when dane of my third-raters a week or two before. Frost was ruling at the time, and next day I regretted the cowardly brutality of my action. So I went and quested for my victim, set on making amends. And there, on the frozen grass, I found the dispotted Odontoglossum still alive and well. ‘This changed my plans; I took it up and planted it in the rockery, in a sheltered corner, near the protecting shade of Cistus laurifolius. It was an absurd experiment, but I could not resist the temptation of trying it. Of course the poor thing ultimately died, but I solemanky declare and affirm iat: there, in the open, Odontoglossum crispum held out for a solid three weeks, during which time rain and tempest alternated with bitter ak, and the temperature was generally down to goodness knows where at night. Of all evergreen flowering shrubs though, for the rock- garden, great and small, the enormous race which we call Rhododendron (exclusive of Azalea) is the most august. Here, again, I am stumped by the impossibility of elimi- nating lime from my soil. However, I have induced no fewer than three of the Himalyans to thrive—though, started as tiny plants, they have not yet flowered. These OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 31 are fulgens (this, | remember, bloomed last year, but was cut by frost), most dazzling of scarlets in the garden, luscombeanum and campylocarpum. I even induced the royally beautiful Awcklandi to survive through three un- protected winters. The latest novelty I am trying is Smr- nowi, large-leaved, but reported very slow-growing, with big pink flowers. But the great Rhododendrons cannot be introduced too carefully, even too sparingly into the rock-garden. Almost invariably their growth is either rounded and lumpish, or straggling and gawky. Their leafage, too, when the brief glory of the flowers is gone, is leaden, dull and depressing. For my part, I detest and flee the vast pies and puddings of Rhododendron that prevail in all parts of England where the soil admits ponticum, catawbiense and their hybrids as almost wild plants. ‘And I’m sure it’s no ill-breeding, as the classic poem has it, ‘if at these repulsive pies, Our offended gorges rise.’ They are terribly overdone; the blaze of them in bloom is overwhelming; for the remaining eleven months of the year they make mere humped domes of lead, gloomy, uninteresting, and undistinguished by any countervailing grace of line, form, or carriage. It is with the smaller species that Rhododendron comes to its own in the rock-garden. And yet I must not shrink from the truth. I almost dislike the Alpenrose. In fact, I do. I have no notion why, but for this glory of the Alps I can muster no affection at all—hardly even esteem. Its growth is generally straggling, and I am not fond of the flowers. And this coldness is not due to the fact that neither ferruginewm nor hirsutum ever enjoys itself in my gardens; for I like the plants as little in full rot on the slopes of the Oberland as I do in sickly dwindling specimens on my rock-work. And so let me leave them to others. Perhaps their rather harsh colour, not chalky exactly, nor magenta, but to me mysteriously acrid and 32 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS vulgar, influences my opinion; for I have no such prejudice against lovely Rhododendron racemosum. ‘This makes a charming wee bush (and grows admirably with me) clothed with hard little ovate leaves, greyish beneath ; and the abundant flowers are of a rich and lovely soft apple-blossom pink. The plant is of recent introduction, and shows no signs of becoming commoner, though quite easy to grow. Of the small Rhododendrons I think it incomparably the best—unless I am to make an excep- tion in favour of the newly-shown and figured R. intri- catum, which, if the Botanical Magazine tells truth, has big flowers that verge on blue! As to this, the Jew Ofella can think as he chooses; the colour is by report a very rare attractive shade. Otherwise the little Rhodo- dendrons run dreadfully to unclean lilacs. Myrtifolium, ovatum, parviflorum are all useful plants; so is their cousin, the deciduous Rhodora canadensis, an American peat-bog plant, of rather untidy habit, with dull flowers of bad tone that appear before the leaves. As for Rhodo- dendron kamschaticum, this much-vaunted rarity is not, I think, worthy of a high place. It is a minute, almost arctic shrub, wiry and frail-growing, with very large single blooms, which alas! (at least whenever I have seen it) were of a sad, unmeritorious magenta. Of Chamaecistus I have already spoken, but one Azalea- Rhododendron remains to be described, much more in sorrow than in anger. ‘This is the marvel that I talked of in the Garden of Asia as Azalea ‘ Gloria,’ and before its beauty all other Azaleas flee and hide their heads. And I say this deliberately ; as you go up to Nikko and beyond, to Yumoto, all the wild ita: to eight thousand feet and more, are a rolling prairie fire of Azaleas, in every shade of splendour, ran the candid amber or salmon of mollis, through the whole gamut of yellows, white and orange, to scarlet, crimson and violet. And OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 33 then suddenly comes Azalea Gloria into sight, and all the others are forgotten. Azalea Gloria is really Rhododen- dron dilatatum, and it makes a solid band of colour across the hills below Nantai-San in the strangest way, never descending below or rising above a level so sharply defined that its bounding lines never seem to shift. A hill that just rises to the required height is capped by the Rhodo- dendron; a greater one is barred by it straight across the slope. Rhododendron dilatatum is a tall, loose shrub, with silver-white bark, deciduous, and blooming before the leaves. Only on mature plants are the flowers freely pro- duced. They come before the leaves, and are very large, of the purest and most brilliant cherry-pink, absolutely devoid of the brassy or magenta tones that disfigure so many of the Azaleas. A well-flowered specimen is the most beautiful sight I have ever seen in the way of a flowering shrub—the effect is of an innumerable crowd of rosy butterflies alighted, each by itself, on a naked silver tree—so delicately balanced are the wide trumpets, each on a distinct pedicel of its own. With great difficulty and after many failures and delays did I succeed, two years ago, in importing a hundred young plants of the Rhododendron. Of these only about half a dozen sur- vived, though treated with every care. Mhododendron dilatatum is an Alpine shrub, and the rigidity of its limitation proves that its requirements are definite and imperious. It grows in the loose spongy soil of the mountain woodland, and its roots love to wander through the cool, light mass amid the great stones beneath the surface, which preserve the moisture even more faithfully than the faithful copsewood and humus above. And I have little hope that, except by some rare fluke of some individual’s luck, or some individual plant’s persistence, we shall ever be able to make an easy garden plant of c 34 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS beautiful shy Rhododendron dilatatum. Meanwhile, too, I am haunted by a doubt whether the name or my memory is false. As to my memory, I can absolutely swear—to the glory of that rosy Azalea; but have I, have I, after all my trouble, succeeded in getting the right name? ‘To doubt is weakness; I must steel myself against it. But the fact is that last year one of my few surviving plants emitted one poor sad flower. It was magenta. It was ugly. Yet there is the silver bark, there are all the other details. Beyond question the bloom was only poor because the plant was young and sad and homesick and hectic. With restored health—if ever that arrives—will come also the size, the purity, the radiance of the blossom I adored at Chuzen-ji. After Rhododendron come Kalmia and Camellia (for I have nothing to say of Stwartia, and Gordonia, and little of rare, beautiful, white St. John’s-Wort-flowered Hucry- phia pinnatifida). And the Kalmias are all failures here, though once I had hopes, reading that the glorious mountain Laurel occurs in heavy yellow loam as well as in peat on its native mountains. But no; big latefola and charming little angustifolia dislike me equally ; and hardly less, too, the rare, delightful miniature form, angustifolia alpina, which I collected in the Rockies. This is an absolutely prostrate trailer, woody and wiry, narrow-leaved, with brilliantly glowing little cups of crimson. I had great difficulty in getting even incom- plete roots, and my plants have never done anything more than survive, and even that is more than I can claim for the majority of them. It loves damp alpine hollows, in peaty places, and, to all possessors of peat, might well prove a treasure. Of Camellias, I have made but little out of alba plena and Donckelaari, which are generally recommended for outdoor culture. And reticulata, though T had it un- OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 35 protected in the open through two winters, is really an indoor plant—the most gorgeous, perhaps, of all solitary- flowered shrubs; its broad, loosely built blooms being larger, lovelier, richer, and more graceful, to my taste, than those of even the largest, loveliest, richest Rose. Its intense gentle carmine has a quality of luminosity that I know in no other floral red, to the same degree ; it seems to light up a room with its presence, and glows like the steady heart of a fire. Even as the Rose is less stodgy than the horrid, fat Camellias that Marguerite Gauthier affected, even so are the blooms of reticulata less stodgy than the regularity of the typical double Rose. The Camellia’s one lack is fragrance ; otherwise its glory, its tossing profusion of petal, its revealed core of golden foam, make it the successful rival of any Rose that ever bloomed. The only scented Camellia is C. Thea—more famous as the tea-plant. This is practically hopeless, I think, for outdoor culture. I have gathered it at Nagasaki, as a semi-established wild plant, drooping its sweet, delicate bells modestly beneath those dark-green leaves to which the world owes so incalculable a debt of health and happiness. But for our gardens Camellia japonica and Camellia Sasankwa stand pre-eminent. Sasankwa is a quite small, frail shrub, throwing up one slender bough to five feet or so. In autumn, these boughs are bent beneath the weight, along their course, of many large flowers, in shape and size and colour exactly those of Rosa canina, but having the artificial, waxy texture of all the Camellias. But Sasankwa is an uncertain plant in England, and has given much disappointment. Of an imported batch all will start by thriving—then, sud- denly, ninety-nine will obstinately, inexplicably die, while the hundredth goes on prospering like a bay tree. JI give mine any rich soil, peaty or no, and trust 36 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS to luck. I have lost many, and succeeded with a few, and never yet flowered one. Camellia japonica will probably never reach, in Eng- land, the huge, tree-like proportions it attains in Japan. But it is an absolutely certain doer, almost anywhere, perfectly hardy and requiring no sort of care or protec- tion. It is more, of course, of a wild-wood tree than a rock-garden shrub, but when well-developed, has a rare magnificence, with its grey, smooth trunk, and its burden of flame-like crimson flowers, single, golden-eyed, that nestle amid the dark, glossy leafage. It is so one sees it in the wood above the Shiba Temple-Tombs in ‘Tokio, and from the shade one looks down and notes how the fierce sun beyond kindles each one of these fiery blossoms to a ring of scarlet flame. For, in the type-form, the blossoms, much harsher and hotter in colour, have the same luminosity that you get in reticulata. I growa white form, too, Yuki migiriima, Snow-circle, aan is one of the purest and loveliest things I have ever seen. Camellia japonica does not carry the individual flowers for very long, and their tendency to drop when touched has made the plant unlucky in Japanese romance, as it is thus credited with an analogy to decapitation and sudden death. Of the Daphnes I have already treated of the special rock-garden species—cneorum, rupestris, and alpina. But indica claims notice here, for its absolute, indestructible hardiness. My plants hail from the Tokio Plain, and have never quailed or blenched before the most awful winters, though quite without protection. ‘They grow on, too, like weeds, in any soil, and I only trust they will one day take it into their heads to flower as profusely as they grow. ‘The same rusticity could probably be proved of Dauphini. Another valuable species or group is that diversely named thing, Daphne fioniana, neapolitana, OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 37 collina. Whether these are all names of one or of dis- tinct sorts I dare not dispute. Let me call my plant collina, and so praise it. It grows in any soil, quite robustly, though sometimes a branch dies off for no clear reason. It develops into a round bush of small, leaden, evergreen foliage, three feet high or so, and each straight shoot is capped, in June, by a head of deliciously-scented rosy-pink flowers, like those of indica. Daphne Genkwa is an outstanding, notable kind, very rare in cultivation. It hails from China and Southern Japan, and labours, consequently, under a reputation for doubtful hardiness. As a matter of fact, | imported my plants from the Tokio Plain, with the result that they turn out able to stand anything in the way of weather. A pot-plant, in the open, suffers far more, of course, from frost, than does a plant whose roots are safely buried in the ground, with only one surface to feel the cold. Last winter a number of Japanese Plums, even, in pots, were killed off by frost; not a single pot-plant of Daphne Genkwa took any hurt. This plant, economically impor- tant in the manufacture, I fancy, of paper, is a small, very frail, straggling shrub, deciduous, with thin, velvety, greyish leaves. ‘The bark is soft, dark brown. The flowers, born in few-flowered clusters before the leaves, are larger than those of any other Daphne, and of a very clear, beautiful, blue-purple, like those of a fine lilac. Of Daphne striata, a close cousin of cneorum, and reported a lime-lover, my imported plants turned out, after all, to be mere collina; Daphne arbuscula is a very rare little novelty, quite easy to do with, in peat, which seems to me exactly like a minute form of cneorum with the diminutiveness, but without the gorgeous blossom, of rupestris. With Laureola, Philippi, Sophiae—the dingy, greenish yellowish Daphnes, no rock-garden need concern itself. 38 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Remains only Daphne Mezereon, our sweet rare native. In almost every cottage-garden in March you will see the bare, leafless twigs of the Mezcreon clothed along their length with its big magenta flowers, armed with a fragrance keen, sugared, bitter, curiously ominous of the malevolent poison lurking in the whole plant, and con- centrated in the glossy scarlet berries that succeed the bloom. ‘Though rather capricious, the Mezereon, in its typical and its white form, is to be found all over Eng- land, naturalised, even, in wood and coppice, while on the upper Alpine meadows it abounds. There is only one spot, in our islands, however, which claims to possess it as undisputed native. Ling Ghyll is a narrow, deep gully, cloven abruptly between the fells at the back of Ingleborough. Its steep sides are clothed from top to dim, wooded, water-haunted bottom, with bushes of the Mezereon, which no external agency can well have introduced to a spot so remote from man, so utterly lonely in the wild heart of the hill country. Another speciality of this strange, magical glen was Sawifraga umbrosa, also claiming this for its only genuine station as a wild plant in Great Britain. Alas, the London Pride has disappeared for many years now; they say that incursions from Giggleswick were fatal to it. But the stubborn wood and fibre of the Daphnes will resist any- thing short of pick-axe and dynamite. As for me, I confess that I love this Daphne better in Ling Ghyll than in my gardens, where its colour vexes me, and its heady, evil fragrance troubles me with obscure terrors. And now comes the lesser fry of flowering evergreens. Let me not, though, rashly apply such an epithet to Cistus, noble race, which, however, is not for the most part enthusiastic about my garden. Let others, in hotter, sunnier, sandy climes, run riot with crispifolius, salvifolius, formosus, algarvensis, corbariensis, undulatus, ladaniferus, OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 39 laurifolius. I envy those fortunate ones; even as I write my brain is filled with the hot, poignant fragrance of a Mediterranean cliff, flogged by the full glare of midday, till all the sweet plants, all grey lavenders, all straggling thymes, all odorous, gummy Cistuses pant in thrills of vertiginous sweetness. Ah me—AXBatous U7r0 KevO waar yevoiwav!—if I may be forgiven this cri de cur, as thought of Cistus calls me back to the sun-bruised incense of the shrubs above the Madonetta. (‘ Du Grec! 6 ciel! du Grec! Il sait du Grec, ma seur!”) My only hardy Cistuses, as a matter of fact, are laurt- folius, florentinus, undulatus and lusitanicus. And all these are so easy to grow that I need say nothing of their culture. (Of course no one will plant them in shade.) Laurifolius is only less gorgeous in bloom than ladani- ferus—big, snowy, profuse in blossom, though the flowers soon fall. The whole plant, too, exhales a delicious scent of violets, which simply haunts the air, and cannot be emphasised by squeezing or breaking. Florentinus is a white-flowered hybrid, attractive, but much less so than either daurifolius or lusitanicus, which latter is, to my taste, the most beautiful of all. It is similar in growth to laurifolius (both are bigger plants than undulatus and florentinus —this last, the child, I rather fancy, of undulatus and daurifolius), but rather frailer and more straggling. The huge, fugacious flowers are snow white, but each of the five petals is marked, at the base, with a round spot of dark maroon. It is a far cry from Cistus ladaniferus, laurifolius, lusi- fanicus, several feet in height and bulk, to the minute Rock-roses, with their countless, reckless display of brilliant flowers in every shade, from white to crimson. But these, too, are to be ranked with Cistus ; their easi- ness, hardiness, commonness, make it as unnecessary to recommend them as it is inevitable to grow them, in any 40 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS open place, over any sunny rock. Besides all the innumer- able single and double varieties (Amabile is a double ball of crimson scarlet, and there is a similar lemon globe called Ball’s Green) of vulgare, notably a copper-coloured one from Mr. Wolley-Dod, and a beautiful big rose-pink variety, I grow also purpurewm and roseum, species so far doubtful as far as the flower is concerned. 'Then comes umbellatum, tall, erect, wiry-leaved, with heads of snow- white flowers. ‘This is tender and miffy, though less so than the, to me, impossible Tuberaria, so abundant by the roadside over the hills from Cannes. But our own most rare white-flowered native, Helianthemum polifolium, from Brean Down (you see masses of it, too, on the rail- way cuttings as you leave Dijon), is very valuable, and so is the tiny grey bush of HZ. linulatum, with its profusion of small lemon blooms. And a special favourite of mine is the too seldom seen HA. oelandicum, which I collected in the Oberland—a wee, frail thing, with little blossoms of brilliant gold. As for Helianthemum vulgare—type of all its kin—no culture, in the sun, comes amiss to it, but there is one cultural recommendation I should very strongly make to every one who grows it. Cut it over hard, as soon as the spring blossom is done. ‘This causes the plant to break anew, forming a neat round tuft; and has the further advantage of securing a second season of bloom later on. Not to mention that otherwise the Rock-rose grows leggy, lanky, sickly, and ultimately moribund if left too long to its own devices. The same advice I have already given about Potentilla fruticosa, and it is, of course, of the first importance in the case of all slender, tall-grow- ing shrubs, from Lavandula vera to Boronia megastigma. ‘The same applies, too, to Lreica and Pernettya. Past Pernettya I slide, for though useful little berried heaths, as it were, in the rock-garden, they have never made any ‘VUOTAIGNVUD VATIIANVONI Pah Ee ee Le +, sy é : 79< a “aa ay ars - ; 1.3% C=. oP o = a be ¢ ’ i 7 - Pia’ q ita F parte <9 OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 4] appeal to me. But no garden can be without the finer varieties of Calluna (Hayes, of Grasmere, has a white form so long and elegant in the spike as to suggest a Spiraea japonica), and the various hardy species of Erevca itself—carnea, mackayana (lovely, if impermanent as this fleeting world of false desire)—lusitanica, mediter- ranea, ciliaris. This last is a rare, beautiful little native from Dorset heaths, with heads of big brilliant bells. Another is vagans, from Cornwall, with fine bushy spikes of white. All these enjoy hot, sandy, peaty soils, and have no marked love for me. Mediterranea, however, thrives brilliantly, and blooms at the most improbable times, while usitanica has now formed a great tall bush of five feet high or so, which makes a delightful filmy shelter for Epigaea repens. And of my heaths, the most precious is the Irish Bell-Heather—Daboeocia polifolia— which you will see on either side of the road as you drive across the wild land between Sligo and Galway, through Connemara. This is a very easy-going plant, which luxuriates with me, and even more in peatier corners of England, with ovate leaves and long, loose spikes of very large white or rosy-purple bells, carried on stems about eight inches high, and precious, like Hreica carnea, in the rock-garden, for its habit of blooming from early till late. Under the shelter of Hreica, too, come such things as Arbutus, Vaccinium, Arctostaphylos, these two last species containing one or two useful little things for the peaty rock-garden, which, besides possessing no dizzy degree of charm, are too hostile to my garden to earn a more exhaustive notice here. The Gaultherias give us one big, ramping undergrowth in G. shallon, a North American unworthy of a choice place; and another most precious and elect of dwarfs in tiny, rare G. trichophylla, which you must grow in peat, among stones, at the bottom of a little hollow like a 42 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS sugar-bowl, if you want it to remain in health. Gazl- theria trichophylla is not so much remarkable for its small inflorescence, its furry-looking branches, as for the resulting fruits, which are ridiculously large, and of the most brilliant blue, having the colour and the bloom you see in those of Vitis vulpina. Indeed the fruits of the Gaultheria are almost as large as those of a grape. For the rock-garden, Mitraria, Fabiana, Fremontia, Carpentaria are rather luxuries than necessities ; so, too, are Choisya ternata, Perowskia, Parrotia, and many another illustrious shrub which it is one’s delight to prove hardy. ‘The same, too, must be said of the Olearias, gunniana, stellulata, macrodonta, nitida, and the ubiqui- tous Haasti. But, at the base of a rock-wall one may well grow Rosemary, and especially its delightful creep- ing, rock-hugging variety ; together with Ozothamnus rosmarinifolius, so like Rosemary in its aromatic leaves, so like Aster ereicoeides in its spikes of creamy blossom. Another plant I eye tenderly is /llicium religiosum, from Japan, an evergreen, with pale glossy green leaves, delightfully fragrant if you squeeze them, and_ then, nestling far down between the twigs, big pendulous blossoms of a ghostly diaphanous white, vaguely recalling those of Chimonanthus in design, and sweet with the tense, bitter sweetness of orange peel. This appears to be as hardy as it is rare and precious, though I have not sufficient experience yet to say the same of the Pitto- sporum, so glorious in great bushes of false orange-blossom along the Italian Riviera. The Abelias, chinensis and floribunda, are pretty, graceful rock-garden shrubs, sway- ing heads of pink trumpets, undeniably delicate, though, and untrustworthy. Cotoneaster and ELuonymus (though the mottled sea- side Euonymus is, | think, the plant I most dislike in the world—unless it be the Aspidistra) give us at least two OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN AS priceless rock-work plants, in two new rarities, Huonymus radicans, microscopically minute—like a woody, frailer version of Helxine Soleirolii—trailing over the stones; and Cotoneaster pyrenaica, which creeps rigidly down the rock, a small-leaved, dense-leaved plant, firmly appressed to soil or stone as it goes, after the delightful style of Veronica chathamica, loveliest of cliff-hugging shrubs, quite hardy, too; evergreen, with spikes of delicate soft blue blossoms late in the season. Nor must I forget Cydonia Maulet, the Rock-Garden Pyrus, a dainty, straggling shrub for rock-work, with big flowers, scarlet with the sad scarlet of stale blood, and round fertile quince-fruits. Another wild quince is the Japanese 'Toringo, Pyrus prostrata— or Cydonia prostrata—a frank trailer, winding in and out of grass or hedgerow in Japan, with flowers of a healthier, richer crimson than those of Maulei. The little rock-willows, too, trail firmly over the line of the rocks. I have at times imported them accidentally, and now they have made wide masses in many corners of the garden. I believe mine to be alpina and herbacea ; they are particularly charming when their fluffy silver cater- pillars emerge. Of the Brooms to be cultivated there are many to be treated of in their due place. Here I will only say that Cytisus purpureus is a fine little shrub for rock-work, with arches of lilac, rosy or white flowers according to the varieties. It grows about two feet high, and spreads with reasonable freedom. Heuffelianus, rumelicus, nyssanus, anxanticus are novelties from seed, to be proved, and not yet showing signs of being thrilling; our own very rare native, pilosus, is an invaluable, densely close trailer, making a cascade of gold over the rocks. ‘The commoner tinctorius (I am herding Cytisws and Genista recklessly under one name), with its double form, is pretty for a rough corner; and sagittalis, prostrate, epiphyllum-like 44 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS in growth, producing yellow heads at the end of each shoot, is good for any very hot, dry, rubbly bank where nothing else will do. Genista andreana is the gold-and- copper form of the common Broom, and is splendid up at the back, together with Mr. T. Smith’s lovely new hybrids in shades of rose and lemon and coral—'T. Smith, Firefly, Daisy Hill, and so on. We come now to the Pines, Firs, Ivies. ‘These hardly bear cataloguing. Hedera minima is a charming, serried wee ivy, quite stiff and stout, and very effective in the rock-garden. As for the Firs—not to wander into such debatable territory as Thuya and Retinospora—A bies excelsa gives us a perfect miniature of itself in clanbra- siliana. Pumila and pygmaea are other minute firs that adorn and dignify an outstanding coign of the rock. Retinospora obtusa, if I may beg the question, is also good ; but the two finest things in this group, beyond all cavil, are the mimic Cedrus atlantica which they call Comte de Digon (or should it be Dijon?) and the rare heuvronensis dwarf of the Scotch Fir—a perfect reproduc- tion of the type, but never of more than a foot’s height or so,—and indescribably alluring. Of the Junipers, prostrata and hibernica are beyond price —the one a trailer, the other erect, columnar. Sanderiana is wonderful beyond the ordinary, though, and so is pachyphlaea, a new introduction from Oregon. Sanderiana is a little Japanese, making a round bush about six inches high. All through the summer it is of a glaucous pearly grey, and with winter deepens to a metallic purple. Pachyphlaea promises to be much larger, and already has more or less columnar varieties. Its dis- tinguishing note is the clear and brilliant glaucousness of its foliage, which is more clearly and conspicuously blue than even Abies Parryi or Cedrus atlantica glauca. Nor, apparently, is any miffiness or delicacy to be feared from OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 45 it. While rare varietal forms like Comte de Dijon or Pinus sylvestris beuvronensis must have the choicest fore- most places on the rocks—not that they are difficult, but because they are rare (all these conifers are easy, thrifty doers anywhere)—there are some true species which are useful higher up. Pinus Cembra, stocky and so slow- growing as to count as a dwarf, may be employed as a wind-break. Pinus montana is a quite invaluable low- growing, straggling, vigorous little tree, the mountain- pine of the highest Alpine slopes, in whose bosky twilight lurk Lilium martagon and Aquilegia alpina. Learning a lesson from this, I have planted mine up with Tulipa gesneriana, and when their green dusk is starred with the flames of the tulip the effect is of a rare beauty. Pinus koraiensis is too uncommon as yet, and too little tried, to be spoken of; people who try Cryptomeria japonica are almost as unwise as they who once revelled in Welling- tonia ; and I have never succeeded in getting any live importations of the splendid tortured dwarf varieties that spring in Japan from that most magnificent of magnified, glorified Scotch Firs, Pinus massoniana. I tried to import the umbrella-headed abortion, T’anyosho, only last year, but my failure was so complete that I shall not repeat the experiment. Finally, if any one wants a big column of green darkness for a high point of some large rock-work, and dares not try the Funeral Cypress, let him remember, in the first place, that exquisite, lace-like Cupressus torulosa is absolutely safe and hardy ; and, in the second, if he wants a heavier, darker mass, that Juniperus virginiana Schottt is absolutely and at all points the living double of the great Funeral Cypress, possessing for itself the advantage of being as hardy as a Sycamore and as easy as a Privet. As for the Bamboos, I have a lurking feeling that it is unfitting to talk of these giant grasses as either ever- 46 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS greens or shrubs. In any case my remarks will take the form of warnings to a great extent. I know no Bamboo that can safely be trusted inside the rock-garden. Once they start they are the most fearful of growers. Pyg- maea is pretty and mild-looking, only a foot high or so, but, when established, it eats up space like a motor, seeming to engulf fresh pastures every hour. Ruscifolia (I am not troubling here with the distinctions between Phyllostachys, Arundinaria, and Bambusa) is even prettier —smaller and neater, with dense little boughs feathered with leaves like those of the Butcher’s Broom. So far as I know it, this plant, though also a ramper, may be trusted, as it does not increase so voraciously as pygmaca, and can easily be kept in bounds. And it is certainly most dainty, pretty, and attractive, as well in summer as in winter. Bambusa quadrangularis has proved too tender here, but a brilliant success among the smaller kinds has been B. Veitchi. This is dwarf, and big leaved, growing a foot or more in height—a miniature, roughly speaking, of palmata. And round the edge of each vivid green leaf there fades a clear rim of pure white, so that a well-grown dense mass of this is a delight to see. But Veitchi will certainly prove a tyrant. It covers all the Japanese Alps in a close jungle, and in England will probably prove extremely valuable as a covert-plant, as its hardiness is undoubted, and I have noticed in Japan that its vigour always increased as it mounted towards the high cold, while it Hagged and died as you descended from the hills. Of the larger Bamboos, palmata is another plant for general or covert use, a terrific grower when once started ; with few and very large leaves to a growth. It thinks nothing of shooting three or four yards underground, and coming up, like Arethusa, in the most improbable places. Away with all thought of it from the rock-garden. OF SHRUBS, MOSTLY EVERGREEN 47 But nigra—tall, exquisitely frail and graceful—is surely one of the loveliest things in the garden, growing into a gradually increasing central mass, whence all the fairy- like culms arch outwards, but never sending invading shoots to conquer the territory far and wide. Henonis is another gracious beauty, too, but my Henonis flowered and died. Sono more of him. Bambusa Maximowiczii is a compact, medium-sized plant at present, very plumy, but stiff, in which I am inclined to have a certain amount of confidence, though in charm he cannot hope to rival the grassy elfin grace of nigra. recta has been my latest surprise. It seemed a neat, mild grower, whose habit was a tuft, and whose height was about three or four feet of stiff culms. What, then, was my amazement when, last season, my Erectas, one and all, made new growths three inches round or more, that went sailing stiffly heavenward to eight or ten feet, with promise of corresponding increase again next season. As this seems a perfectly safe and hardy Bamboo, it will probably prove of very high value in the garden, more especially as it forms a clump and does not run. As for Metake, dear and gracious old friend, first of its race to prove to us how ridiculous it was of us to be timid and nervous about trying Bamboos in our climate—well, Metake itself is a little too vigorous, despite its wonder- ful beauty, to be admitted to the rock-garden. And senanensis is too much of a new-comer to be prophesied about yet, although already I think I can proclaim that he is hardy and very graceful. With regard to the culture of Bamboos, and recording again my warning that for the rock-garden only rusci- folia can be trusted on the rock-work, and only nigra and erecta in bigger places, with only nigra, erecta and Maximowiczii in the bog, I can go on to say that the sole requirement of the hardy Bamboos is a rich, cool, 48 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS deep soil, in which they by no means object to a good deal of moisture if the drainage be good. Add to this a sheltered glen or corner, where spiteful spring winds cannot assault and hurt the young, upshooting growths, and your Bamboos will grow as in Japan. ‘They are, indeed, damp-climate plants, and wild-garden plants, essentially ; impatient of control, and far too glorious to be broken in. Their charm is their high, imperious grace. Group them up some glen in majestic clumps, and you will have your reward. With me they thrive in garden and in wood, but in the heavier rainfall of the Lakes they develop tropically, and make great jungles in the misty, steaming Himalya climate at the northern end of Windermere. Above all, though, let no one think that by planting Bamboos in a dense, serried mass, and making little wobbling walks between them with blocks of white stone, you can produce anything in any way fit to be called a Japanese Garden. In the real Japanese garden the Bamboo hardly figures at all, if ever, its whole growth and character being so alien to the scheme required. And in no part of England, remember, will there be any difficulty or danger about cultivating the hardy Bamboos. They are as robust as brambles, and their only fault is their excessive vigour. Of course there are innumerable greenhouse kinds in China and the Tropics. Of these, naturally, I make no men- tion. Let us hope it is one of these that is the agent of a certain peculiarly appalling Chinese torture. RANUNCULACEAE 49 CHAPTER Dit Manunculaceae, Papaberaceae, Cruciferae I am tired, I declare, of waiting for my herbaceous Clematises to bloom. I had integrifolia and Fremonti from seed, under promise of splendours to come; yet though I have nursed them for years I have never seen a bloom. recta, though, and the larger heracleaefola are fine, handsome herbaceous plants, leafy and large, with abundance of flower-clusters, like masses of wee blue Hyacinths. As for the large climbing species of this notable race, they have no place in the rock-garden, unless you have a vast space to cover, and trees for them to make a jungle of. ‘This is just where both my gardens fall short, so that I have never, except in the ordinary garden, been able to use beautiful things like Clematis grata, Henryr, tangutica, Viticella, Jackmanni, and lanuginosa, all of which should make a foaming back- ground of white and gold and violet to the huge block- built rockery that slopes up to a brow of coppice or wood. However, if I lack Clematis, I have Atragene ; and Atragene is to all practical purposes indistinguish- able from Clematis. My plants of the American Atra- gene verticillata are yet but young ; the European Alpina, however, gives me more and more delight every year. It is a slight trailer, and I have found it, in seed, meandering among the bushes in the Maritime Alps, just below the level of the Primulas. In early summer it produces D 50 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS blue or lilac flowers, large, cross-shaped, but very like a Clematis, ‘This dear little creeper has a splendid Albino form; and both thrive easily on any sunny rockery (1 daresay they would thrive in shade quite as well) in any cool, sound loam. On the heels of Clematis must come Anemonopsis—in flower so like Atragene, yet so different in every other way. Anemonopsis macrophylla is a singularly beautiful Japanese herbaceous perennial, throwing up great, hand- some leaves, recalling those of a Cimicifuga, though the whole plant is juicier and less tough. The flowers are carried on tall, graceful stems, and are vaguely reminiscent at once of Anemone and of Clematis—large, pale-purple and white. Anemonopsis has a bad reputation, I gather, in gardens, and I have suffered many things at his hands ever since I saw him years ago, blooming gloriously at Edge, and resolved that happen what might, I must and would possess him in health. Many failures, however, at last disgusted me, and when a final stock came to hand I said I couldn’t be bothered to make any more beds or fussments for such an ungrateful creature. He must go out with other herbaceous stuff, to shift for himself in a rich border of peaty loam fattened with manure. I confess I thought that Anemonopsis would be much annoyed, and sulk even worse than he had been in the habit of sulking when care had been bestowed on him. With the amazing contradictiousness of plants, however, that Anemonopsis has simply taken possession of his strip, and throws up tall sturdy shoots after the wildest winters. He is a deep-rooter, and evidently will take kindly to deep, nourishing soil. And, this granted, he seems to ask for neither protection nor care of any kind. (Latest news: this tale is much too rosy.) As for the Christmas Roses, I don’t think I need tell my experience of them. ‘They are splendid people— RANUNCULACEAE 51 always thrilling, even if they are not beautiful—and all they want is rich soil and to be left alone. Nothing beats the snowy niger—such a preposterous paradox of a name! But the bluish torguatus is attractive, indeed, and so are the purple olympicus, the rose-red orientalis, with its many varieties, the bright purple colchicus, the native foctidus, like a fountain of pale-green foam, and, I imagine—for I have never succeeded in getting it— that marvellous plant, the true dividus, from Corsica, which sounds like an enormous foetidus—a column of spouting green spray. Luteus I have never had, and my collection is not at all complete, worse luck ; but those I do have give me a great wish to make it so, if ever I got time to specialise on more than twenty specialities at once! The Adonises are very much praised as a rule. There are three or four yellow Alpine species — wolgensis, pyrenaca, vernalis, amurensis. ‘These are so alike to the casual eye as to need little differentiation. They all have very finely divided leaves, like green clouds, and large yellow flowers. But the yellow is always spoiled, for me, by a certain acridity of tone. It is just tainted with green, and has a bitter, thin, unpleasant shade. I have never been able to like any Adonis, I am sorry to say, except amurensis as one saw it used in the Japanese toy-gardens. These toy-gardens are a landscape in a pan a foot across—some range of hills, or river-bed, or promontory by the sea. ‘Tiny, tiny plum-trees stand on the margin, aglow with blossom, beside some ancient water-worn boulder, and there are generally two or three wee golden buds of Adonis amurensis coming out ‘of the ground like a dumpy little Aconite—just small globes of gold, nothing more. In this stage it is a treasure, but it loses all attraction for me as it grows large and coarse, even as a slum-cat is delightful in the kitten- stage, but erelong develops the full unattractiveness 52 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS of maturity. ‘The Adonises are quite easy to cultivate, but I rather hope, by now, that I have lost or parted with all mine. Paeonia and Delphinium, those very gorgeous persons, are not, of course, suited to the small rock-garden. But hard indeed must be the heart that can exclude them. The species of Delphinium that I have grown are dictyo- carpum, scopulorum, and tatsienense. Of these tatsien- ense is so immeasurably the best, that I shall let the others go without replacing them. Tatstenense grows anywhere in the sun, is about a foot or eighteen inches high, and produces clouds of bright blue flowers on graceful branching stems. I have also wrestled with cardinale and nudicaule, the two scarlet species. The sun-loving, delicate Californian mwdicaule has been an utter failure here. Cardinale, also a Californian, seems a better plant, but I cannot really do it justice until I have given a good trial to the stout little seedlings that I now have ready to go out. Of better-known species, I will only say that the tall Hybrids are glorious for high places on the rock-work, and that the dwarf, Delphinium grandiflorum, has the largest flowers and the most brilliantly splendid blue. The old Belladonna, too, is among the best, small enough for the rock-garden, bearing loose spires of big blossoms, tender in their Cambridge blue as the sky of early morning. This delight thrives anywhere, but very rarely seeds. There is also a white form of grandiflorum and an exquisite gentian-, or pale sky-coloured form, as there is also of its twin, cashmerianum grandiflorum. And all are perfectly easy to grow. Paconia wittmaniana is a rarity, a herbaceous species with big sulphur-yellow flowers, which, like all the 1 They throve robustly, and sent up stalwart spikes. And then the slugs came and ate every one of them clean down to the ground. RANUNCULACEAE 53 Paeonies, only wants rich soil and neglect. Witt- maniana, however, differs from the others in sometimes dying off imexplicably. Whitleyt major is the loveliest herbaceous plant I know, as Moutan is the finest—well, shrub, one must call it. Of course I mean the single Whit- leyi; the double is beautiful, but of no account in the rock-garden. The single Whitleyi has flowers like a huge water-lily of pure white silk, and the heart of it is a tassel of fine gold. No one ever imagined a lovelier thine. As for the wild red Paeonies, I do not think very many of them are worth troubling about. ‘There are so many single hybrids now; I have just established, in their second year, a big batch of single herbaceous Paeonies from Japan, and I expect to see marvels this year. The species, lobata, Russi, peregrina, officinalis corallina (who lives on the Steep Holmes Islet in the Severn Sea, among the rocks, but basely suspected by some of being an alien) tend to be leafy in growth, small in flower, and with a tiresome shade of lilac or magenta in their reds. You have to be careful about this always in buying Paeonies. Only buy by sight, if possible. Far different is it with the white species. ‘The Japanese obovata, whose pearl-white goblets I remember above Shoji, is a jewel quite outside any condemnation; as are albiflora and edulis and the precious /modi; while there is even a certain rare variety of the magenta lobata called ‘Sun- beam,’ which has flowers of a splendid luminous scarlet. As for the Yellow Tree-Paeony—Paeonia lutea—well, I am waiting till that drops a little in price. Besides, though thrillingly exciting, I don’t gather that lutea compares in beauty with Moutan or albiflora. Its flower seems rather small for the leaf, and recalls to me a bloom of Nuphar advena stuck fraudulently on a Paeony-plant. As for culture, all the species are alike: give them deep soil, a more or less shady place, and let them alone. 54 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Close cousins to Anemone are the Thalictrums, of which our limestone fells abound with one, mins, in foliage hardly less graceful than the better-known adiantifolium, and gracious, in June, with tall, airy showers of yellowish tiny tassels. You will see it waving from the inaccessible cliffs of Sulber and Gordale; nor does it offer any sort of difficulty to the gardener. Our other interesting native (/lavwm is rather a coarse, gawky thing) is microscopic Thalictrum alpinum from Upper Teesdale, a wee, delicate, inconspicuous high-alpine which you may cultivate carefully in a select peaty corner. Anemonoeides is a real beauty, with big Anemone-like white flowers, which, I don’t know why, has never yet done much with me. It has a good reputation, too; perhaps the fault is mine for having only tried it in the Old Garden. Some day I will attempt it again in the new one. Light soil, well drained, in a sheltered choice corner, is recommended for this. Of the larger sorts I have a great love for petaloidewm (and hope great things of polygamum and foliolosum and chelidoniifolium, re- ported splendid). Petaloidewm has beautiful glaucous grey leaves, which unfold at first rather like those of Ranunculus rutaefolius, and then, on stems about a foot high or more, heads of large cream-white flowers, rather like those of the Traveller's Joy on a lessened scale. This plant likes any border soil. But the most gener- ally valuable for large-scale gardening is unquestionably Thalictrum aquilegifolium. So splendid is this, and alto- gether admirable, that I cannot restrain my enthusiasm for it until I come to the greater bog-plants. One finds T'. aquilegifolium in damp alpine meadows all Switzerland over, and in cultivation it takes very kindly indeed to any cool deep loam, forming, in time,enormous clumps that need no care. ‘The leaves are very large, pale green, magnifi- cent as so many broad spreading plumes of a magnified PAPAVERACEAE 55 Adiantum farleyense ; the flower-stems reach to five feet or more at their best, and carry far on down the season a wide foaming mass of white blossom, which, in one form, is pale purple. No plant is handsomer for the big bog- garden, or the cool border. Delavayi is a novelty, and a little uncertain so far. It seems everything that it should be, and in growth is like a dense robust minus, with leaves of a metallic bronzy grey. The abundant flowers are of a very pretty, soft mauve, and large enough to make quite a feature. Isopyrum thalictroeides is a wee cousin of the Thalic- trums, very close to them, and of perfectly easy cultivation in light loose soil, rather poor than rich. The plant is quite small and graceful, with the fine, dainty greyish- green leaves of its kind, and three or four charming little white flowers carried on short foot-stalks, very early in the season. It is a Swiss plant, but not, I fancy, very common. I have never seen it wild, and believe it to be rare—at all events in Western Switzerland and the Ober- land. This, I think, covers nearly all the Ranunculacez that are valuable in the rock-garden. ‘The little false Aconite of early spring is too common, and the big true Aconites too large and too wicked to find any place in the rock- garden. One need not look twice at any Monkshood to see that he is an evil, poisonous person. So away with them all, unless you admit the beautiful white Levantine album, or the new twining volubile. Sanguinaria canadensis, with its variety called major, is so like a cousin of the Buttercups and Anemones that he must certainly come next. He occupies a certain peaty bed in the Old Garden underneath my big bushes of Magnolia Kobus and Magnolia Watsoni. "The Canadian Bloodroot is so called because he bleeds. When you dig up his fleshy tubers they ooze gore in a most unpleasant 56 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANT'S way. And their bleeding is a symptom of annoyance too, for Sanguinaria hates being moved and cut about and worried. Give him a quiet corner under some deciduous tree, and he will increase perpetually and multiply, send- ing up early in April his pretty rounded leaves, veined, and glaucous grey (they are, I do believe, the prettiest of all leaves in nature; like a vine’s, but rounder, more regular, and smooth), and then, even before they are unfolded, expanding his large snowy flowers, like nothing so much: as a pure white Celandine on a stalk about six or eight inches high. Of the other Poppyworts I have little experience. ‘The Big Celandine is a weed in the upper valley of my Old Garden; and the Jeffersonias, Stylophorums, and Chelidoniums, or whatever you like to call them, have never hitherto appealed to me very strongly, though I weakened towards Stylophorum japonicum when I saw him blooming abundantly with Anemone trifola in the mountain copses on the way up from Nikko to Nantai- San. But even Stylophorum japonicum is, after all, only a glorified Chelidonium majus, brilliant in flower, but rather plebeian in growth. As for that common Japanese weed, the gigantic plume-Poppy Bocconia cordata—well, it is a weed here, too—and, for all its stately splendour, I regret ever having admitted it, or any of its kind. But the essential glory of the Poppy family is Meco- nopsis, a race scattered most of the world over, but con- centrating its efforts in the Himalya. Our own country has one, though, the delightful little Welsh Poppy, which no one can be stern enough to keep out of the rock-garden, although he knows how soon he will deplore his laxity. For the Welsh Poppy is a dreadful weed ; but then he is so very fascinating, and when the worst comes to the worst, he is an easy plant to cope with. You can grub him up fairly easily ; and, however thick your PAPAVERACEAE 57 jungle of Meconopsis cambrica, it never gives you the heart-breaking trouble of one single runner of Gout-weed or Pig-nut—may their names for ever be accursed ! Meconopsis cambrica has a soft orange-coloured form, too, whose colour is singularly rare and beautiful; and, be- sides, he stands among the few Alpine plants possessing an indispensable double variety. I detest doubles as a rule, but in candour I must own that the double yellow Welsh Poppy is a fine thing; as for the double fire- coloured form, well, there is nothing to beat the ferocious splendour of it anywhere in the garden, loose puffs of flower, shading from clear yellow to the most furious ver- milion orange, that is Meconopsis cambrica aurantiaca plena, a plant so splendid as to make it worth every one’s while to learn his truly awe-inspiring list of names. And, add to all this, that these varieties of the Welsh Poppy seed—at least here—abundantly, come almost always faithful to their parents, and thrive no whit less hilariously than the common ancestor, except, indeed, that they make stouter bushes, and blossom in far greater profusion, their blooms continuing right through the summer, with a second burst in autumn. Meconopsis aculeata is the good wine that needs no bush to those that have seen him at Kew. I doubt if anything more beautiful exists anywhere, or can exist. The leaves are handsome, cordate, more or less five-lobed, brownish with hairs, and long prickle-like bristles. ‘The flowers are carried in a pyramid, perhaps a foot high, and are large, more or less nodding, and, at the best, of an iridescent blue-violet, glistening like silk. ‘The plant is a North-West Indian, and all these Himdélyan and mountain species are rather bad customers to tackle. It is said that they inhabit the mist-zone of the ranges, and therefore enjoy conditions extraordinarily difficult to reproduce in England. 58 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Angustifolia, simplicifolia, bella, grandis, racemosa, horridula, integrifolia, punicea, compose a grand total of beauty very hard to beat, and also, I fear, rather hard to enjoy. Very quick drainage, good deep, deep compost,— rough, peaty, gritty, sandy, yet rich,—with an exposure neither bleak nor overshadowed, make up my prescription for these gorgeous exotic Poppies. Thriving in such conditions I have young plants of racemosa (which thrives anyhow, in ordinary soil), aculeata, grandis, simplicifolia, and integrifolha. Of course, I dare not claim success until they have flowered. And then, I greatly fear me, they will probably die. For these plants are generally biennials, or, at least, have a tendency to be monocarpous, that is, to die as soon as they have safely flowered and set seed. Nor is seed, as a rule, very certain to fill and be fruitful; nor, even so, is it particularly easy to raise and rear. The easiest to deal with, pro- bably, is integrifolia, whose enormous lemon-coloured globes have made the sensation of the Temple Show for two years past. Punicea, to my. taste, though not to most people’s, is even more attractive, with its pendulous, great ragged-looking blooms of a deep, obscure scarlet. It is more possibly perennial than integrifolia, which is frankly monocarpous, but seeds very fairly well. As for simplicifolia—there, indeed, is all my hope stored. It is said to be the counterpart of integrifolia, but with flowers of a soft, clear blue. Ask what our {xpedition thought of it when first they sighted Holy Lhasa and the Golden Mountain of the Potala, with the clear blue of heaven above, and the clear blue of Meco- nopsis simplicifola filling all the foreground. My young plants seem strong in growth, and are now in bud, but what frightens me is the uncertain colouring of these blue Poppies. JWadllichii, besides its azure glories, pro- duces seedlings of every dull shade of brown and mauve ; PAPAVERACEAE 59 the same holds good of bella, aculeata, simplicifolia, and probably of all. Horridula and racemosa are supposed forms of one plant, and rumour threatens that their big purple flowers also fluctuate to dowdy lilacs. Grandis is only a promise, so far; it looks mighty fine and stalwart; Heaven send its beauty be in proportion to its vigour! But sad experience teaches gardeners that vigour, in a new plant, or fertility of germination in seed, spells ugliness—things that are really worshipful are too apt to be slow to springing and faint in growth. And it will be well to mention here that Meconopsis petiolata is declared a synonymof Stylophorum diphyllum by Nicholson, while Meconopsis heterophylla is a tall Californian annual with very pretty orange-tawny flowers, black-spotted at their base, that smell like Lily of the Valley. Meconopsis nepalensis is a biennial or monocarpous species, carrying very tall spikes of nodding pale yellow flowers high above lovely great fluffy rosettes. It is among the less uncom- mon species, and has never taken my affection captive, probably because it is so like, but so inferior to, its superb cousin Meconopsis Wallichvi, the best known of all the exotic species. Meconopsis Wallichit carries spikes similar in foliage, growth, and size to those of nepalensis, but the flowers are, or ought to be, of a pale, bright, silky blue. I say ‘ought to be,’ for the colour varies dreadfully, and seedlings of one batch will yield, as I have said, besides the celestial tones, most horrid lilacs, brownish purples, faded or dingy shades unworthy of admittance to the garden. At Kew, in the peaty bog- pits, Wallich’s Poppy makes a gorgeous show, but here, of course, no such wet treatment is necessary; any cool peaty corner, in sun or shade, does equally well. Having flowered, the plant dies, and there is, first of all, the anxiety of ascertaining whether it has set any sound seed ; then the trouble of raising it; then the long waiting 60 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS period before you see whether your batch has borne you good, pure colours or no. But no trouble is too great to be taken with a Meconopsis. And at this point, with however little regard for proper order, I am going to talk of a genuine Poppy, which is in aspect exactly like a Meconopsis. Papaver tauricola is a very handsome Levantine, whose proper place is here, rather than with his closer kin, whose name he shares. He is incredibly like Meconopsis Wallichit in habit, and bears a tall fountain of orange-salmon flowers, no less beautiful than remarkable. I fear he is mono- carpous, but he is certainly hardy, for he has sailed through the winter on a perfectly unprotected piece of the rock-work, and is now making broader rosettes than ever, and freely emitting lateral growths, which encourage a faint, foolish hope that he may be perennial. Cathcartia villosa is a humble, but near cousin of Meconopsis, with very silky vine-shaped leaves and large golden flowers. It only grows about a foot high, and has most unexpectedly, I confess, proved its hardiness by surviving the winter as heartily as any native. One gets into the way of expecting Sikkim-Himalyan things to be capricious and miffy. The other Cathcartia, lyrata, I have never grown, my seed always having proved sterile. Of the Fumitories, I cannot help loving our native or naturalised weed, Corydalis lutea, with its dainty maiden- hair-like leaves, and its persistent, cheerful, yellow flowers. The Yellow Fumitory runs about old walls in England, and is quite delightful somewhere at the base of the rock- work, confined to a nook and well out of the way of doing harm. For, of course, it is an intrusive pest if you give it any room near choice things. Its cream-white variety seems rather rare, and is very attractive indeed. Corydalis solida I grow, but not with enthusiasm, on CRUCIFERAE 61 either hand; the prettiest Fumitory I ever saw in my life still dwells among the dead leaves round a Korean monastery high on a hillside, buried in forests (the only forests now left in Korea, for the pious monks have respected what the foolish peasants have everywhere else destroyed). Does any reader know this Corydalis, I wonder? In early March it gleamed here and there amid the fallen leaves—the daintiest little flower, with fairy-like, frail foliage, and a few rather large blossoms of a delicious violet. It has a small bulbous root, but all my efforts to bring it back into cultivation proved vain. The vast Natural Order of the Cross-bearers evidently thinks that in providing us with all our important vege- tables it has done quite enough for humanity. For few other Natural Orders are horticulturally so barren of charm; among the Cruciferae that one can use in the rock-garden—or, for that matter, in any other flower- garden either—there are astonishingly few of any great merit (such as Aubrietia, Aethionema, and Ionopsidion), and but few of any merit at all. The race is, generally speaking, an open-ground one, found most abundantly in the Old World, and such Cross-bearers as we like to use are generally quite easy of culture. The greatest and most important group is that of the Aubrietias, plants of the very first rank for any sunny, light, and not too choice corner of the garden. I have them all over the place as edgings to the stone-work, where they look lovely in their time—so many cushions or torrents of rose, carmine, or violet. By now the species have been swamped with garden-raised varieties, and these, in turn, occur perpetually in almost every batch of seedlings, so that every one will do well to buy packets of some good Aubrietia-seed and select their strain. Moerhewmi is an especial pet of my own, and ve have one called Craven Gem, which has the great merit 62 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS of carrying its fine purple spikes long after all the other Aubrietias are over. As for Fire King, Dr. Mules, Pritchard’s Al, Purple Robe, and the many other named forms, they are glorious in colour, but not invariably nor everywhere, quite so robust in character as the types, I think ; or, perhaps, it is that some of them have a rather lax, straggling habit. Speaking generally, the Aubrie- tias will bear anything in the way of culture except shade and excessive moisture. The Arabises, I must frankly confess, I almost detest. ‘To me they seem rank, coarse, evil-smelling, obstreperous creatures. I am now describing Arabis albida and its varieties, but no Arabis, think I, has any great beauty. No form of albida, not even the double one, is really admissible to any small rock-garden; and, even in a large one, there are so many better things to fill rough corners with, that there is no need to waste space on an Arabis. The Alpine tufted species are less tiresome, only because less rampageous. Sturit is an uninvited guest here, and is still welcome. He came in something else, and now has made himself quite at home, a neat- habited rosetty thing, with heads of white blossom. Arabis lucida variegata is useful too, with shiny rosettes very neatly variegated with yellow. And I also grow a pretty creature whose name is usually made a battlefield, some people calling it Billiardierii rosea (the name I bought it under) and others aubrietioeides. 'This last name exactly describes it; it has erect spikes of big pale pink flowers like an Aubrietia, and also the same woolly leaves. It very much dislikes damp, and, on the whole, is miffy. As this is the case, why be bothered about growing what is, to all intents and purposes, a not con- spicuously beautiful Aubrictia, with a far worse constitu- tion than any Aubrictia ever raised ? Alyssum gives us the precious, little, honey-scented, “ANIVYOTY GIO YWHL NI VISUVO VOVUHIXVS GNV OTTINAd SOHINVIVYdGY ¢ = a Sk - s ‘oa rf. 7 4 : p »“ ar”, ’ = f ae ; ba or i ; ae ye * 2 P } . in "5 ees ot ¢ 1S i ila les Pl rag ‘ _—— ; th aU are Ft AIS > RPA " re t% ~_ i NO | ar ; 7 i? /& Se - _ : : i¢ - CRUCIFERAE 63 white-flowered native annual 4. maritimum, now called Koeniga. 'Then there are montanum and alpestre, plants of the Southern Alps, prostrate and more or less grey- leaved, with heads of blossom that have a certain acrid, mean tone in their yellows. They have double varieties which are fairly pretty. Alysswm gemonense is a seed- ling here, and proves the best of all in colour—a really pure, gentle yellow; Shivereckia podolica, otherwise known as Alyssum podolicum, is rather an uninteresting, white- flowered plant, and both species seem very fertile and robust. Alysswm savatile is a well-known plant, and really invaluable with its dense masses of grey foliage, quite hidden by the astonishing abundance of its yellow flowers. The variety citrinuwm is paler in colour and even more attractive. The double form and the varie- gated form move no emotion in me. My own favourite in the family is the rather rare and delicate little Alysswm tdaeum, the only one of its race I know that can be used, or deserves to be used, in any choice place on the rock- work. Jdaewm is a small, prostrate species, with tiny roundish leaves in pairs down its stem. And it is the leaves that make the plant so charming, for they are absolutely silver—not white exactly, not glaucous, but true silver. All the Alyssums, I believe, without excep- tion, are southerners, and all want dry light spots in full sun. heir only constitutional dislike is for excessive moisture. And this may be made a rule for all the Cross- bearers that one is ever likely to let into the garden. The Drabas have some reputation, and are generally advertised in rosy terms. I must be honest and own that I don’t really like any of them. ‘They are all neat- habited, true rock-plants, and no doubt very useful, but I can never feel any enthusiasm for them. ‘Their flowers are mean and ragged in shape, a dullish white, or sharp, bitter yellow. I grow aeizoetdes, scabra, and olympica 64 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS hetericoma. 'The other species all bear a very strong family resemblance to these, and none of them have any radiant loveliness, though I make one exception in favour of the rare dicranoeides, who has well-built, solid little flowers of a soft, pure yellow. He is thriving in the moraine, of which he is well worthy; and as for the others, their only need is a sunny crevice. The one species that does sound exciting is Draba violacea, a deep purple-flowered plant from the Quito Andes. There are a few other dwarf Crucifers of moderate merit. Hutchinsia alpina is a common, pretty little thing, which soon, if you are not careful, eats you out of house and home, by seeding itself everywhere. Not to mention that the plant itself runs about and ramps in a deceptively modest way, which conceals its depredations till too late, when you suddenly find a dying sprout of Androsace villosa gasping piteously at you out of a dense impracticable jungle of Hutchinsia. But the invader is such a pleasant-looking, hearty thing that I never have the heart to wage internecine war upon him. I have not admitted him to the New Garden, though. Cochlearia alpina is a dwarf plant, with glossy, heart- shaped leaves in a neat rosette, and white flowers, which occurs rarely in England, at high elevations, and haunts the western face of Ingleborough. It is fairly pretty for the garden, but tends to grow rank, and revert to its type. Parrya Menziesii, from the Rockies, I have only just got. It is a near cousin of Awbrietia, with purple lowers, that promises to be charming. M€egacarpaea polyandra is a rare, tall plant, of which I have one stout seedling who is now reappearing for the second season. I don’t know what he will be like, except that he is bound to be robustious and big. Heaven send he bear no resemblance to my pet dislikes—the Honesties and single Rockets ! CRUCIFERAE 65 Iberis is another important race of Crucifers—some of them dwarf, and all, to my mind, spoilt by the tone of their whites, which are either dingy or very hard. Jberis correaefolia and Iberis Snowflake are far and away the best for general purposes, and their flowers are clean and pure, though rather cold in tone. Correaefolia is a huge, obtrusive grower, but Snowflake and pinnatu, another good plant, make dignified, pleasant little bushes about a foot high, flowering with splendid generosity. Jberis jucunda is a synonym of Aethionema coridifolium, which leaves Iberis petraea alone to represent the rock-section of Iberis. Petraea is a very dwarf plant, trailing little dark boughs along the ground, and bearing a profusion of white flowers not as brilliant, alas! as some, though extremely pretty. Nicholson gives it as a form of [beris tenoreana from South Europe. It is a true high- Alpine—minute, neat, and supposed to be rather difficult by some people. I have never had any sort of bother with it here, nor, beyond a corner to itself and decent soil to grow in, have I ever given it any attention or coddling. Of the larger sorts, I think one called Little Gem is the best—even neater than Snowflake—forming robust round balls which, in their time, are literally hidden by the abundance of blossom. Tenoreana, sem- pervirens, and gibraltarica are none of them trustworthy in my climate. The Aethionemas are certainly the most brilliant of the Cross-bearers after Aubrietia. 'They are southerners, coming, for the most part, from the Alps along the Mediterranean, where they drop out of sun-baked ledges in a profusion of rich colour. For,-almost alone of their race, they have flowers in varying warm shades of pink ; whereas the utmost that the generality of Crucifers can do in the way of effect is pale purple, their attempts at red tones being apt to turn out rather weak lilacs and E 66 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS magentas. But the Aethionemas are really bright and lovely in their flowers, while their leaves are, for the most part, of a glaucous blue, which makes a dainty con- trast. Their habit is that of wiry, rather untidy little flopping bushes, carrying goodly spikes of bloom along the end of every twig. A strong generic likeness holds them all together, and their requirements are all the same, although there are now many recognised and a few unrecognised species. I grow Aethionemas under the following names :— grandiflorum, coridifolium, thomasianum (a rare annual, quaint, but not very pretty) diastrophis, creticum, ar- menum, iberideum, and persicum. Grandiflorum is far and away the best of the bigger species, and armenum, I think, of the smaller. As for jucundum, that also I seem to be growing well, and so far, in spite of Nicholson, it looks a different thing from coridifolium (if, indeed, Aethionema jucundum be not yet another synonym for Iberis jucunda, which is declared identical with Aethionema coridifolium!) But, as a matter of fact, there isa great deal of confusion among the Aethionemas, and nurserymen are far too careless about the naming of the stuff they send out. Against the whole race must be set the disadvantage that their hardiness is not absolutely above suspicion. A cold winter will not do them much harm, but a wet one kills them dead with me, unless they are planted high up on an exposed point, with very quick, perfect drainage. Grandiflorum, I think, is the only species which I can pronounce perfectly faithful and trustworthy. Damp winters have at one time or another forced me to replace all the others; and last winter killed me off armenum, which I loved. It made a little furry-looking grey bush, out of a cranny; and I thought it was safe. But no, the winds blew and the rain came down, and Aethionema armenum departed from such a soaking world. All the CRUCIFERAE 67 species, then, want a dry, hot crevice—at least in such a climate as mine—and are supposed to have a love of limestone, though I have never found them exacting as to soil. And if they grow too straggly, or have dead- looking boughs, the whole plant should be snipped hard back, like a Box, and then it will make a neat mass again. The Wall-flowers have given me a great deal of dis- appointment. Hrysimum pachycarpum I liked, and its deep orange flowers rejoiced me. But then it turned out either miffy or biennial or both, so that I think I no longer possess it. Ochrolewcwm—whose synonyms are lanceolatum and Cheiranthus —I got seed of, which germinated so freely that now it is the burden of my life. It makes a good border-edging plant, with hard cutting, as it forms neat lumps of a bright darkling green, with thousands of fragrant large lemon-yellow flowers. But it is too rank for the choice rock-garden. Then, fired by a most wonderful coppery-orange illustra- tion, I imported Erysimum comatum from Servia at vast expense. The habit of the plants, very long, narrow leaves in a fine rosette, is lovely, but those flowers that should have been so brilliant, turned out ragged in shape and substance, and of a pale quite uninteresting citron yellow. However, the plant is as robust as such undesir- able aliens frequently are. Of the dwarfs Erysimum pumilum and Erysimum petrowskianum, I have a better tale: they are very wee, delicate, and pretty, well worth a little extra trouble in the way of a choice corner. Purpureum, too, is a real gem to do with—quite small, with large flowers of a soft, sad purple, attractive and effective. As for T'chihatchewia isatidea, which Mr. Robin- son’s (or M. Leichtlin’s) flaming tale sent all the world in quest of, I greatly fear he praised it prematurely: it proves a shocking miff and mimp, querulous, monocarpous, and no prettier than Jberidella. 68 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS CHAPTER IV A Collecting Day abobe Arolla Ir is always with asense of approaching the most boundless botanical possibilities that one penetrates into the moun- tain valleys southward of the Rhone. For there, high in each secluded glen, dwell species that scorn the crowded slopes of the Oberland. In the Saasthal, in the upper- most screes, lives Campanula excisa; in the ‘Turtmann Thal Linnaea borealis meanders through the mosses of the woodland; in the Val de Bagne Saxifraga diapensioeides huddles passionately into the inexorable sun-baked preci- pices of the Pierre a Voir. And with these specialities grow also all the commoner glories of the Alps, so that, for one ambitious to collect in the hills, and unable to go so far afield as the Tyrol, the mountains of North Italy, St. Martin Vesubie, or that gardener’s Eden the Col de Lautaret, no more profitable advice can be given than that they should put money in their purse and fare hope- ful forth to Saas-Fée, Meiden, or Arolla. At Arolla, indeed, I had my first experience of these tributary valleys of the Rhone. For the wanderer’s guidance I may mention that opposite each notch in the vast mountains overhead that wall in the bed of the Rhone three thousand feet and more beneath, there sits in the flat lands over which the great river flows, a little town, with a station on the railway. Thus, immeasurably far above the tiny hamlet of ‘Turtmann hangs the opening A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA 69 of the ‘Turtmann Thal, and Sion, Sierre, Martigny, each corresponds with the gap that opens up towards the terrific snows above. By false guidance, however, I alighted one steaming afternoon at the wrong station, and had two hours to wait before a train would take me back to Sierre, whence, it appeared, you climb dizzily up the rampart of the mountains until you come into the Val d’Hermance, and so, past Evolena, to Arolla. Few situations of life can possibly be more overpower- ing than the valley of the Rhone on a hot afternoon in July. It is so very large, so very flat, so very hot—and, above all, it is so straitly bounded, in front and behind, by so crushing, so annihilating a wall of mountains, which in their turn—oh horror!—are divined, even from the depths, not to be themselves the pinnacles of the world’s roof that they appear, but mere subordinate pedestals to the real snow region above, whose awful teeth appear here and there as one raises one’s eyes to the distances overhead. The first part of the journey from Sierre, however, is made luxuriously by carriage, and it is wonderful in what serene majesty the mountains open up before one as one goes, no longer made terrific by personal fatigue. For, in a carriage, somehow, one loses that appalling sense of utter personal insignificance, minuteness, nonentity, that always paralyses me when first I set my lonely feet on the austere territory of the hills. In a carriage—and a carriage for which one has to pay—one feels once more in comfortable relations with the world into which one has been born and bred, the world of amenities, humanities, personal importance, where one’s mortal personality has its place, and where the gaunt enormous hills are not actors in a fearful superhuman drama, but a mere painted mise en scene, a pleasing background to the human comedy. In long loops, curling and curling upon each other like the rings of a vast python, the white road mounts 70 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS over pleasant slopes of shelving vineyard, orchard, corn- strip, towards the upper valley. Here and there amid the golden stubble gleams the profound velvety sapphire of Delphinium Ajacis, a rare cornfield weed in England, parent of our multicoloured, lovely annual Larkspurs, and one of the consecrated plants which have their name from sad memories of strength and beauty vanished long ago, for whose disappearance the tears of earth are shed eternally—for Aias, for Adonis, for Hyacinth. Sheer below us, far below, lies the valley of the Rhone—the broad river looking ridiculous and undignified in such a bird’s-eye view, with its worm-like wanderings, the mapped spaces of its meadows, its fringe of toy poplars, its punctua- tion of little toy villages, each with a toy church perking in the midst. Away to the left and passing out of sight, the depths are blocked by the fairy palaces and temples of Sion on its crags; and as one mounts higher, so does the opposite barrier of mountains grow every minute more high and wide and awful, broadening and swelling at each step, as the eye, dazed by their prodigious mass, follows the line of their development till it ceases in the snowy spires away towards the St. Gothard. And from this height one feels the double influence of the two colour schemes that fill the Alps. Far away below, the valley of the Rhone lies dreaming in gold and golden green, a soft territory of sleep, with the sleepy blue thread of the river running through. Everywhere as one looks down, there is green and the kindred tones of green, while the depths of the air themselves are swim- ming with a dust of infinitesimal gold in the sunlight. And then above, abruptly, begins the dominance of blue. Long slopes of pale cobalt, soft indigo falls of forest, then the high naked sweep of sapphire, fading into distance after distance of serrated colour, far up against the gentle azure of the sky, across which, in the rosy haze, huge A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA 71 curling ranges of cloud go soaring in shades of coral, ochre, amber. Here and there in front of their denser volumes, the pinnacles of the mountains are violet, scarred on this side and that with the rich white of distant snow, while the peaks round the St. Gothard reverse the process and are all of warm, rosy ivory, set with irregular jewelled ridges of amethyst, against the faint pink and purple of the thunderous cloud-masses behind them, a score of miles away. And the whole prospect, beautiful beyond our poor mortal comprehension, is on so vast a scale of grandeur, so inhumanly immense, so contemptuous of such dear human details as roads, towns, railways, that every time one meets it at a turn in the loop one gasps anew with the shock, as under a sudden deluge of icy water. But at last the shoulder of the hill is turned, and we say farewell to the valley of the Rhone. Now the road continues directly up the Val d’Hermance—for we are here, by kindly fate, still in French-speaking Switzerland. To describe the vein-system of the Swiss waters one must adopt the most severely scientific terms. In fact the venation of the Swiss rivers is perfectly pinnatifid— at least, I trust, I am right, as well as impressive, in so explaining it. In milder words, the arrangement of valleys is as follows: there is, first of all (to put the cart before the horse, for the sake of clearness), a great and first-class river, such as the Reuss, the Aar, the Inn, the Rhone, flowing down a deep and broad valley that it has carved through the mountains. This valley lies quite low as regards sea-level, and is fed by contributory streams that come in at right angles from secondary valleys high up in the hills on either side. In their upper reaches it is the habit of these to flow along a fairly level course, and then to achieve their final descent into the main body by a series of crashing leaps that 12 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS disposes of the two or three thousand feet they may have to descend in about a quarter of a mile. A notable instance is the Reichenbach, which foams imperiously enough down from Rosenlaui, and then takes its leap to join the Aar in the most imposing of Swiss waterfalls. (For its rival, the Handegg, offers no such coup dil as the Reichenbach, slinking down in all its volume through the concealment of a cafion, with an unmanly coyness as indecent and grotesque as if Moses were to coquet behind a fan.) The Rhone and the Aar flow among cultivated lands and cornfields, their tributaries from above through the dense pine woods. But these tributaries, in turn draining the lower mountain-mass, are fed by yet other streamlets pouring down at right angles again from the open fell above—(and thus, roughly speaking, parallel with the big river five thousand feet below). And then again, these very streamlets from the upper barrens have carved glens for themselves between the topmost ridges, and are nourished by little filaments of water, trickling down from right and left from innumerable gullies and screes in the high snows. ‘Thus, from ever higher and higher, one stream is perpetually flowing at right angles into another, until you reach the last faint runnels that have been washing the feet of Ranunculus glacialis, or carrying vigour to the opening gaze of Eritrichium nanum. I hope I have sufficiently shown that the water system of the Alps is perfectly pinnatifid ? The drive up the Val d’Hermance is beautiful but without event. ‘There is only the one great thing to see at the end of the valley, far up beyond invisible Evolena. Now on one side goes the road over open lands and past sun-beaten banks aglow with the rare yellow Ononis. Then loom into sight a row of portents—enormous, big- hatted monsters aligned across the way. ‘These are the A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA 73 Pyramides d’Euseignes. Water, it seems, has in the interminable course of years eroded all this valley. But certain huge stone blocks have sheltered the light friable tufa on which they rested; with the result that each block stands up, like a gigantic toadstool, on a tapering twenty-foot spire. And here these fantastic mushrooms rise aloft securely on their stems, and bid fair to outlast the valley, and grow taller as its soil is washed away. Only man has ever been successful as their enemy. Some perverted mind once conceived the idea of using the pyramids for targets in gun-practice. Popular indignation, however, stopped the irreverence before much damage had been done. After Euseignes the road crosses to the other side of the valley, and mounts and mounts. At a dizzy depth below, by the foot of the precipice, the river brawls downwards over its rocky bed. ‘The roadway is a mere wrinkle on the face of the cliff. Overhead, as the air clears, hardens, deepens to the cold calm of sunset, the high snows begin to appear, chill and sombre above the last pines. But neither precipice, nor pyramids, nor yellow Ononis can hold one’s attention for long against the dominant presence of the Val d’Hermance. For one has not been bowling for long through the upper valley before one comes into sight of its reigning deity. Snow here, snow there, high overhead, is our right; we expect it. But snow is one thing, ordinary white teeth of mountain are one thing; the Dent Blanche is quite another. Away, away at the uttermost extremity of the valley the mountain-spire leaps into sight, and the un- relenting majesty of it is like the blast of trumpets. As I have already said, all these secondary streams flow from some big mother-peak, and these mountain glens end _ always in a pre-eminent height of snow. The Val d’Her- mance is formed like a Y, and while the right-hand 74 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS branch brings a stream down from Arolla and the Mont Collon, the left arm is called the Val d’Hérens, and descends immediately from the Dent Blanche. And at the junction of the Y stands Evolena, where the traveller may spend the night. It was on a blazing morning that I set out from Evolena for Arolla, up the steep valley to the right, upon whose bare slopes of grass a pitiless sun was beating. ‘There is nothing but a track after Evolena, so that one must either walk or jog it on a mule. Where, in the lower valleys, it is a question of tramping endlessly upwards through sweltering forests, I myself prefer the mule as the least unpleasant of unpleasant ways to achieve a necessary piece of drudgery. (This may sound irreverent. Remember that I speak as a gardener. Opulent as the pine-woods are, they give a gardener very little of interest. And no one will deny that they can be stuffy and hot to an infernal degree.) But from Evolena, standing so high as it does, only desultory fringes of woodland are to be feared on our upward way to Arolla. So that with an undaunted heart one can set out to walk the six miles or so that lie between the two. Very soon one has to say good-bye to the Dent Blanche, which passes out of sight as one diverges from the Val d’Hérens. And it is almost with relief that one escapes from that overpowering presence. All ranges and peaks seem to me to have a personal character of their own. Indeed, this is inevitable. Since all things organic and in- organic, all rocks and mountains and trees must ultimately become Buddha, perfect and unchanging, it follows that, of these enormous pilgrims in the road of salvation, some must be farther advanced on the way than others—that all must, in fact, have personalities of their own. And, far down in the scale as the rocks must be, the Dent Blanche is surely farther down than many of its rivals, A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA 175 ‘The Matterhorn, arrogant and terrible, has splendour and generosity ; the Wetterhorn is obviously good-tempered ; Mont Blanc and Mont Rose are two stout and cosy dowagers, Mrs. White and Mrs. Pink; even the Weiss- horn has in its beauty an energetic fury that suits well with a pilgrim on the Way—although that energy be sometimes turned to evil. And Fuji-yama is surely not so much mountain as Bodhisatta. Very near the close of its journey is Fuji-san, and no one could be surprised to discover, some morning, that it had faded out during the darkness, and passed away into the Peace, which is Nirvana. But about the Dent Blanche there is a cold and sluggish malice, unsleeping, unhasting, which owns no kindred with the stolid, fund-holding respectability of Mrs. White, the fierce nobleness of the Weisshorn, or the divine tran- quillity of Fuji-san. The Dent Blanche, as far as hills can have a heart, has an evil, unfriendly heart, which is very far indeed from learning that Love Catholic, which is the way of Release. The Dent Blanche, indeed, has beauty for its only merit, and therein lies its salva- tion. For it is unorthodox folly to say that handsome is as handsome does, and that plain faces can hide lovely souls. If the soul be lovely, the face must have its beauty too, by the law of inevitable consequence, that we call Karma, even though that beauty be rare, exotic, hard to see. And, on the other hand, nothing beautiful can ever be altogether evil, since beauty can only co-exist with inner loveliness, or the possibility of inner loveliness, no matter how remote, how deeply buried in vanity, malice, and frivolity. And therefore, in the enormous course of years, there is as sure an ultimate hope for the beautiful Dent Blanche as for any beautiful man or woman who has ever followed desire through selfishness and treachery. For in the very fact of outward beauty lies the promise of inward good. The seed is there, though many a load of 76 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS soil must be cleared away before the Great Light can penetrate its husk and ripen it to germination. Over the sun-trodden slopes of grass the mule-track mounts to Arolla. The scant, browned herbage wavers in the heat. Little lizards pant in ecstasy on the burning stones of the low wall that skirts the cobbled ascent. A hot fragrance of life and flowers throbs round one as one goes, and from each burning surface of rock rise on stiff, sticky stalks the rosy star-clusters of Sempervivum arach- noideum. Rosy I call them, and rosy they are in our pale air, but there, in that blaze, they are fire-red, glowing, incandescent. And their mats of round rosettes, too, are silver white with dense tomentum. In England we can rarely hope to see the bloom as brilliant, the little balls as snowy with down. The heat it is that achieves both miracles of beauty, and my climate, to speak for myself alone, has no friendly torridness for the Houseleeks. They live—oh yes, they live—and even thrive in a pallid way, but never do they attain the solid silver, the intense glow, that transfigured them on a sun-baked slope of Switzerland. My wet winters martyrise them, my uncertain summers perplex and bore them. On one rock, indeed, in the Old Garden, I had once tectorum, arach- noideum, and Laggeri thriving excellently. Then my manager and I read Clarke’s book on Alpines, put our heads together in a pious and humble spirit, and, as the author warmly enjoined, planted all our Sempervivums anew in a mixture of clay and cow-manure. With the result that they unanimously languished and expired. All the Sempervivums, in fact—and they are legion ; I might consume pages in analysing and noting the minute differences that make up the two hundred species or more that are cultivated—are sun-worshippers of the purest Zoroastrian zeal. Of them all, arvachnoideum, with its lovely variety transalpinum, is my favourite. Tectorum, A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA 177 our English Houseleek, is good and useful. Not far off are triste, Wulfeni, Reginae-Amaliae. Rubicundum is smaller than these last, rare, and very rich in colour, the whole rosette being deep ruby-claret. But of the larger species the finest, to my taste, is the rather uncommon Gaudini from the Southern Alps. ‘The rosettes of this are big, ball-like, clear green, and furry with innumerable small bristles. It sends out babies on long feelers, and carries a stout head of lemon yellow flowers like Catherine- wheels. Gaudini, too, thrives here far better than most of its kindred, and in more ordinary soil. Sempervivum calcaratum, if what I have is true, and not confused with calcareum, is magnificent in size and shape; and Laggeri is a charming wee thing, half the size of little arach- noideum, but otherwise similar, with the same downy white globes. For all these—at least in the rainy North —I advise as little soil as possible, some mere crevice in a rock with a pinch of earth, exposed to every ray of sun, and as little troubled by rains as you can manage. And if you wish to specialise on Sempervivum—and you could have no worthier subject—there are Houseleeks beyond number, as the sands of the sea, all more or less casuisti- cally differentiated from the species I have mentioned, which represent the typical beauties of the race,—dainty and delightful as is every other Sempervivum that has ever been glorified with a name to itself. The way grows hotter as it mounts, and there is no stick or twig of shelter. ‘The heat seems almost too much for all flowers except the Salamander-hearted Sempervivums, for the only other thing which the slopes above Evolena yielded me was a single, narrow, purple spike of Campanula spicata. But erelong the way leads on into a scattered woodland where Campanula pusilla runs riot over the sun-dappled stony slope between the rare trees. In light and shade it thrives equally, and 78 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS under the lee of every stone its little china blue-bells dance lightly on their almost invisible stems. It was here, just before the trees began to thicken, that I found the dainty silver-pale variety that I call puszlla pallida. Pallid is a word with evil connotation, and I am sorry I chose so dishonouring an epithet for so exquisite a colour as the silvery French-grey that you get in this form of Campanula pusilla. 'Then the path passes wholly into dense shade, and skirts a mossy boulder as large as a young church. After that it emerges and moves through endless vicissitudes—up and down, in and out of meadow and woodland, peaceful and pleasant to pursue. Some- where in these parts is to be found, so M. Correvon tells me, the very rare, tall yellow Valerian Huguwenimia tana- cetifolia, but alas! I never saw it, though it frequents damp, mossy corners where such rank splendours as Lactuca alpina are to be met with. The great excitement at this part of the ascent is one’s first sight of the Arolla Pine. About all waning, dying species, such as Savifraga florulenta, Liliwn Kramer, Campanula Allioni, there hangs a flavour of almost Stuart romance; but Pinus Cembra is the protagonist of nature’s tragedy in the Alps. Only in its young stages could the tree possibly be mistaken for anything else. As it grows older it develops a dense, club-like shape, which enables you easily to distinguish its dark, stout columns from several miles away, amid several thousands of its rival species. Pinus Cembra is probably a very ancient species. It is certainly very slow-growing, and, I believe, not in the front rank for fertility. In any case, it is being crowded out of the world by younger species. In the Valais it lingers, in Tyrol, and in Siberia. You first sight it when half-way up the path from Evolena to Arolla, in the Arolla valley, and after that it goes with you all the way to the glaciers at the foot of the Mont A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA ‘79 Collon, becoming the reigning tree as you get higher. ‘Though in the past it has suffered fearfully from the prodigal destructiveness of the peasants, movements are now on foot to establish plantations of Pinus Cembra in favoured places (at Bel-Alp, I fancy, among others), so that its approaching extinction may perhaps be retarded indefinitely. For the forester and landscape gardener Pinus Cembra has no value; for the rock-garden, on the other hand, its slow growth and its dense habit give it very high merit. Asa wind-break it acts admirably, and, for general use, ranks only second to the genuinely, permanently dwarf Pinus montana. Even at Arolla itself you do not escape entirely from the forests, which still linger above you to the right. But the way becomes more open as you advance, skirting shaggy slopes of long grass and summer flowers. Not here, though, can Campanula barbata be seen in such unexampled splendour as in the meadows above Meiden. There its Campaniles seem taller, its great, fringy bells larger, more numerous, more shaggy, more blue than anywhere else in the Alps. I have already praised this plant ; now, deliberately, I must say that my praise was altogether insufficient for its merits. Campanula barbata is one of the most perfectly lovable plants that lives. No other epithet is so apt. Other things are more flam- boyant, other things are more startling in their colours, but very few plants in the garden have the gay pleasant- ness of Campanula barbata, the serene, large-hearted charm. Last sight I had of it, I remember, was abloom with all its usual generosity in the depths of London, on a rock in the Physic-Garden at Chelsea. But if the way to Arolla is not famous for Campanula barbata, in revenge, the sunniest, driest slopes are ablaze with the coralline loveliness of evil-tempered Dianthus sylvestris, most ungrateful of plants. But, indeed, the 80 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Pinks are a difficult race; I am reminded, by my memories of Arolla, that certain seedling Pinks, of which I held out great hopes in My Rock-Garden, as due to bloom that year in unheard-of loveliness, turned out, after all, to be dull, fringy dowdies of a most vapid and milky descrip- tion. These came to me under such high titles as cinnamomeus and pruinosus. Only cinnabarmus failed to bloom, and so, most likely, to disappoint. The postponed disappointment, I already fear, is no less certain than the bloom. And so, past copse and meadow, the track leads on and on, until at last we come to the Mont Collon Hotel itself, sitting lonely at Arolla (which is only a name) above a marsh full of Savifraga aeizoeides. And in front of this there is nothing but the gaunt, promising desola- tion of stone stretching up to the feet of the Mont Collon, whose vast bulk closes in the grim little valley. To the right rises another big humped mountain, the Pigne d’Arolla, carrying a few sparse old specimens of Pinus Cembra on its rust-coloured screes. But the hotel stands on the fringe of the last woodland, and the other slope of the glen is clothed rather with copse and tangle of Pinus montana than with any more notable tree. High and high above all this stretches, against the blue, the saw-line of the mountain-ridge, so fiercely planned as to be hardly patient of any snow. Midway stands up the Aiguille de la Zé, a stark pinnacle like some gigantic saurian’s tooth, no less waspish and deadly than its hiss- ing mosquito-cry of a name. Standing there before the hotel, as darkness gently cools the air of the mountains, a gardener alone will understand perhaps how the heart of a gardener bounds to think that he has escaped the fertile, unprofitable land of meadow and forest, that he has come at last to the territory of great open spaces, of that illimitable, gorgeous desolation, which A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA 81 is the home of so much brilliant beauty, such enormous peace. The tutelary deity of the Arolla valley is Androsace wmbricata. And for the Androsace you needs must go very high up into open spaces to which the open space below the Mont Collon is a crowded jungle. Looking out across the acres of stone, grim evidence of altitude, that stretch before the hotel, it is hard to realise that only far and far above all this do you come into the real openness, the real freedom of heart and soul and eye. The upward way leads you first of all across the rocky wilderness, where little dwells but Sempervivum montanum, and then across the stream, along whose further bank it continues for some time a mild ascent, beneath the shadow of a precipice. Sempervivum montanum need not detain the searcher. It is a rather undistinguished little House- leek, with lopsided rosettes of pale green, and heads of sad murrey-coloured Catherine-wheels. So, unheeding the small fry of the mountains, one pursues one’s way upwards in the grateful shadow of the cliff. Campanula pusila is rampant everywhere, the immense violet bells of Campanula Scheuchzeri glitter imperially wherever water distils, on wet rocks Pinguicula lifts its purple Gloxinia- blooms above its flattened star of viscid, carnivorous leaves, and everywhere Saaifraga acizoén shows its stout little creamy spires. Only in the moraine garden shall we ever be able to achieve the full charm of Saxifraga aeizoon. On rock-work, in cleft and border, it has high value and charm indeed, but set it thickly on a slope built only of small limestone chips, and there, alone against that background of broken stone, so lovely in its innumerable lights and shades, its tones of lilac, white and grey, will you get the full effect of the Saxifrage, its tidy masses of blue and silver rosettes, the serried solid blooms in their rounded spikes on abundant, sturdy stems. u 82 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS I have already sufficiently lauded the easy temper of this group of Silver Saxifrages, but their pictorial effect is apt to be undervalued, owing, as I myself have too readily admitted, to the dull or greenish tones that some- times damage the brilliance of the flowers, as seen against the uncompromising background of English rock or Eng- lish soil. But at last I learned my lesson one day below the Laemmern Glacier on the Gemmi. From a lawn of purple Pansy, snow-white dazzling Ranunculus alpestris, and the amazing blues of Gentiana bavarica and Gentiana Favrati, I came suddenly, unexpectedly, on a high steep shoulder of broken limestone. ‘The whole surface of the ground was covered with white chips, and everywhere, over its expanse, rose crowded colonies of Sawxifraga acizoon, gently waving its sheaves between the gorgeous violet stars of Aster alpinus, while Biscutella laevigata made showers of pale gold at intervals, and the hot orange of Senecio Doronicum blazed here and there against the cool soft silver of its leaves. And to harmonise the whole there were frail, rare grasses, plumy, cloudy, that shivered amid the flowers. And there, in an instant, I learned the full decorative value of Saxifraga aeizoon. But here, on the way from Arolla to the Plan de Bertol, aeizoén is abundant enough on the stones. Sometimes the blooms are heavily peppered with crimson dots; sometimes they are almost pure in their white; sometimes dull and stodgy. And then, all at once, my companion—why should I conceal that this was M. Cor- revon himself ?—darts forward withacry. There, on a flat rock, thick-set with its ordinary kindred, shines before our eyes the long-sought yellow variety of Saai- fraga aeizoon! ‘Though not brilliant, this yellow—it is quite clear and soft and pure—is very easily distinguish- able among the duller tones around. In my rhapsodies over Eritrichiwm I have touched on LA BARBATA AND CAMPANULA PUSILLA. CAMPANU A COLLECTING DAY ABOVE AROLLA 83 the gardener’s joy of discovery. This has a quality which can belong to few other successful quests. For what can equal the delicious moments while one sits down in glory at the side of one’s discovery, and finds the moments far too holy and precious to be cut short by the premature introduction of the trowel upon the scene? The thing is there, for us to deal with at our reverent pleasure ; mean- while we must adore every detail of our find, lovingly touch the upturned petals, mark the growth, the health, the beauty, the whole delight of the plant, There is no hurry about precipitating the end. So there, on that flat rock overhanging the precipice, we loiter in worship of the yellow acizoén; then, when our satisfaction has been fully savoured, the trowel is introduced, cunningly and with piety, so as to remove only a little fraction of the clump—Anathema sempiternal on those who would rend away the whole, and leave the rock widowed of its chief pride! And this, again, is generously divided, that finder and companion may share alike. So we go happy onwards, secure in our knowledge that every rosette and rosettling of these Silver Saxifrages is safe to make a solid little plant by autumn. . Now the track, having passed the precipice, suddenly takes it into its head to mount. And mount it does, with fire and fury, in abrupt, violent zigzags, over a slope as steep as the side of a house, and surfaced with fine herbage, polished and slippery as glass. So quickly goes the climb towards the upper levels that gigantic Mont Collon, now close at hand to our right, seems to sink down beneath us as if through a trap-door. Up and up and up curls the track, still in the shadow of the hillside. The grass is starred with little plants of Stlene rupestris, and the dark sapphire globes of Phytewma pauciflorum. Here and there occurs the one-flowered form of Campanula barbata, which, so far I have never proved constant 84 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS in cultivation. Then, high above, solid rock, reddish, granitic, begins to loom overhead. 'The track reaches it. Now we are on the territory of os ey t - } 7 a’. : © 7 = - a J _ a v2 _ rd oanteg a ~ ae 2 ee eee eg | ov be ; at @ @ ; ¥ : > @ an e 2 i, oY Ya Merl . c 7 > Tey os. i es: ” - . Pa ° ee ——~*« es kits % iS nhs » i Ss - . ye - ~ a 7 + = °F 7 o) i 7 : U = = ¥ = ome « 4 od we 7 oy y = i q an Tia a a ‘ ft ® ; j “~. q - S 4 , - i. 4 - , e ou = eq 5 sy = 7 a + ! _ 4 A = COMPOSITAE Ear enough even for the higher wilder banks. I imported sericea with a great deal of excitement one year from the East, but it turned out a huge, silky-leaved, golden- flowered edition of the common Yarrow. But of Achillea the name is legion; learned catalogues are swelled out with columns of them. I have no inclination to specialise on this race, and I am sceptical as to the beauty or dis- tinctness of many of those recorded—however an Achillea- enthusiast, if any such there be, must go bravely on experimenting, in hopes to acquire unsuspected loveliness. So far as I know, all the Yarrows are easy to grow, though perhaps the glacial sorts may give trouble. Close to Achillea, and only a little more attractive, are the Alpine Camomiles. Anthemis aeizoon, I must heartily acknowledge, is a very beautiful plant indeed, with rosettes of silver-white-pinnate leaves, and abundance of pure, snowy Marguerites, large and brilliant. Biebersteine is an Oriental, rather coarser, with big yellow flowers, that everybody else seems to admire a great deal more than I can. This race, again, looms large in catalogues ; but I have never found an Anthemis to beat aetzoon, so perfectly easy and hardy that it is a pleasure to sit and look at its silver cushions. Pyrethrum is a race more famous in borders than in the rock-garden, but I have (or had, for the winter seems to have killed it), a Pyre- thrum densum, neat and pretty, with lovely silver-woolly- pinnate leaves and dull yellow flowers; while Pyrethrum transylvanicum is so new here that I can only commend its beautiful white foliage and pretty habit. Chamaemelon caucasicum is a ferny-leaved trailing little cousin of the Camomiles, with white Camomile flowers, not by any means particularly attractive or remarkable. Chrysogonum virginianum is a very free-growing dwarf plant, with abundance of golden yellow flowers, which I have never been able to help thinking rather mean in colour and 128 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS build. However it is an easy doer, and a favourite with many people, though it no longer finds a place on my rock-gardens. Amphiocarpus Neumeyeri is a strange hardy plant—and where I got it I do not know. Its attraction is the tuft of oval-pointed silver leaves ; the small flowers, when they come, are rather dowdy. The Antennarias are best represented by our own precious little native, Antennaria dioica—a creeping weed, but very valuable for a waste bank, with small hoary leaves and chaffy little heads of white or rose-pink like a wee everlasting. Of the Thistles, what gardener wants to be reminded ? ‘Infandum, regina, jubes renovare dolorem. I once, re- gardless of wisdom and warnings, had Carduus eriophorus, from seed collected on cliffs near Scarborough; but this giant of his race died out after flowering, and I have never replaced him, fearful lest a worse thing befall me. For, of the two alternatives, reproduction or extinction, the gardener will certainly be thankful for extinction where most of the Thistles are concerned. The one excep- tion is Onopordon bracteatum, who sins in the opposite direction. For Onopordon bracteatum—so beautiful that there is no need ever again to think of any other Ono- pordon, makes huge rosettes of crinkled spiny leaves, brilliant silver grey, with veins of pure silver. And when the vast candelabra of rather inferior purple flowers has been sent up and matured, the whole thing dies, and there are you, planté la, with the Onopordon to raise again from the very beginning from seed. However, for high, bold places on the rock-work, Onopordon is eminently worth the trouble; and his seed has, at least, the virtue of germinating freely. Carduncellus is a wee thing, like a small blue-purple Thistle, quite close to the ground, who is attractive in any barren place ; while Carlina acaulis is a very beautiful Alpine, which you will see in August and September, all ————“‘“‘;7TC;.!®!h!lt COMPOSITAE 129 over the sunny, dry pastures—its wide silver and white blossoms lying tight on their thorny rosettes, and looking like Water-lilies of silver tissue. In cultivation, however, the plant wants quite poor, miserable soil or else it gets coarse, developing a stem, and enlarging its leaves at the cost of its brilliancy. The variety acanthifolia I have always thought much less fine, for the same reason—that it is stalky, and not stemless. Our own Carlina vulgaris is near these two, but lacks the whiteness of blossom. The Saussureas look like little blue Thistles that have been packed up in cotton wool and got it inextricably twined among their flowers. They are not all distinct, but the one I grow as candicans is distinctly pretty. As for Cacalia and Brickelha, 1 mention them here merely as warnings. I bought them on the most flaring descrip- tions from America, and I can solemnly affirm that as far as my own taste goes, I do not think that even England pro- duces two more totally graceless, dingy, overgrown weeds than Cacalia tuberosa and Brickelia grandiflora—this last, especially, of a dowdy gawkiness beyond expression : and even more tragic is my tale of Myrrhiactis Wallichi, which I got seed of from the Himalya, and grew on ina perfect flutter of excitement, foreseeing promise of marvel- lous beauty, in its name—for surely nothing named for Wallich could be poor. Myrrhiactis prospered like a weed—whole framefuls of little pots. At last its in- numerable flower-stems swelled up and budded. ‘Then the flowers opened. They were like small groundsel-blossoms, with the outer rays entirely omitted. Myrrhiactis de- parted over the garden wall. The big blue Ball-Thistles are rather border- than rock-garden plants; however, I rejoice over Lchinops ruthenicus in a bold corner; and now am expecting even better things from my seedlings of the dwarfer-growing Echinops humilis. Another huge great plant is Sidphium I 130 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS terebinthinaceum. If any one is bold enough to order this, they will find it handsome, with very tall stems carrying big Helianthus-like flowers, while the leaves at the base of the plant are fine and effective. However, it is not a patch on a good Helianthus, I must confess. Of the Rudbeckias I don’t grow any more now—ever since I was irritated by Lepachys columnaris, which had futile, pale yellow daisies, with a silly sort of snout cocking up in the middle. The Mulgediums or Giant Lettuces are very splendid things though—to be admitted with caution into the garden. ‘The biggest and most robustious is Mulgedium Plumieri, which nothing can hold in bounds. He is a glorious wild-garden, or rough bank plant, de- vouring yards and yards each season, and covering them with big hairy leaves whose underside is rusty purple. Then, in August, up go the stout flower stems six or eight feet high, carrying heads of blossom like large violet Dandelions. My thianshanicum is similar, but bluer in flower, and much milder in growth, forming a nice, neat, glossy clump, that never seems to spread about or grow greedy. But the prettiest Mulgedium in my garden is Bourgaei, which makes one dense crown that gets denser and denser every season without any further spread. ‘The abundant flowers are smaller than those of Plumieri, and carried in long lax sheaves. Their colour is of a peculiarly delicate and beautiful rosy blue—very gentle and soft, yet quite pure and decided in tone. Prenanthes is a quaint thing, vaguely recalling a starved Mulgedium, but even more like an Oat which, by some strange miracle, has developed tiny violet flowers. This queer creature inhabits all the Swiss mountain woods, and neither my manager nor I profess any wild affection for it; however, it deserves my gratitude for the happy way in which it has taken possession of a very barren place under a Laurus Tinus in COMPOSITAE 131 the Old Garden—above whose glossy leaves its little purplish clouds come hovering indomitably each July. Adenostyles marks a doubt in my mind. I believe that the plant I got with great effort from shady rocks near Rosenlaui is not, as I had always thought, an Adenostyles, but really the true Mulgedium alpinum, a beautiful tall plant, with blue Dandelion flowers, of which Plumieri is an exaggerated variety. As for the genuine Adenostyles —the stout pink thing, with triangular leaves, white underneath, that you find in the high pastures of Switzer- land, is Adenostyles alpina—not a very interesting species, and one that I have never bothered to collect—while the only plant of the Dandelion group I have ever liked is the white form of the common Dandelion itself, which grows all over Tokio to the exclusion of the yellow type. Now I have seed of this, and hope it may prove true. Of the Centaureas very few are really beautiful, I think, though several are interesting for sterile banks. Montana is quite useful thus, in all its varieties, and I grow also rutaefoka—a stragegler, with whitish leaves and pretty, red flowers; and also another white plant, ragusina compacta. 'Vhe Golden Rods, to me, are all coarse and quite unworthy of culture, without exception ; and the Hawkweeds, even, though pretty, are too dangerous to admit. But valdepilosum is attractive, and so is auran- tiacum, but a dreadful irrepressible weed. 132 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS CHAPTER VII ME Dad Creasures Ler others specialise on Sedum and Sempervivum. I frankly confess that I approach these two great races with hesitation. I have never been able to take more than a mild fancy for even the prettiest of Sedums. Justice must be done, though, even if deliberately, and I will place it solemnly on my record that the average Stonecrops are useful, easy-going inhabitants of the rockery, if kept in due bounds. Having said so much I will add my own personal sentiment, which is the same for Sedum as for Draba—a mere recognition of merit, uncoupled with any warmer feeling. The Stonecrops nearly all thrive anywhere, and are typical rock-plants, with the one exception of our own dear little marsh plant, the most charming species of the family—Sedum villosum, found in small colonies here and there in wet places on the high moors round the base of Ingleborough. Sedum album has white flowerheads, and is a rare native of attractive appearance. It turns out an appalling weed, which one throws away in cartloads without ever suc- ceeding in eradicating (my whole stock sprang from two crushed sprigs sent me in a letter: two years later I was weeding up barrow-loads of it without effect). Sedum anglicum is another rare little native, much neater and smaller, white-flowered and of modest habit and glaucous- blue leaves—perhaps the prettiest of all Sedums for OF ODD TREASURES 133 the rock-garden. We may also include Sedum dasy- phyllum, and Sedum brevifolium, a really beautiful tiny species, with fat blue foliage. (Pottsi is the name under which I had this, but what Pottsi may mean, or who Potts is—unless he is the unique gentleman who said he admired Johnson’s Jrene,—I have no notion.) Equally pretty are my Sedum lydium and my SS. Ewersi turkestanicum, this last rather larger, prostrate, with ovate, variegated leaves and pretty pink heads, Cor- sicum 1s neat, and supposed to be a form of dasyphyllum, and farinosum a form of album. Rhodanthum and aeizoon | am growing on from seed. But the larger Stonecrops lack individuality in my mind—they are furniture rather than inhabitants of the garden. Of the larger Sedums Ingleborough provides me with Sedum Rhodiola, the herbaceous Rose-root, with stout woody root-stock, and stiff stems of glaucous leafage and dull yellow flowers. ‘The name comes from the scent of the root, which, in the wild plants, is like that of an old Damask rose. Sedwm spurium, a prostrate mass, with broad heads of white and pink, ramps in every cottage- garden; Sedum kamschaticum, with a variegated form, is virtually an orange-coloured spurium ; Sedum Telephium, with tall, dingy crimson heads, is a useful, uninteresting native; Sedum spectabile, with its enormous blue leaves and ample cauliflowers of rosy blossom in late autumn is equally familiar. It is a splendid thing, beloved of bees and butterflies, though its colour has a chalky tone that makes it perfectly ghastly anywhere within a mile of any good crimson, scarlet, or yellow. Sedum sewangulare and Sedum rupestre are natives, the first common, and the second extremely rare, but not easily distinguishable from each other; both thrive on any wall, and have heads of golden flowers which, in the similar Sedum pulchellum, are of asoft pink. Unfortunately Sedum pulchellum, otherwise 134 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS a very attractive kind—seem to have a biennial constitu- tion, or at all events a tendency to miff away. Sedum oregonum and Sedwm spathulatum are closely related— medium-sized plants, distinctly attractive, with glaucous or glossy spathulate leaves, which in the splendens-forms of oregonum, are of a gorgeous blood-red. And, in con- clusion, I must disclaim any authority for the names I give. ‘They are reported as I have had them; I believe them to be trustworthy, but I have never yet specialised on the Sedums, and I think it unlikely that I ever shall. The same may be said of Sempervivum—but in a very different, sad, contrite spirit. If I were certain of two hundred years of life, I would begin specialising on the Sempervivums to-morrow. But one’s life is short, and one’s horticultural interests many. It is not possible to run so many horses abreast !—if there were room in one’s days for all one’s enthusiasms, I would specialise on Iris, Tulip, Lily, Sempervivum, Saxifrage, Odontoglossum, Gentian, Primula, and goodness knows how many charmers more all at once. But, as things stand, a wretched writer of books, who is also a worshipper of Orchids, as well as a slave of the plants, and an amateur of all stray expensive lovelinesses to boot, must perforce put a rein on some, at least, of his possible fanaticisms; for, if pain follows on desire as certainly as the wheel follows the foot of the ox that draws the cart, so do bills inexorably dog the path of all who let themselves be snared by the delight of the eyes. Therefore I will hasten on past Sempervivum with a shamefaced, sidelong glance, adding nothing to what I said earlier, apropos of .S. arachnoideum. I have already dealt with the small Phyteumas, but there are some of the larger kinds which come well into the garden. The others most desirable are Charmelii, Scheuchzeri, and orbiculare. Of these I pin most of my affection to OF ODD TREASURES 135 Scheuchzeri, a neat, thrifty thing, about a foot high or so, with round heads of deep blue bottles. The others are similar, but a trifle less distinguished. All these plants are very easy to deal with, and, I think, prefer rather moister treatment than the others, in shady corners of the rock-work. My best Scheuchzeri was collected by me once, without my knowledge, in a clump of Anemone narcissiflora that I consoled myself with one barren dreary afternoon on the Schynige Platte above Inter- laken. It was already late autumn, and everything was over, and all the mountain-panorama was cold and cloudy and grey. But I saw the Anemone’s leaves, and made good the lost day by grubbing him up. And when the clump was well-established in the old garden, lo and behold, it consisted not only of the Anemone but also of Phyteuma Scheuchzeri, Geranium sylvaticum, and the little Snow-Crocus. Now for many years they have been fighting the matter out between them, and I am inclined to put my money on the Phyteuma, which seems to be crowding the others out one by one. The Geranium will very likely go soon; the Crocus, I believe, has gone; the Anemone shall never go, if I have to redress the balance of the world by making an artificial clearing in the midst of the Phyteuma.? As for Phyteuma orbiculare, his round heads of deep blue on their tall stems may be seen here and there in our south-country meadows. On the Ruff above Abinger, for instance, he grows all over the place—nor need one have any scruple about saying so, for, first of all, the plant abounds there, and, in the second, the man, nor the million men, have not yet been born, who could eradicate a flourishing Phyteuma. Such a silly name to * Latest news: The Phyteuma has abruptly, irrelevantly expired, like Salammb6, in the very hour of victory : the Geranium and the Anemone now have to fight an internecine duel. 136 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS give the poor things—just The Plant! As for the Michauxias (how can an ordinary person be expected to pronounce this ?—‘ Me-show-ia’ is right, but is beyond most people; the name usually emerges as My-corks-ia), they are tall things, more or less biennial, with panicles of reflexed flowers like tiny blue Panther lilies in general effect. Campanuloeides has not done much good, but Michauxia Tchihatchewi (there’s the worst name in the garden) is a handsome-leaved grey person, who thrives persistently in a warm, well-drained nook; both are easterners, hating mould. The Thrifts are rather respectable than beautiful. Tall, giant Armeria Cephalotes is very splendid if you get him in a good shade of pink, bright and warm. For he varies in colour, from seed, and, besides, is more than a little of a miff—dying out suddenly under a heavy rain, if your climate be chilly and wet, or your soil too heavy. However, while he lives he thrives heartily, and so escapes the reproach of being a mimp. For a miff is a plant which, in the midst of seeming life, is in death, and expires abruptly; a mimp is one that for ever hangs on the edge of death, trailing a sickly existence towards in- evitable extinction. Thus Gentiana verna in too many gardens is a mimp; Myosotis rupicola is a milf. Of the other Thrifts, the only one to trouble with is Armeria caespitosa, a tiny, furry little ball from blazing rock-clefts in Provence, thickly covered, in spring, with globes of pale rosy flowers. This is lovely, if not brilliant, but wants careful watching, perfect drainage, and a warm, dry corner where damp may never lodge round its crown. Our own Armeria plantaginea is a dull, reduced edition of Cephalotes, and any varieties advertised as brighter are certain to be only of a more tedious because more pro- nounced magenta than the type. The Acantholimons, however, are the most delightful of OF ODD TREASURES 137 plants in every way—neat and thrifty and brilliant— cousins of the pallid Thrifts though they be. Probably the old elwmaceum remains the best—making mats of spiny cushions in any decent, hot place, and then sending up spikes of bright rosy blossoms, like very large thrift- flowers, each arranged singly, in a chaffy bract. My other species, venustum and androsaceum, are much rarer in gardens, and even more beautiful, though slower in growth, and, perhaps, a little choicer in requirements. The leaves of venustum are glaucous grey, and the flowers are much bigger than those of glwmacewm, and of a lovely bright pink; the flowers of androsaceum have more purple. All the Acantholimons hail from hot ranges like Lebanon, and in cultivation like a sunny-corner, light soil, and a high, well-drained position; in which cir- cumstances they show themselves pleasantly hardy and accommodating. Two other sun-lovers with whom, on the contrary, I have had a good deal of bother, are those two glorified Portulacas, Lewista rediviva and Lewisia Tweedy. ‘These are both Americans, and want sun and drought and drainage, so that I might have expected difficulty with them. However, rediviva has done very fairly well, with its odd habit—a reminiscence of the deadly desert- summer, I suppose—of dying off most wretchedly into a withered mass, and then (just when you are on the point of throwing away the corpse in disgust) of breaking quite happily again, with a quantity of rosy Mesembryan- themum-like flowers. Lewista Twweedyi is very much more beautiful, however, with leafy rosettes, that look like some succulent evening Primrose, and then, on stems about four or five inches high, large flowers of an iri- descent creamy-pink, such as you see in certain ‘T'ea Roses. In the open this plant has been an utter failure here—any touch of undue damp seeming to rot its stout 138 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS fleshy root-stock immediately. Nor, to console myself, do I imagine that many people in England are so favoured as to find Lewisia T'weedyi a really sound, trustworthy, outdoor plant. For pots, perhaps; but for the rock- garden it is useless to cope with plants who fly beyond any mere soil-requirement, and want you to alter the entire climate of the country before they’ll condescend to thrive. Primula, Gentiana, and Androsace are races far too great to be huddled together without distinct and definite treatment, but they each have a number of smaller clans dependent on them, which give us a few good and one or two brilliant plants. The Cyclamens come first, of course, and what uninitiated person is there who would believe that these are reckoned cousins-german to Primula? ‘They don’t need detailed discussion, although so charm- ing, so I will only say that autumn-blooming Cyclamen europaeum is the most delightful of plants for naturalising in light, loose woodland, while Cyclamen repandum is very bright among the toughest grasses, with its fine flowers of a rather fierce magenta-crimson. The most beautiful of all, to my mind, is the new and very rare Cyclamen libanoticum—a dear little plant of the large-flowered, spring-blooming section, with beautiful fleshy leaves, and abundance of big, fragrant, peachy-pink blossoms—a trea- sure from high glens of Libanos, which prospers with me in sheltered places under Cistus Laurifolius and big Daphnes. Cyclamen coum, the wee winter-bloomer, I have never cared for—the flowers are so preposterously small and dull; nor have I collected Cyclamens long enough for any discussion of the many confusing names that fog the race; europaeum, neapolitanum, and hederaefolium being all very close together, if not mere varieties or synonyms; while vernwm does duty for repandum, and ibericum with its form Atkinst are twins to coum. OF ODD TREASURES 139 A very difficult thing to establish, as far as my experi- ence goes, is the rare and dainty Chickweed Winter Green, Trientalis europaea, which I collected once, very carefully and perfectly (it is quite easy to collect), from woods in East Yorkshire. And yet, though given every care, those plants never did any good with me, and all subse- quent attempts to grow Trientalis europaea, or its stronger brother americana, resulted in dead failure. And then, two years ago, where no T'rientalis was or should have been, up a T'rientalis came, full in the middle of my big Pyrola rotundifolia. Now, had it lain dormant in the clump ever since the Pyrola was collected—or was it simply a wandering little white sheep from the black flock of T'rientalis that had all died off years before? And, if so, what had persuaded it to better thoughts, or made it take shelter under the wing of Pyrola, where I had never dreamt of putting it? And, now that it has come, it reappears again each season, and always stronger than before. T'rientalis is so very pretty that I earnestly hope he will always continue coming—a whorl of small, rounded, glossy leaves on a five-inch stem, and then, springing up on even frailer foot-stalks, one or two starry, white flowers, rather like a fairyfied Chickweed, as its common name implies. The cousinship of the Primulas closes here (for Anagallis tenclla belongs to the bog), and, before I go on to the relations of the Gentians, I must make the amende honorable to two or three plants that I had forgotten. The first of these is Eriogyna pectinata, a tiny, trailing collateral of the Saxifrages, who, with fine, ferny foliage, throws long rooting runners about in shady corners of the rock-work, with small spikes of blossom like tiny spiraeas. Then comes Convolvulus: be very wary of that loveliest and worst of weeds, C. arvensis, whose rosy, wide trum- pets may plead with you for a welcome. Admit it: in 140 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS a year your soil will be packed tight with the matted macaroni of its dreadful roots, and you will never, never be clear of it again, for it is worse than Goutweed, worse than Willow-herb, worse even than Coltsfoot itself. Con- volvulus Soldanella, from our own shingles, has not made any show here; and, saddest tale of all, mauritanicus, fragile trailer, with wreaths of azure megaphones, is not of certain hardiness here, though eleven miles off, in West- moreland, plants from my own garden mock at me by their brilliant persistence. Yet again, more beautiful than even this must be that very notable rock-plant C. sabatius, found only in one place in the whole world— between the crannies of the Cape of Nola, on the Riviera. Here also, and here only, lives Campanula floribunda, and I have never possessed either. However, let us hope the Campanula has no special merit, enters into no rivalry with my two prized novelties, raddeana and amabilis. Rad- deana has proved itself a perfect jewel—lovely, delicate, exquisite, with showers of purple hairbells, and a charm- ing, persistent habit of increasing from year to year. Amabilis is much larger, pleasant as its name; a stout rosette, with three foot spires, loose and graceful, of big shallow cups, soft blue, with a dark purple eye. Of the Acanthuses I have the Jlatifolius variety of mollis, the most splendid of all foliage plants, not except- ing the huge Gunneras and Giant Rhubarbs. But mollis is not quite happy here, at least not as rampant as in rather softer places. In Westmoreland and the Lake- country, that soaking Himalya-paradise for the gardener, it makes glorious glossy banks, which are as admirable as anything I know. Here it thrives quite sufficiently, but not, so far, with any wild enthusiasm. However, the Acanthus needs time to establish himself, so I still nourish hope. Then I have Candelabrum, reputed a fine, sturdy kind, and a dwarf species called roseus, Perringi, or Caroli OF ODD TREASURES 141 Alexandri. This is hardy and vigorous, quite small and low in leaf, with a very stodgy, important-looking spike of pinkish flowers about a foot high or more. Except for its quaintness and rarity, I do not think this a very wonderful plant; it has not the choice brilliancy of an Alpine, while it has lost the tropical grandeur of the typical Acanthus. Glossocomia, Codonopsis, and Cyananthus are cousins of the Campanulas, which deserve a place to themselves. I will not pretend to distinguish between the indistin- guishable Glossocomia and Codonopsis. ‘They are flaccid, rather loose-growing herbaceous things, with nodding, big bells of blossom, which vary infinitely from one packet of seed ; the prettiest, very pretty indeed, of a soft green-blue, with brilliant, many-coloured gold and blue markings inside. The most frequently grown plant is called ovata, but I believe the true ovata is very rare in cultivation, and I am anxiously awaiting flowers from the seed of it that was given me last season. ‘Then there are two or three other species or forms, of which I am rearing seed- lings, of viridiflora, ussuriensis, and Tang-sheng. 'They are all quite hardy, and ought to be planted high, high up on the rockery, so that their pendent bells with the quaint interior markings can nod down at you in all their delicate beauty. And now we come to a race indispensable beyond all other indispensables for the rock-garden. For who will deny this claim to the dwarf Phloxes, to the innumerable cheerful family of setosa and subulata? Of the species I grew caroliniana, a vigorous trailer that runs about all over the place, in any ordinary loam, sending up heads of rosy pink flower, large and bright even in the late autumn, after a gorgeous display in the spring. Pilosa and Douglasi are rather rare, sand-loving plants, very pretty and choice, but not making any attempt to rival 142 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS subulata in vigour or effectiveness. Stellaria is a beauti- ful lax trailer, like a rather large swbulata, making mossy cascades down the rock-work, with abundance of very pale French-grey flowers—a delicate, soft shade extremely attractive. The form erubescens I cannot quite place in my memory. I do not think it can be any improvement on Stellaria. Amoena and pretty ovata, as far as my garden knows them, are both bright and pleasant little plants, creeping and ramping over the ground, though I cannot at present accurately and definitely be certain which is really which, and how they are each distinguished (if at all) from the other. One dwarf Phlox that I have as nivalis is a wonder of loveliness—close to Nelsoni, that snowy carpet- marvel, and actually sustaining the comparison. And, very similar, to be distinguished only by their rivalry in beauty, are all those matchless garden-carpets, the chil- dren of subulata—Daisy Hill, Vivid, llacina, annulata, and the countless other sisters of Nelsoni. My favourite of all, perhaps, is the beautiful Phlow divaricata—a medium-habited thing, making a bush about a foot or eighteen inches (dwarfer and more compact in Perry’s Laphami-form of the synonymous canadensis). ‘The flowers are very large, like Periwinkles in size and colour and shape, borne in wide loose heads, and scented exactly like Lilium auratum. 'The cool, soft blue of this Phlox makes the most glorious contrast imaginable with the ardent splendour of the orange-vermilion Double Welsh Poppy. And the Phlox is as vigorous and easy as the Poppy with which it goes so well. In colour it has a rival in subulata G. F'. Wilson (or lilacina), a fine rug of moss, which is covered in early summer with such a multitude of clear, electric-blue stars that all other Subu- lata Phloxes are put to shame, and even Nelsoni has to look to its laurels. But Phlow Vivid, though small- OF ODD TREASURES 143 flowered, has blossoms of a rich, hot, salmon-scarlet, and, combined with the moonlit blue of G. F. Wilson and the snowy chastity of Nelsonit, makes an unsurpassable tri- colour of the most subtle yet blazing beauty—the more so that the other rosy Phloxes have a taint of magenta. The large Natural Order of the Borages provides me with a good number of easy things and a good number of difficult ones too. To deal with the worst of these first—there is only one Lithospermum, so far as I can discover, that is really and truly a limestone plant. Alas that I have never had the chance of proving Litho- spermum erythrorhizon, whose big round flowers make the copses below Nikko into the reflection of a cloudless sky at dawn! Lithospermum graminifolium grows here very affably, but too many of the others pine and languish, even if I give them peat-soil and all the luxuries that heart can desire. Among the languishers is azure pro- stratum—rich in colour as any Gentian—that is such a Meibuts’ of sandy, Surrey gardens; as well as petraeum and the dazzling, half-hardy rosmarinifolium from sun- baked sea-cliffs by Amalfi—so that of their beauty, therefore, I dare not trust myself to tell, lest, like the bereaved Achilles, I should speak the unhusbanded truth, and melt into wild lamentations. But graminifolium is a very dear and gracious plant, with many prostrate branches, each terminating in a grassy rosette that sends up in June a nodding head of lovely pale blue, tubular flowers—in fact, though this plant has not the awful brilliancy of the celestial Lithospermums, I console myself by believing that it has even more tenderness of charm. And the way it grows is a pure joy. With zntermediwm, a hybrid, I believe, of graminifolium, I have had success ; the lovely Gastoni does well here: and purpureo-coeruleum, the rare Welsh native, is a fine ramping thing, which has, at last, I don’t know why, died 144 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS out with me after firmly refusing to flower through many years of luxuriant growth. I first collected its big heads of sapphire trumpets in a copse near Cannes, and in many a cool, shady glen of Liguria will you come unexpectedly on its glory of blue. To my surprise, the American yellow Lithospermums have been a moderate success with me—multiflorum, canescens, longiflorum, and hirtwm making herbaceous, sturdy little bushes, with abundance of golden blossoms, in any light, sunny place. Add to these the lovely common Prophet-flower, with its black- spotted, canary-yellow blooms like big cowslips, pro- duced perpetually—and the Lithospermums, with their cousins, do not do so badly by me after all;—and Arnebia echioeides is one of the most brilliant of easy beauties for either border or rock-work, in any rich soil, well-drained. The Onosmas are opulent hairy creatures, with white, golden, or crimson bugles, that hang from the uncurling, crozier-like spikes. ‘They are all Southerners, peering down from the ruins of Byzantine castles or Saracenic fortifications, and, it stands to reason, hairiness and habitat considered, are quite unsuited to a cool, wet climate. However, the best of all, the well-known Golden Drop, Onosma tauricum, is very satisfactory here, and even more so, of course, in gardens that rejoice in a drier, colder winter. Glorious, indeed, is a mass of this all through the summer, with up-curling spikes thick hung with long drops of pure amber. Similar is the white form, but more delicate; as also is rare Onosma albo-roseum, whose bells are of white and pink—a lovely, tender plant. Of Onosma Thurberi and O. Thompsoni I speak doubtfully. I flowered O. Thurberi last year and found it a fraud—a biennial, with a stout, podgy spike, set with dull little red flowers. Of the remaining Borages the true Lungworts never move me to much enthusiasm. The Spotted Dog or OF ODD TREASURES 145 Jerusalem Cowslip of cottage gardens I even dislike, with its liverish-looking leaves, and its feeble, purply-red Howers. But the unspotted variety, azwrea, with deep sky-blue flowers, is beautiful; and so is our own very rare native Pulmonaria angustifolia, which I collected years ago in Dorsetshire woods—a plant of slight growth, with narrow, spotted foliage and large flowers of a very rich pure sapphire. ‘Then there is a pretty blue- flowered arvernensis, and a white variety which is small- blossomed and dowdy in effect ; while Pulmonaria rubra, despite the real charm and brilliancy of its rosy bells, must be looked after and frequently divided if it is to be kept floriferous and showy. And, even so, it has rather too much leaf as compared with the flowers. However, it is very pretty, and all the Pulmonarias bloom while the garden is still rather dead and sere; so, for this, as well as for their invariable good temper, we must love and cherish them, as well as two near relatives of theirs, Cynoglossum apenninum and Cynoglossum pictum, with showers of bright blossom, sound, sturdy growers for a backward corner, where such splendid things as the Dropmore variety of the Italian Anchusa can be put. Of all inconsiderable and dowdy weeds the Fig-worts are the least worthy to give their name to a very large race, which, while it is more generous in larger than in small plants, is yet of great importance in the rock-garden ; for, though, setting aside Linaria, Pentstemon, and Veronica, there are no big clans of brilliant plants among the Scrophularinae, yet there are a certain number of valuable species cropping up here and there by themselves. Otherwise this Order leads worthily on to the dull desola- tion of Labiatae, though I know this is an unpopular view to take, and that nowadays it is good form to say that all plants are lovely, and that Nature can never be either dull or plain. However, one must abide by one’s K 146 ALPINES AND BOG-PLAN'TS own convictions, and I will honestly say that Nature not only can be both, but very frequently chooses to be so ; so that real treasures are in an inconsiderable minority. As for the exalted truth that the emancipated mind can see beauties in Groundsel or Deadnettle, not for one moment will I deny it. But its prophets in popular literature seem too often to speak academically, as wor- shippers of the ideal, rather than as horticulturists with actual earthly, earthy gardens to cultivate; and as my book, no less than my garden, aims at dealing simply with the cultivation of obviously beautiful, interesting plants, I will reverently waive aside for the time this unis doc- trine of immanent, universal beauty, and content myself with the concrete, everyday beauty as the everyday garden can fitly contain it. ‘The blessed Elizabeth actu- ally talks about the ‘ loveliness of Cow-Parsley, that most spiritual of weeds.’ But had Elizabeth ever tried Cow- Parsley in her German garden? I think not. Nor, to do her justice, would she, I believe, claim to admire it out of its place. So, thank goodness, we are really at one. The noble family among the Fig-worts is undoubtedly that of the Pentstemons. These are all, as far as I know, Americans, and range from north to south, from hill to valley, from leafy coarseness to the extremest and most delicate beauty. Many, too, hailing from countries where the sterner winters are what we should call a warm July, prove sad and unhappyin our gardens. But both beautiful and happy, even with me, is bushy P. Scouleri, with pro- fusion of large pale purple snapdragons. But far more beautiful than this, almost lovelier than anything else I know, is my latest novelty Pentstemon heterophyllus. ‘This is a slender, graceful grower, reaching perhaps to eighteen inches. ‘The foliage is dainty and refined ; the flowers appear from July onwards, in very loose, elegant spires— OF ODD TREASURES 147 and their colour! Imagine long narrow bugles of a tender soft violet, and then lip and hood and open throat all of the clearest, purest azure blue—blue as a Gentian or a Myosotis. ‘The tone in itself is a glory; the combina- tion is a very miracle. And, planted out everywhere, in all places and conditions of good drainage and light warm soil, the Pentstemon bids fair to show itself a sound, hearty perennial, breaking anew (at least we hope so) each season from the base. Of the larger Mimulus I can never muster much love for cupraeus or for cardinalis; cardinalis appears to me to have flowers quite inadequate in size for the robust leafiness of the plant; while there is something— shape, or shade, about the blossoms of cupraeus that never quite appeals to me, though it makes a gorgeous show round my pond in August. But our native or naturalised alien, Mimulus luteus, with his big yellow, brown-freckled Gloxinias, well deserves one’s affection. Even more deserving are two most splendid dwarf-grow- ing hybrids, Brilliant and Model, of which Brilliant is of a flaming velvety crimson scarlet, while Model, even more lovely in my eyes, is of the hottest possible salmon- rose. Both these make carpets round my pond, and are a perfect blaze of glory all the summer, not to mention that they pull to pieces and propagate heartily from the smallest fragments. ‘Then, of the little ones, there is the neat, dainty yellow-flowered Langsdorffi from the Rockies, and two minute species, radicans and primuloeides, moun- taineers from wet places, I fancy, of which radicans has violet and white flowers, and primuloeides abundance of small yellow ones. They both creep and shrink along the ground—and, either I have been away during their great days—or else they have never had any great days; at all events my impressions of them are not by any means striking. 148 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Of the Snapdragons, those who wish can naturalise Antirrhinum majus in any or all of its forms on sunny rocks; I content myself with several less showy yet equally pretty southerners—asarinum, sempervirens, and glutinosum. Of these asarinum has fleshy, trailing stems, with large, soft, rounded leaves and a quantity of big creamy Snapdragons nestling among them, while semper- virens and glutinosum make stiffish little bushes among the rocks, with quantities of smaller blossoms along Shel small-leaved, greyish branches. These are all lovers of drought and sun; therefore of doubtful hardiness in many parts of England. But these half-hardies, as the lady says of English women in ‘ Le Monde ov Von s‘ennuie,’ ‘ont daimables surprises, and I, who had always found sempervirens and glutinosum dead after an average winter, am now overwhelmed with astonishment to see that they have sailed triumphantly through the mon- strous inclemencies of 1906-7, and are breaking up into vigorous little masses once again. Asarinum I planted high and dry; and yet I have known some incalculable survivals here and there in the dampest, dankest, most unpromising places. Linaria anticaria is a pretty dwarf thing, rather like a much magnified Linaria alpina, with flowers which vary infinitely from seed—some being dowdy and quite un- worthy, while others are very fascinating—white and velvety brown. Linaria repens is abudaalon on the walls of Oxford and elsewhere, a tall plant with very long close spikes of tiny purple flowers. ‘This plant is only admissible into the roughest wilds, for it ramps most grievously and makes itself quite a nuisance. Its variety alba has rather larger flowers, set more loosely on shorter spikes, and altogether is much slighter in growth and more graceful in effect. But even this should be used with caution. Linaria dalmatica and Linaria dalmatica ‘NWASONILOTS WONIHYAILNY WOLLOd FHL LV * YONIW SITVUNIN YO SANIYY GANVNSIN ATSNOTOOIGIN “VIONVdNVD-SUNILVIQ AHL GNV ASNUINLSVONVT WOINVYUAS) OF ODD TREASURES 149 macedonica are magnificent herbaceous plants, broad and narrow-leaved forms of one type, probably, like enormous common sulphur and orange ‘loadflaxes, with glaucous leaves and a sturdy upstanding habit, that make bushes four feet high or so, and flower all through the summer, and thrive in any decent position as heartily as any one could desire. Linaria Cymbalaria is our own dear little creep- ing Toadflax of the walls, which is charming for any neglected corner, as well as its bigger, more brilliant pallida form. As for Linaria hepaticaefolia, I have an uncertain plant which came to me as Linaria ovata, but which is declared to be the true hepaticaefolia—a creeper, with round, white-veined leaves, and large whitish lilac flowers, admirable for a rough, shady corner, like every creeping Toadflax. But one must be very careful with all of them; for, if you give them an inch, and they like it, they will certainly go on to take an ell; only the most valueless wastes should be allotted them; and I already foresee that I shall have trouble with my hepaticaefolia, which is beginning to run up a choice cliff at whose dank base it was planted in certainty that it would be out of all harm’s way. Linaria Cymbalaria maxima, and Linaria Pancici—this last a novelty and well- spoken of—are yet but seedlings that will flower this season. As for Mazus rugosus, that also is a seedling, but looks so flourishing and flowered so prettily last year, with little Toadflaxy blossoms, that I am in high hope he may prove more satisfactorily winter-hard than the older and better-known Mazus Pumilio. And another pretty little plant of the Fig-worts, Coris monspeliensis, a Provencal, with six-inch spikes or so of small purple and gold Howers: this, like the southerly Antirrhinums, blooms long and late, loves dry heat, and is not safely hardy here, except on a high-drained corner of the rocks in light soil. Foxgloves and Mulleins are hardly rock-plants, except 150 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS for high, rough banks, so I will only chronicle my pretty yellow-spiked Digitalis ambigua that I collected many years ago in shady dells of the Esterel ; and a very beauti- ful ambigua hybrid of which I have seedlings. The parent-plant had close small-flowered spikes of lovely rosy bells. Then for the Verbascums I am reduced to the pretty phoeniceum, with flowers that vary through almost every conceivable shade of purple. Decorwm I once im- ported from Servia, but he was very flannelly and very like the common Mullein, so that what with one thing and the other, I experienced no wild regret or surprise when the whole lot mouldered off as a consequence of damp on the journey. From thought of the Mulleins, so rank, so coarse, I leap with pleasure to the contemplation of my tinier bulbs. Not here is the place, nor am I the temerarious soul to talk of Daffodils, of wee Daffodils, of Narcissus nanus, Bulbocodium, monophyllus, calathinus, triandrus, moschatus, and many another delicate angel of spring— Eapos ayyeXos (wepodwvos anowv. I will be content with praising the ‘ pied Fritillary.” Difficult, indeed, are some of these, and dowdy, but I worship the white variety of our native Meleagris; and this is a thrifty soul that goes ahead in any decent soil. Aurea is perfectly beauti- ful, with the same rounded bells, but much dwarfer, and of a soft canary-yellow, faintly checkered with more or less brown. Armena is another pretty one, and so is Moggridgei ; but the dingy ones like pyrenaica I consider dull and ugly; while pluriflora, with the scarlet flowers, has never done much good here, and, altogether, it is in pots rather than in the open that I get my pleasure out of Fritillaria. ‘The Erythroniums, however (why are they called Red Violets or Dog-tooth Violets, or any violets at all? Nothing could be so unlike), approve of me more warmly, and are always perfectly beautiful, with OF ODD TREASURES 151 marbled leaves as with yellow or pink or white reflexing flowers. They are spattered all over the place, and thrive heartily—Americanum, Howelli, Dens canis, revolu- tum, and Stwarti (the true lovely white montanum I have never been able to get). Little bulbs uncountable does the cousinhood of the Lilies give one, and Grape-Hyacinths are among the prettiest. I have never specialised on any of these families ; so my Muscaris are restricted to ordinary ones, like the very heavenly Heavenly Blue, whose turquoise spikes are almost the earliest flowers to appear; then there is szovitzianum, with its white and its rare pale azure form ; and the common Jotryoeides, with our own native racemosum, all little cluster Hyacinths, these, to whom my love goes out far more readily than to plumy, wild monstrosities like comosum. Of the Hyacinths, my prime favourite is the soft, sky- blue amethystinus—a real sky-blue, with its white form —as well as the ordinary Dutch Hyacinth, when it has forgotten its Dutchness and grown thin and elegant again, in which reduced and reclaimed condition there is not a prettier plant alive than the Hyacinth that had - been so fat and horrid and soulless the year before, in beds or pots or glasses. Hyacinthella rumelica is a novelty that I am rearing from seed, and whether it is pretty or no I cannot say—at this moment I cannot even tell you whether it is alive or not. All I do know is, that if a thing with such a name can be ugly, I shall no longer believe that there is any sense of decency in nature. High, high among bulbs comes our well-known Blue- bell, too, and on this subject I must loose my wrath against the purblindness of people who, when they want to naturalise Bluebells, don’t buy our own Scilla nutans, but the kindred Scilla patula (or campanulata or his- panica), which is a Bluebell spoiled at every point, with- 152 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS out the grace, the charm, the refinement, or any other delectable quality of Scilla nutans. ‘The one advantage of patula is that it is certainly easier to establish than the Bluebell, who is not always very adaptable. But, oh dear me! the advantage is dearly bought ; and surely it is worth the extra trouble to have a thing so infinitely superior as is Scilla nutans to Scilla patula. One year, too, I found in the woods, and collected with immense care, a Bluebell who had immense pale blue bracts under each bell, so that the whole spike looked like a head of bearded barley that had got dipped into Heaven by mis- take. Although this was taken up in flower and with a penknife, it has continued to thrive and increase mightily, till now I have quite a colony of my little Paderewski Squill. The other Squills, so far as I grow them, are not very brilliant or interesting, except my Scilla stbirica, of course, whose colour is of such an awful squalling blue that it brings the water into one’s eyes to look at it. The Chionodoxas, though, are all charming—Adlen:, Tmolusi, and Luciliae ; while of the Snowdrops my vote, in this mixed, vexed race, goes solely and passionately to Galanthus Ikariae and Galanthus poculiformis. My Ikariae is out and away the largest and most brilliant Snowdrop I have ever seen, while poculiformis, only a little less in size, has its inner segments pure white and like the outer ones, but smaller, so that the flower looks like a reversed snowy chalice without a single spoiling touch of green. Otherwise all the Snowdrops are to me rather cold and dreadful—icy, freezing flowers, hardly flowers at all, but emanations of the winter, in whom I can take no real joy except on a very bright or very muggy day that gives a hope of spring. ‘The Snowflakes are different some- how, though vernum and carpaticum bloom almost as early in the year. Carpaticum, indeed, blossoms with the Snowdrops, and its dark green tufts, with the big, OF ODD TREASURES 153 pendent flowers, purely, warmly white, with their orange markings, are to me far more heartening than any Galanthus that ever sent up gelid-looking leaves and opened its cold-coloured frost-flowers. Leucotwm aestivum is only less valuable than his earlier relations because he comes at a less lonely time, when such as he are less prized, and the exquisite Leucoiwm autumnale (or Acis autumnalis), the Pink Snowdrop from Gibraltar and the South, has never done any good here. Those Southerly creatures don’t; I once had a present of the very rare Narcissus viridiflorus from Gibraltar, but nothing more ever came of it, despite attentions beyond number. 154 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS CHAPTER VIII The Big Bog and its Lilies Tue denizens of the bog-garden, large and small, have, as a rule, one distinguishing tendency which sets them far apart from the inhabitants of rock and crevice. For their habit is, either not to thrive at all, or else to prosper so outrageously that they eat you out of house and home. And this second alternative, fortunately, is that usually chosen by bog-plants, with the result that the bog-garden is one of the enthusiast’s easiest domains—giving him the maximum of joy and glory, with the minimum of pain and worry. Indeed, among the larger bog-plants there are hardly any that can fairly be called difficult or ill- tempered, but a large and opulent generosity of growth is their prevailing characteristic. In the first place, about the building of the bog-garden. The prime, dominant, inevitable, necessity of the bog- garden is the most perfect drainage. For, the more moisture a plant requires, the more imperiously does it require that the moisture shall drain away and be renewed incessantly. It is a fatal error to imagine that because a plant enjoys growing with its feet in water, and its fibres a-soak with perpetual wet, that therefore it cannot need drainage. ‘Too often the error is made, and the bog- garden, built to retain the moisture, becomes a slough of soured and soggy mud, in which the roots of all but the most rampageous weeds turn sick and die. Drainage, THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 155 sharp and rapid, is even more essential for the inhabitants of the marsh than for the pinched children of the high rocks. One only has to study their circumstances. In the soaking, fine shingle of the last moraines grow the downy-leaved mats of Androsace glacialis; and one con- cludes that heavy, loitering damp can, despite proba- bilities, be no enemy to that roseate loveliness. But, if you examine, you will see that the moisture is perpetually running, sifting, drifting through the rough harsh sand, and never rests for a minute round the roots of the Androsace. It is true that I have chosen, for my instance, a plant so difficult of culture that no treatment seems to satisfy it; but my rule holds securely and firm all through the long list of bog-plants, from Ranunculus glacials, a-glitter in the melting streams of the snow-beds, to Cam- panula hederacea, twining its tiny peal of azure bells through the long wet grasses of North Wales. (And yet I have iust heard of a plant of Eritrichium nanum—LEritrichium nanum, if you please !—which has thriven unprotected through a phenomenally rainy winter, planted in a low boggy hollow! Oh dear me, there is only one infallible rule, I believe, in the culture of difficult plants; put them elaborately, with full precautions, in a corner care- fully thought out to suit their requirements—and they ’Il certainly die; plant them where, by all laws of their being it is physically impossible for them to survive—and they ’Il probably go ahead like Duckweed on a pond. I think I must take to growing Fritrichiwm as an aquatic, and Miltonia Roezlit as a hardy perennial.) In building the bog-garden, then, take all the soil out, if necessary, to a depth of three feet or more, then set a bottom of very rough drainage before you put in your rich mixture of loam, peat, and old manure. Obviously such a violent course is not always necessary, by any means. Quite often your garden will be founded on sharp 156 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS gravel, or flow down a salutary slope. But wherever your soil is retentive, it will always be wisest to give the garden a fair start by preparing the ground thoroughly beforehand, and arming it against catastrophes. Your ultimate success will trebly and quadruply repay your initial trouble. Never scant initial trouble, never despise it. Half the world’s horticultural tragedies arise because gardeners, for one reason or another, fail to make their preparations complete, fail to be thorough with the long, tiresome, and sometimes expensive preparatory measures. Neglect initial precautions, save a few sixpences in the matter of drainage, concrete or what not, when you are making your garden, and you will certainly have to spend many sad laborious years, and many unprofitable pounds, in trying vainly to make good your own deficiencies, to do, with difficulty and pain, what might and should have been done properly and easily at first. For it is never easy to make good an error; a thing obvious and simple to do in its own good time, becomes difficult and dreadful to accomplish when its time has gone by ; and very rarely, with great trouble and misery, can one ever catch up the lost years, and make a tardy botch of what should have been a simple, workmanly job in the earliest beginning of one’s scheme. I speak all this feelingly; I was seduced, in the far- off years when I was making the Old Garden, and worrying, through my own ignorance, into saving labour here, and saving labour there, into allowing thoroughness of work to pass as insignificant, into yielding to various pernicious ‘dodges,’ because they were cheap. Result: the Old Garden for years has been a sore burden, an unrewarding toil, a daughter of the horseleech in its rapacity. Money in floods has been poured down its bottomless gullet of late seasons, in a vain effort to reclaim it; and it is only now, after ten struggling years of failure, that the thing THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 157 is turning into a success. And that is only by girding me heroically to the task, and undoing every inch and every yard of all that was ever done before, and rebuild- ing the whole thing from the very foundations, as it ought to have been done at the beginning, nearly a dozen years ago. And, had I done so, I should have saved incalculably, in money, time, labour, and pleasure, by insisting on the extra initial expense that thoroughness of workmanship entails. Gardeners ‘of England, take warning by me’; abhor cheapness, which means shoddiness and inadequacy ; utterly eschew the saved sixpence, which ineans sooner or later an outpouring of pounds. My critics have so alarmed me by describing my standards as impossibly high and discouraging, that I must deny their accusation incessantly. ‘There is nothing in what I say to discourage small gardeners, poor gardeners, enthusiasts whose scale is limited. I only insist that they must prepare their ground thoroughly, and not spare the extra half-hour in building their garden, which will ensure through later years the prosperity of even difficult, capricious beauties. It is not lavish expenditure that I preach—it is thoroughness, thoroughness, thoroughness. ‘Thoroughness, that cheapest and best of investments ; thoroughness, the gardener’s richest capital; thorough- ness in preliminary preparation, his easy, perfect insurance against all the woes that afflict the little flock in his charge. Of course if you are making a bog-garden by the acre, preparations will come heavy and expensive ; but in a little space, such as most of our gardens allow, all my sermons, even if carried out to the letter, will only mean a trifle of extra care at starting, an hour or so of added labour, another six inches of soil removed—a few small details looked to in the building, which, at the time, are as trifling and cheap as they may seem unim- portant—but which, in the course of years, will be found 158 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS to make all the difference between a garden that is a pleasure alike to the owner and to the plants that live in it and a garden which is nothing but a perennial anxiety and expense. For, if you build well at the start, your money will come flowing back to you, multiplied, through a thousand channels. Spend a little more—ever so little more at the beginning, and you will be spending less and less, making more and more, as the seasons go by. Put a rare, valuable plant in ill-prepared, faulty ground; it dies or dwindles; plant it well, in well-planned territory, and it grows ever stronger and stouter from year to year, yielding you younglings, and affording you perpetual pleasure. In renewal-money, saddest of expenses, proper initial care will save you fortunes; for, with proper preparation of your ground, you will rarely need to fill up vacancies left by deplorable demises among your treasures. Let my ideal bog-garden flow down converging slopes, and fill a broad hollow. Let its sparse rocks be porous and water-worn—either of light powdery tuff, or of the gnarled, fretted mountain-limestone. Let its aspect have a rich peace, untroubled by ambitious violent features, pinnacles, bridges, uneasy, fussy adornments. ‘Through the middle, perhaps, among tangled thickets of Iris, a stream may meander; but, for the most part, I incline to the opinion that in a small place water had better be a haunting pervasive influence than an actual visible force. In my own gardens, flowing water serves its turn; but as a rule, it is difficult to look after, to keep clear of weeds and leaves, to hold in its course. Nor is it of any effect unless the stream be a big one. And in any case water, running or staying, is an uncommonly hard and expensive servant to control. ‘lherefore, for general advice, I should say, let there be abundant moisture, yet none to see. But, of course, if space and water be at your disposal—space and such unhusbanded fountains as bless our Northern THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 159 Land, the banks of your bog may, and should, slope gently up to stark mountainous rock-work above, whence brawling cascades may come splashing down over Caltha and Maiden-Hair fern, loitering in pools and under still dark caverns, widening into lagoons that mirror beds of Primula rosea and azure Myosotis. But this is merely a beautiful vision. As for the bog itself; if your sub-soil give sharp, free drainage, if your site be a favourable slope, all your need will be to prepare rich ground, and then provide moisture to pervade it. Frequently, though, on heavy soils, it is necessary to do more. In fact, from my own experience, I think that it is always better if one can do more; namely, for a small bog, to take out all the soil to three or four feet, to fill the space with a sort of concrete tank, the concrete to be about four inches thick ; then to lay six inches of rough drainage-rubble at the bottom; then at the floor of the concrete, at its lowest point, to knock one or two drainage holes, to let the filtered moisture run away; and finally to fill up with a very rich mixture —richer and heavier than the soil of the rock-garden itself—made of old manure, silver sand, peat, leaf-mould, and good loam, with a generous intermixture of stone fragments. But the garden thus made will be, of course, only the choice nursery of your rarest, loveliest little things. It is In no way necessary to take such elaborate precautions to grow Iris stbirica, Spireas, and the larger, commoner glories of the bog-garden—which, indeed, require nothing more than juicy, retentive soil, and a certain amount of moisture. But, if one is a true enthusiast, it is very pleasant, at the bottom, say, of a slope aglow with great Lilies, Irids, Orchids, to have a space where the tiny jewels of Alpine bogs may be safe and at peace—where Gentiana bavarica, Primula involucrata, and half a hundred 160 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS other such small delights may have their paradise. And, for these, it is best to make the elaborate excavation and concrete basin that I have described—not as an absolute necessity, but as a safeguard and preliminary precaution, which will make them a great deal safer and happier than they are otherwise liable to be—besides securing to them a suitable, reserved territory of their own, where their special convenience is consulted, and from which all the profane crowd of larger plants may be held in banish- ment. And now I will give free rein to my ideal, and will conceive myself lord of a vast bog-garden, sloping richly away from a high crest of copse and rock to a choice flat space for delicacies far below. And my bank is now full-fed with fat soil, and its river flows down from the upper corner, winding through the valley, but touching each bank, even to the crest, with the benign influence of its moisture. For, where water flows, thence water always climbs, and the banks on either side a stream are always so far tinged with damp that they can never know drought, and therefore may fairly be included in the bog-garden, though their soil, to the touch, is merely fresh and cool, even in the driest summer heats. So into my happy valley parched Thirst can never enter. And now, to take first my choice of big things for the banks, what shall I begin to plant ? And at once comes up at my call the Queen-race of the bog-garden. For, though many and diverse are the dwell- ings of the Lilies—though Heldreicht and chalcedonicum blaze on the hills of Greece, though tenuifolium takes plea- sure in hot, dry, dusty soil, yet, as a race, the Lilies are plants of the upper reaches of the bog, delighting in very rich, well-drained slopes, kept always cool by the influence of water at their feet. Then let the high places of my bank be filled with gorgeous auratum, Martagon, pom- THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 161 ponium, monadelphum, szovitzianum, and gigantewm. All these are woodland Lilies, revelling in rich, decayed soil and the shelter of undergrowth. Allalike detest drought, and are glad to have water haunting their neighbourhood. No one can fail to mark this who has seen auratum, hunted and outlawed, with a price on its poor head, wagging great blooms among the cliffy copses of Kama- kura, or the Turk’s Cap peering from the gloom of Pinus montana on the highest tree-limit of the Oberland. ‘To me, personally, Martagon has never made any strong appeal, the colour of its pinkish blooms being sickly and weak; nor can I see much value in the new high- priced hybrids—Mar-han and Dal-Hansoni—which seem to me to have all the ugliness of Martagon and Hansoni, with the beauty of neither, aggravated by the combina- tion. As for the Burbanki-crosses, these are too con- fused and suspect to be spoken of yet: some of them are obvious pardalinum. But the snow-white form of Martagon is very notable even among Lilies. It is a rare and expensive plant, which is supposed rather hard to grow. My stock, how- ever, came from an old cottage garden near Ingleborough, where it makes stout thickets ; and though for some years I did ill with it, planted in a hot dry place, it is now luxuriant in cool rich soil, among ferns, at the top of a big slope that falls towards the bog in the Old Garden. The other valuable Turk’s Cap is Martagon dalmaticum, whose stalwart spikes are clothed with turbans of a glossy maroon so intense as to verge towards black. (Cataniae is similar, though less profound in tone.) This is commoner than the white Martagon, and is a perfectly sound grower in fair treatment, though all the Martagons require some years to get fully established and show their true character. Indeed this must be said of all Lilies, except of those that save one trouble in the matter by L 162 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS invariably dying after the first year. As for Martagon, though, it is so robust a species that it might well be established in our woods—and indeed has so established itself in several counties of England. From its very first introduction Lilium auratum, leader of the Archeleirions, struck the British Public between the eyes, and became the type of splendour among Lilies. It is indeed a noble and magnificent plant, though, for my own part, I do not think it surpasses Krameri and Chloraster, sovereigns of the Euleirion group. But, of the tall Lilies, it is the finest garden sort. I have not yet indeed mentioned Kramert and longiflorum for my bank. My reason is that, do what you may with Krameri— provide it with well-rotted manure, and silver sand, and so forth—you will rarely see its huge rosy trumpets more than once, and you may think yourself lucky if you see them atall. Longiflorum, again, Browni, Chloraster, splendid, snowy, creamy trum- pets, are not always to be really trusted as perennials, and I am only admitting to my bank Lilies that with precaution you can make and keep as soundly perennial as any Spiraea. Nepalense and neilgherrense are of more than doubtful hardiness; the new, beautiful, fine-leaved sutchuenense is not yet proved; sulphureum and Lowi are of no hardiness at all. Wallichianum and washing- tonianum, stalwart and lovely, are difficult and capricious ; Parryi, the joy of Californian upland bogs, with canary- coloured trumpets, is a perfect fiend, at once a miff and a mimp; the rare Himalyan polyphyllum, a glorified, pearly Martagon, is now, I think, unprocurable, as well as very difficult; as for Alexandrae, I have already recorded my opinion of that delicate hybrid. So now we return to auratum. ‘This Lily is the type of the copse Lilies, and in awratum we may notice the rule that applies to its whole cousinhood ; all these Lilies love to THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 163 send up their young growths through light scrub of bush or fern. When the stalk is mature, its first eighteen inches or so will be found bare of leaves; and, to such a height, these Lilies like to be shrouded in vegetation, which secures their young shoots from drought, storm, and frost. Even where the naked stem is not found as an indication, almost all Lilies enjoy a light covert, and dislike a parching isolation. The sun-loving species— Heldreichi, tenuifolium, philippinense, concolor, medeoloeides, avenaceum, callosum, chalcedonicum, candidum, and testa- ceum—are more or less exceptional, of course, even if one can ever make a rule for candidum and testacewm (which one never can, as candidum sometimes seems to revel in shade); but, in practice, you can rarely do wrong by planting Lilies among Azaleas, Rhododendrons, Daphnes, and big ferns. Auratwm, again, sets the fashion in the matter of food. Auratum has not the perverted gross- ness of g7ganteum, for whom no garbage is too disgusting ; but awratum is still a rank, hearty feeder, and you cannot possibly give it too rich and solid nourishment. The more manure it has the more violently will it grow from year to year, and the more years will it magnificently endure. Naturally the manure must not be too new or crude; but it cannot easily be too rich. And this rule governs almost all Lilies, especially all the forms of speciosum, which, however beautiful, have no place on my bank, because they bloom so late that the frosts begin, as a general thing, before their buds unfold. The twin Lilies, long confused, monadelphum and szovitzianum, are not, I fancy, quite so greedy. They are very splendid people, far too seldom grown, very stalwart and perennial, when once established in good light loam, in the companionship of trees or bushes. In style they are tall and leafy, with abundance of brilliant, big yellow flowers, like very large canary-coloured Marta- 164 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS gons. ‘They bloom early, too, before the other great Lilies are showing bud. The remaining yellow Turk’s Caps are the true pomponium, a very vigorous grower of medium stature, which has the rare demerit of a most hateful stench; and Hansoni, a yellow counterpart of Martagon itself, with which, though it is held an easy species, I have seldom done much good. ‘The enthusiast, of course, will grow the rarer species, alike of the Cup-shaped and the Turk’s Cap sections — maritimwm, concolor, and dainty little starry Coridion. But these, difficult and evanescent, need not trouble the general gardener; and as for the Big Cups, tall Bate- manniae and thunbergianwn, dwarf alutacewm, and elegans in a dozen forms, these are pretty and robust, but fitted for the ordinary border. Of the other Turk’s Caps, the most valuable is chalcedonicum, with its better, black-stemmed variety, excelswm, with flowers of dazzling sealing-wax scarlet that appear in August and September. But this loves warm, dryish places in the border, or among light grass. Of ‘fancy’ Lilies there is rosewm, like a dull pink Asphodel, and a blue-flowered species—a true Lilium, and truly blue, though only of a dull slaty shade, which has recently been discovered in Korea. But of these the first is rarely grown, and the second has never been introduced. I shall not easily forget how I scoured a high Korean down for it in early March. The short grass was still sere and wintry ; here and there the steep slopes were dotted with stunted bushes of Pinus koraiensis. Beyond, clear blue against the sky, rose sharp sterile peaks, and very far away below, to the utmost range of the eye, extended, map-like, the ridged, gravelly desola- tion of Korea. And on that Alpine pass the earliest sign of life was a Lily pushing its first soft shoot of green from the bulb. In the hope that it might prove the blue AQUILEGIA GLANDULOSA. THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 165 novelty, I collected that bulb with laborious care, and carried it home to Japan, through all the changes and chances of mortal life, which involved a visit to the Great Wall of China and a fortnight of dust-storms and pneumonia in a hospital of French nuns at Peking. And for my reward that Lily throve and shot up to its full height like any heroine of a novel. But alas! when the gracious blossom opened, it was only Liliwm medeoloeides, which, like avenaceum, is a smaller, frailer ver- sion of its compatriot, graceful, glowing-flowered callosum. Auratum, nowadays, has many forms, and the first thing to notice is that awratum platyphyllum has absolutely destroyed auratum for gardening purposes. Platyphyllum is twice as large as awratum, twice as vigorous, twice as perennial, twice as easy to grow, and twice as brilliant. Indeed, I might have said thrice or four times without overshooting the mark, I think. Platyphyllum is magni- ficent ; no one must ever think of buying the type awra- twm nowadays. ‘Then there is the beautiful virginale, without spots, but a trifle delicate and capricious ; and rubro-vittatum, with notable central stripe of crimson down each segment. And, finally, there is a new form just dawning over the Eastern horizon, in which I am this year indulging, despite its terrifying price. This is described as rubro-vittatum as far as brilliancy of colour- ing and crimson stripe are concerned, but as being pure platyphyllim in every other respect—in strength, in stature, in enormous size of blossom, in unpretentious readiness to thrive and persist. As for Lilium gigantewm, this unnatural-looking Lily comes triumphantly in to some high, copsy corner above the bog, a corner, if possible, sheltered from sun and wind. Gilehni, cordifolium, and giganteum make up a small, strange group of Cardiocrinums, utterly unlike all the other lily-classes— Archeleirion, Euleirion, Isoleirion, 166 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Martagon—which haunts the dense gloom of pine-forests all over far Kastern Asia, from the wooded uplands of China to Saghalin and the dank darkness of the jungle in Hok- kaido. ‘The stolid, cone-like, scaleless bulbs send out many whip-thong roots that are gluttonous for food. Up come broad heart-shaped leaves, iridescent, glossy-green. Then, after years, a spike, tallest in gigantewm, which reaches to twelve or fifteen feet, carrying ten to twenty long, narrow, white trumpets, very fragrant, white within, and purplish white on the exterior. The plant matures abundant seed, throws many offsets, and dies after flowering. Giganteum is the only one that need be grown, the others being smaller, inferior editions. This Lily is grateful for shade, moisture, and shelter, towering magni- ficently in sheltered, cool corners of the woodland, among ferns, but not requiring the copse-protection that the naked-stemmed lilies of the Archeleirion section prefer. Indeed, the big heart-shaped leaves of gigantewm admit of no such overshadowing. The only other note to offer on this Lily is that it has the most hoggish appetite of any plant I know. If you want a first-rate colony of it on the crest of your bank above the bog, you will do well to excavate a pit and fill it with the contents of half a dozen swill-troughs and hog-pens; then stamp down rich light soil, and plant the lily-bulbs in it. It is perfectly robust and hardy, too, though it sometimes suffers from cold rains or melting frosts lodging in the goblet of the glittering leaves as they first unfold from the bulb. Passing over now, as a rock-plant, my own especial favourite, delicious rwbellum, we come to the lower slopes of my bank, and the great lilies that are definitely and frankly bog-plants, clamouring for incessant and abun- dant moisture. Lilium pardalinum is a tall, rampant grower, perennially vigorous, to whom no_ treatment THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 167 comes amiss. It will eventhrive among potatoes. But it especially loves the cool, rich damps of the bog-garden— a high leafy plant, whose one fault, in the typical form, is that of sending up too many blind and flowerless shoots. 'The flowers, however, if rare, are magnificent— big, reflexed, spotted like the pard, on a ground of orange, vermilion, and scarlet. In the other forms, too, of this splendid Californian, the tendency to sparse-flowering is corrected, and Bourgaei, Johnstoni, californicum are all varieties of the Panther-Lily which exceed the type, if not in size, at all events in profuseness and brilliance. And all these Lilies, once inserted in the bog, continue thriving and increasing mightily from year to year, as if they were the worst of weeds. Liliwm superbum is another North American, whose essential beauty is his tall, swaying grace. He grows to ten feet or more when fairly established in the bog, and carries a loose, airy sheaf of medium-sized flowers, more or less reflexed, and of the usual fiery colour. The Tiger Lily needs no description or advertisement. This glory of autumn unfolds too late with me to give any perfect pleasure, for how miserable and tantalising to see fat, rosy buds all gnarled and browned with frost! And Lilium tigrinum is not a bog plant. However, on the heights of the bank the Tiger Lily with its trebled forms, Fortunet and gigantewm (but not its horrible double variety), may well be placed in huge, bold clumps, well above superbum, pardalinum, and the others that love the damper levels. Among these perhaps my own especial joy and pride is the rare and rather ill-reputed Gray, which I now have firmly and unquestionably established in a sopping corner of the bog, where it yearly doubles the number of its spikes. Grayi is a little, slender lily, carrying a loose spire of rather small bell-shaped flowers, pendulous, of orange and crimson. Like all the Panther- 168 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS group, it flowers in August and September, with parda- Linum itself, superbum, and Roezlit, making the bog into a glory of sunset colour. Roezlit is another rare and difficult tite taller than Grayi, and much more brilliant, but still a medium- sized species. With this, again, I have had complete success in a corner of the bog above Grayi and not so wet —to balance against my modified failures—hitherto, say I, for hope is the hardiest perennial of all—with Hansoni, and with glorious Henryi, the new Lily from Ichang, which is unworthily called the ‘orange speciosum. Henryi is three times the height of specioswm and in- finitely more beautiful, with daintily-balanced big flowers of a soft, dreamy apricot-colour. And this new-comer is reported by all growers to be of the cheerfullest temper and the most exhilarating constitution under almost any treatment. However, fate or folly has been adverse to me. I have grown Henryi, and flowered Henryi, in many soils and aspects. But I have never yet turned it into a weed, never succeeded in growing it into a wild copse of yearly thickening stems. This, though, is by the way, for Henry? is in no way a bog-plant, but will come in among bushes, high up on that precious bank of mine where failure is not known, since it never yet was seen on earth. But I must now lay earnest praise and a tribute of gratitude before these Lilies, bog-species or no. They have the longest flowering season of all bulbous races. The ball opens with rubellum in May; then hurry on candidum, alutaceum, monadelphum. Testaceum follows monadelphum; then, as summer ripens, the Euleirions take up the tale with Jlongiflorwm, and the Arche- leirions break abruptly into the glory of awratwm. But before auratum has come, Browni and Chloraster are in bloom; then Avrameri, if you are lucky—and all this while, too, the undistinguished blaze of the common THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 169 orange lilies of every cottage garden continues, and in the glow the varieties of Martagon and early- blooming Hansoni pass almost unnoticed. August wit- nesses the triumph of awratum; but this is soon crowded out by the onslaught of all the Panther-group, Parda- linum at its head, Grayi, Roezlii, Henryi, superbum, Humboldtii, and canadense pressing close. And, in my garden, while these flames of red-gold fire are blazing, they are half-quenched by the soft violet of the common wild Vicia Cracca, which has established itself as a weed in the bog-garden, and yearly threatens to strangle in its chains of purple the swathed, labouring fires of Lidiwm Roezli and Lilium pardalinum. 'Then, after these, while auratum and longiflorum still gloriously linger, speciosum and tigrinwm are preparing their buds. With the last lapsing petals of awratum break the first buds of tigrinum, and, in a little, if frosts hold off, the blooms of all the Speciosums open, and carry the triumph of the Lilies far on into the dank, decaying days of autumn. Even in the sere sad hours of late summer, amid the withered herbage of the rock-garden, you hail the terrify- ing scarlet Turk’s Caps of Lilium chalcedonicum, repeat- ing in colour, though with more than doubled size, the brief June splendour of tiny little fairy-like tenaifolrum, blossoming in the dry, warm, sandy corner of the rock- work, And, last of all, while Christmas approaches in its black horror of death and decay, the towering six-foot spikes of Liliwm callosum make their annual silly attempt to flower, pushing more and more strongly every year in ordinary soil, but never, apparently, able to complete their lush growth and come to blossom before the depths of winter. If only it had not this foolish habit, callosum would be a very valuable Lily, magnificently healthy and persistent, tall, long-leaved, graceful, with profusion of reflexing orange flowers. Perhaps in time this new-comer 170 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS from Japan will settle into ordinary garden routine and adapt itself to our conditions. Humboldtii and canadense are two more bog-lilies in the cousinship of pardalinum, but very much smaller and more slender. Canadense grows slenderly to about three feet or so, and then, on long pedicels, carries two, or perhaps three bell-shaped flowers in orange and crimson, near those of Grayi in shape, but rather larger. Hum- boldtii is more beautiful again ; and, in its high-sounding variety bloomerianum magnificum, more beautiful than itself. This form of Humboldtii is the only one to grow. It thrives well, and sends up loose, well-furnished spikes of flowers, which are large, spotted, very cleanly, and brightly coloured in yellow and red, and strike a com- promise between the bell-shape of Grayi and the 'Turk’s Cap of pardalinum, by assuming the form of a large star, just reflexing at the tips. Maritimum, cup-shaped and crimson, is a rare, dainty North American which I have never grown, and with Humboldt closes my list of Lilies for the big ideal bog and bank. Of Parryi I dare not speak; this is a Californian, usually called a bog-plant, slender, leafy, striking, in shape of bloom a medium between pardalinwm and the Iso- leirions—that is to say, in the form of a rather shallow trumpet, soft, rich yellow, sparsely spotted and very sweet. But Parryz is a problem almost insoluble. Cap- tain Reid grows it like a weed at Yalding, I understand, but no one else, not even the most experienced, has any but an evil tale of it. Clearly bog-treatment by itself is not enough. I incline to the belief myself that it hates bog treatment, except, perhaps, for short periods in the year. However, I will say no more. My bank contains only such Lilies as are really and honestly healthy, good- natured, and robust, capable of adding willingly to a garden’s permanent glory; to the capricious, delicate, THE BIG BOG AND ITS LILIES 171 uncertain species I say a glad good-bye—or, rather, in these pages give them no place nor greeting. Let others specialise on them; I have given you only sound, vigorous Lilies. And the list, you see, is not a short one. Good luck to all. 172 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS CHAPTER [IX Che Greater Bog-Plants Or the shrub-Spiraeas I will not speak here—at least not of the big species such as ariaefolia. And Aruncus has been treated of ‘in another place.” But if you want gigantic, tropical vegetation for the rich rough uplands and outskirts of your bog, you cannot do better than turn to the gorgeous, herbaceous Spiraeas. Of all these I would say that if your space will possibly allow, they will look better in wide tracts and colonies than as _ isolated specimens. In point of growth, luxuriant and rich as they are, they do not run at the root or make themselves a nuisance, and can therefore be admitted without scruple even to the smallest territories. But nothing can beat the effect of a broad sweep of palmata or gigantea, and, where possible, they should certainly be planted with a lavish hand. I conceive of a broad, shallow dip between two wooded hills, through which, in lake and marsh, shall meander a little stream, while above, far up on either side, rise sheltering forests. Here, in the open space of this glen shall be towering masses of the finer bamboos, clumps of Thalictrum aquilegifolium, waving copses of the big Lilies—awratum, pardalinum, tigrinum, giganteum. And here, too, amid belts of the Siberian Iris—there will not be blazing sun-heat enough for Jris Kaempferi in this wood-garden of mine—there shall be jungles of the rosy herbaceous Spiraeas. For these, one THE GREATER BOG-PLANTS 173 and all, are of a temper indomitably robust, able to look after themselves anywhere, capable of coping with any native weed, no less free and sturdy than their sister the common Meadow-sweet. All they ask is a rich, cool soil, like that of a damp meadow. They don’t clamour for extra moisture or bog-treatment, but revel in any such position as the banks of a ditch. At the same time my visionary wood-garden must be very careful how it admits the Spiraeas into the neighbourhood of the great Lilies. For the fiery orange and scarlet of the Tiger and the Panther simply yell and squall, like furious Kilkenny cats, against the chalky pinks of the Spiraeas. This colour, radiant and clean, is the one weakness of the tall Meadow-sweets, inasmuch as it is very reluctant to mix on equal terms with any other. First and foremost of the big Spiraeas comes gigantea. This is the ordinary Meadow-sweet multiplied by three, an enormous tropical thing, waving wide plumes of creamy-white at the top of eight-foot stems, clothed in broad palmate leaves. In the pink form the flowers are are of a pale, ineffective rose, but the type is incompar- ably better, in richness and splendour of effect. Spiraea gigantea, besides being as easy as all its kindred, has, like Aruncus, a hearty readiness to seed itself about the garden. Next comes, for old friendship’s sake, the common Meadow-sweet, gigantea’s little sister, a native whom no one need ever be afraid to admit, as, however freely it grows, it never proves a stubborn usurper, nor makes itself difficult to deal with. Lovely Spiraea palmata is larger than wlmaria and smaller than gigantea, coming about half-way between them, though in leafage and habit it is nearer to gigantea. And its flower is far more brilliant than either, being a flat plume of soft, bright rose. However, palmata varies very much from 174 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS seed, and out of a batch I raised a year or two ago I was horrified to find that half my cherished nurslings bore blossoms of a pallid, dirty pink, a hundred tones removed from the rich splendour of the normal palmata. As for the albino, it is beautiful of course, creamy and opulent. But there are many good white Spiraeas, and the white palmata is not as conspicuous among whites as the type is among the pinks. If palmata approaches nearer to gigantea in habit, lobata (or venusta) approaches nearer to ulmaria. Venusta is a Meadow-sweet of frail and slender growth, lacking the weed-like robustness and luxuriance of its kindred. Not that it is in any way capricious or difficult ; any cool soil will please it. But certainly it does not form masses, spread, seed, and increase like its relatives, always pre- serving a certain spindly, fragile look about its isolated stems. In flower, however, venusta dominates its race, and utterly eclipses all thought of rivalry. By the side of venusta the pinks of palmata and digitata become pale and dingy; for the foaming crown of venusta is of a violent dazzling carmine, richly brilliant and pure as the juice of red currants. I know no albino of venusta, nor desire to, the type being unsurpassable. Spiraea japonica heads another group of herbaceous Spiraeas which are all as easy as the Meadow-sweets, and very valuable for smaller, choicer corners of the damp garden. ‘These are dwarf in habit, and adapted for planting in isolated crowns and specimens, their plumed grace appearing to the best advantage so, at some com- manding point in the garden’s scheme. Japonica itself, the commonest of plants for forcing, is no less precious and beautiful for the open ground. It is imperturbably robust and hardy, requiring no attention from year to year. Each season reappear anew its lovely dark-green glossiness of fern-like foliage, and then the loose, el ae ce ae THE GREATER BOG-PLANTS 175 delicate spires of white. Though perfectly vigorous and healthy, it is rather more impatient of sunshine than its kindred, and will do you better, and show you finer spikes, if you plant it where the blaze is not excessive. The Astilbes have not even this faint want; they thrive anywhere in cool soil—herbaceous Spiraeas in all but name, prolific of the usual bending plumes of white or pink. I cannot enter upon the minute differentiation of Astilbe, Spiraea, and Aruncus; if the lover of the race remembers it altogether as Spiraea, he will be wise enough for all ordinary purposes. ae THE MOUNTAIN BOG 223 emerge in broad hay meadows, bending blue with huge old clumps and dense colonies of Gentiana asclepiadea. Here and there glows a belated golden globe of T’rolhus, abundant in its season as in the meadows of the High Force, or round the source of the Ribble under the northern end of Ingleborough. Ranunculus aconitifolius is here, too, and glorious Thalictrum aquilegifolium, and a broad stretch of Epipactis palustris, vaguely recalling a small and oddly leafy version of Ocontoglosswm pulchel- lum, with pretty flowers of rose and white. Of other Marsh Orchises there are our handsome natives, mascula and maculata, both loving rich soil, damp rather than dry, and both quite easy to establish, if only you take the bulbs in autumn, being careful not to break the clod in which you dig them up. Both these luxuriate in the water-meadows of Swiss streams, and in size of spike almost recall their big brother, Orchis foliosa, from Madeira, a gigantic maculata, with dense, six-inch spears of purplish blossom, which is perfectly hardy and easy in rich damp soil, in a fairly sheltered, well-drained situa- tion. Orchis militaris, with its near relations, Simia and Sambucina, are very handsome plants of similar persua- sion, but dislike excessive damp, rare species from meadows in Southern England. Another pretty native, Morio, is hardly distinct enough for admittance to the garden ; ustulata is quaint and inconspicuous; as for the gigantic, monstrous Lizard Orchis, with its vast-tailed, stinking flowers of greenish tone, this plant, so rare that there are perhaps only two specimens or so still lurking in Kent and the South, is a kind that craves for hot, dry, chalky soil and baking summer heat. But Orchis laxiflora is a brilliant, loose-spiked cousin of Mascula, hardly less rare than Orchis hircina, an alien immigrant upon ballast-hills at Hartlepool (and perhaps native, like so many rarities, to the Channel Islands), which is pleased 224 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS with damp soil in a sheltered corner, though it is not more delightful than our own native, Habenaria conopsea, with long, thin, pink spikes of delicious fragrance. I can- not say as much for a notable American Cypripedium, second of its race for damp, rich treatment. For with Cypripedeum acaule I have never been able to do anything at all. This dwarf species, with two leaves, and then a vast, bellying, pink pouch, folded double in the middle, is, I believe, the most southerly of the hardy Slippers, both in latitude and situation. For it frequents woods in the United States, and though Mr. Smith of Newry seems to grow it quite happily, with me it has never proved really winter-hard, though I have tried every possible soil and situation for it. A cold dry winter would probably please it a great deal better than our muggy, wet ones. Anyhow, in whatever light, warm, sandy stuff I put it, Cypripediwm acaule, after flowering, goes home to mother earth in the normal course, but never comes back again. Even more limited has been my experience with Cypri- pedium guttatum, a rare and most beautiful species from high dank woods all over Asia, through Siberia to Japan. I have never collected it, but apparently it haunts the mountain forests in the very thickest darkness of the pines, where it enjoys the black, cool humus of incalcul- able ages. The flower is small and rather hoody in out- line, but wonderfully dappled with crimson and purple on a white ground. I have tried the plant only once, and then with little success. And it is by no means easy to get hold of unless one can manage to collect it for oneself. The lesser American Cypripediums, candidum, parvi- florum, and pubescens, are all easy doers and pretty species, growing as much as two feet high, with numerous flowers that, in pubescens and parviflorum, have yellow slippers— THE MOUNTAIN BOG 225 very like those of Calceolus, which, indeed, they replace in the New World—while parviflorum has the most fascinat- ing, pure white pouches, that look like birds’ eggs. I have found all these perfectly thrifty in any cool, rather rich, light soil, such as the Cypripediums love—though I am not sure that they are particularly long-lived. Cypri- pedium arietinum is a rare North American whom I only flowered once, a very curious, attractive creature with a blunt-nosed pouch which, with the waved petals, gives the plant its titular resemblance to a ram’s head. This throve for a while in similar ground to that which suited the other compatriots ; though now, I fear, it has returned to its long home. I have little love for Adenostyles alpina, with its large triangular colt’s-foot leaves, white on the reverse, and its big flat heads of pinkish fluff’ But this now abounds by our Alpine stream, as we climb towards its upper glades. And so it goes, through beds of buttercup and many another casual golden beauty, till we leave the last pine woods, and begin to mount over open ground, stony and loose, in which the stream is diffused, and nourishes in the damp débris Sazxifraga aeizoeides, Campanula pusilla, Campanula Scheuchzert. On the ruins of a little shelter you will see thick plumy tufts of Cystopteris alpina, kindly and adaptable to a cool corner of the rock-work, and the occupant, by some unguessable chance, of one churchyard wall in Southern England. Now we are over the ridge and nearing the last plain before we accompany our stream up and up to its source in the moraine and the unsleeping snows. In a narrow channel it flows, no longer a stream but a streamlet. Above its banks on one side hang loose curtains of Primula viscosa from shady rocks ; on the other, a sunny bank of grass is blue with the trumpets of Gentiana acaulis. Down by the very water-side are hurrying P 226 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS blooms of Soldanella alpina, which show that the snow has only lately been melted from that deep gully, and the roseate heads of Primula farinosa tell the same tale. Then suddenly, as we climb, a splashing violence of blue assails our eyes. It is the first tuft of Gentiana bavarica, not to desert us now until we reach the final wastes of stone and the realm of its cousin brachyphylla. No colour that I know can touch that of the Bavarian Gentian as you see it among the lush emerald grasses of the mountain marshes—a blue, thanks to itself and its setting, of the most pungent solid sapphire, rich and dense. Gentiana bavarica is always beautiful; but I think I never saw it lovelier than one day in late autumn on the Brienzer Rothhorn. I had misguidedly made the ascent of that hackneyed peak to see if by any chance I could hap on Ranunculus rutaefolius, which is reported from the slopes towards Sarnen. [arly snows were already descending, and the nights were hard with frost. All day I toiled and caught nothing, slithering perilously about on the glazed, rotten rocks of the northern cliffs, after various alluring-looking buttercups, that always turned out to be ordinary alpestris. So I gave up the struggle and began to stroll down from the peak. October had sent all the plants to their rest, and nothing brilliant was to be seen. The air, too, was clear and cold with the nip of autumn, filled with the indefinable oppressive anguish of the world’s yearly death. Far already on her downward journey was Our Lady Perse- phone, carrying the flowers with Her to the underworld ; and the frozen breath of Hades floated up through the Gates of Death thrown wide for Her coming. And then, in a little hollow, dank with molten snow-water, browned and rotten with frost, I came upon a blooming crowd of Bavarian Gentians. ‘Their poor, brave flowers were half- congealed, half-melted with soaking damp and frost, yet THE MOUNTAIN BOG 227 still they flaunted their splendour unconquered, and made that small wet dell a brilliant basin of blue. Alas! I would that such persistence, such generosity, would mark Gentiana bavarica in England. Give it the choicest place in your choicest bog, nurse it up with silver sand and finest mixtures. But it will seldom be permanent. Perhaps we cannot give it rigours enough of climate—not sufficient sternness at one moment of the year, and enough con- tinuous encouragement at the other. Now the stream has reached the plainland of the last huts, the summer station of the cattle and their keepers. Here is a little meadow, perfectly flat and smiling, through which runs a placid brook as through many an English lowland. Its banks are dense with common nettle and blue Monkshood, thanks to the corrupting occupancy of man, who, wherever he may go across the world, takes with him all his weeds—moral, no less than vegetable, to thrive abominably and wax gross in virgin soil. Beyond the wooden huts lies a colony of boulders by the water- side, fallen from the slope above, which rises starkly overhead towards the moraine. On these huge rocks are found earnests of the promise above us— Senecio Doroni- cum, Primulas, a few stray plants of Asplenium septen- trionale and Lloydia serotina. 'These are both natives, but rarissimi, of North Wales. The fern is a strange, wee thing, linear-leaved, forked like a serpent’s tongue ; the Spider’s-wort, from its tiny bulb, emits a few thread- like leaves and then a dull white blossom like a star. I quested for it once among the dark rocks in the Devil’s Kitchen above Llyn Idwal. No place has ever so daunted me ; on all sides black, awful precipices dropped towards a black, unsmiling little lake far down at their heart; clouds, gloom, and storm made the inhabitants of that dreadful world. Timidly and abjectly I hunted the Lloydia, frail pale Princess of so grim a keep. ‘The 228 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Devil's Kitchen is a black cafion opening, high above the lake, into the flank of the Glydyrs. Its sides are dank and inaccessible, narrowed like the Symplegades, wrapped eternally in a damp and rayless twilight. Here, on ledges of these adamantine walls, linger rare specimens of the Spider-wort. But, though I searched long, I could see nothing—nor, if I had, could I have climbed up to reach it. And now that, after many years, I have found and collected and grown the Lioydia, I chillily announce that, except for sentiment’s sake, it is not worth the collecting or the growing. Now we have done with the plainland. The stream brawls down upon us over a slope like a wall, and we have to breast an incline so steep that our knees are against the opposing earth at every step. At first we climb past stunted masses of Gentiana nivalis, dazzling in their light, clear ferocity of tiny azure stars; over great rosy flowers of Trifolium alpinum, and amid the nodding golden suns of Arnica montana; over the loose trails of Veronica saxatilis, brilliant with its short-lived blue blos- soms, large and intense in colour, with a ring of crimson at the base. Easiest and most thriving of Veronicas is this, easy in every way, and a profuse, faithful seeder, my favourite, almost, in its large but not very interesting race. It occurs, rarely, on the Scottish mountains, and very rarely indeed in its rose-coloured form, fruticulosa. Kirk, guthrieana, and satureioeides are of the same nature, though guthrieana is paler and more bushy; repens forms a close mat of glossy leafage, hidden from sight in summer by a myriad pale flowers, large and softly blue ; prostrata and rupestris are rampant, mat- and curtain-forming Alpines, invaluable for the rock-garden, developing sheets of azure in their time; filifoha grows erect into a filmy fuzz of fine greenery, starred with china-blue blossoms; bellidioeides is simply pale and THE MOUNTAIN BOG 229 dowdy; Alliont is simply dark and dowdy, despite its great rarity, which leads one to expect marvels from its dense, close carpet of branches, clothed with rounded leaves in pairs. Alpina is the bitterest disappointment. The name ought to be a guarantee of worth; but Veronica alpina is pallid and minute of blossom, totally without value; as for balcana, which I had from Servian seed, it proved a little weed like our own arvensis. Last, but not least, comes the native Speedwell, dear attractive thing, to be allowed its full way in the garden wherever possible, and no more vigorous and easy than all its vigorous, easy clan—excepting only such capricious uglies as bellidioeides and alpina. Arnica has been left behind by now, and the hillside is one soaking sponge of bog. Here and there, on stalwart spikes, rise the large lurid goblets of Gentiana purpurea, huddled in a head, and ranging in colour through shades of dull yellow, brown, and livid bronze. ‘Then comes something exquisite beyond all hope—something that clothes the wettest moss of the slope in tenderest, softest, warmest rose-purple. As we get nearer, straining our hearts to be upon this unexpected delight, we gradually discern its flowers to be borne in round, fluffy heads. What it may be we have no notion. Now it is at our feet; we plunge, lay violent hands upon it, possess it eagerly, with fondlings. And it is a garlic! And it stinks unutterably—and not all the multitudinous seas can wash us clean of that clinging stench. As a matter of fact, this is the common Chives of our kitchen-gardens, Allium schoenoprason, native of wet highlands in our own Lake Country no less than of the Alps, and, as another matter of fact, a remarkably pretty thing, well worthy of admission to any choice territory and marsh, were it not for its unutterable odour. And here I will not deal exhaustively with possible garlics for the rock-garden, 230 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS except to say that pretty, scentless, white neapolitanum is hardy, that blue kansuense, rosy, big-flowered ostrow- skyanum, pretty, pink pulchellum, wee hierochunticum are all attractive and often inoffensive ; common yellow Moly is good for a rough, dryish bank, unworthy of choicer stuff. Erdelit is a large, hideous novelty, with globes of dullest grey-white; Schwberti is an immense, weird creature, with huge, round, bomb-like heads of pink, pro- jecting more flowers on longer stems all over the ball, in the wildest and most Struewel-Peter manner. T'rique- trum, again, is pretty, of a dead, dull white, looking like the ghost of a dead white bluebell, sodden in water. This fills every vineyard in Liguria, and is a great rarity in the neighbourhood of Bristol. And so we shake off the malodorous memory of the Garlics and go forward, topping the slope, and finding ourselves at last in the upmost levels. Now the stream flows gently, between banks that are clothed with the rosy snow of S%lene acaulis, so dense with flower that each yard-wide plant seems a mere mat of colour. S%lene acaulis has a vast woody taproot, impossible of collection, but comes well from seed, and grows well, too, in any open, well-drained place on the rock-work. But in culti- vation it never flowers with anything approaching its proper generosity. Perhaps the moraine-garden may cause it to wake up. Ewscapa is a form differing only in the fact that the flowers have minute stems instead of sitting flat on the cushion, and sazatilis, as far as I can see, is indistinguishable. Silene rupestris is a pretty white- flowered biennial for dryish places; S%lene alpestris, de- spite its name, is a bog-plant of the very highest rank, loving any fairly moist corner, and running riot in a mass of narrow, glossy leaves, sending up, on stems of about a foot, abundant loose showers of white flowers, circular, and delicately notched all round. It seeds, too, in pro- THE MOUNTAIN BOG 231 fusion, and blooms far on into autumn—an altogether indispensable delight. Stlene pusilla is a most exquisite thing, a miniature of rupestris, identical in all respects but reduced to the most diminutive proportions. I doubt if it has quite the robust constitution of its big sister ; in any case it should have a very choice corner of the bog— if only on account of its minute loveliness. Stlene saai- Jfraga is a spidery-growing rock-plant, interesting, but not brilliant, with creamy flowers, brownish on the outside. Most brilliant of the race is Silene Ehizabethae, from hot moraine-slopes of Northern Italy, dwarf, sticky- leaved, with immense flowers like those of a Clarkia, which produce—at least they have produced with me— abundance of sound and fertile seed. This plant loves the moraine-garden, or a warm, well-drained slope in light soil; as for the slugs, they adore it as an article of diet. Silene Pumilio is similar, but smaller—a difficult thing, I have always found it, craving something which I could not supply, though I have tried peat and granite and silver sand and everything that seemed at all likely. At last, however, some pot-plants in sharp, light loam are thriving well. Stlene virginica, from hot Virginia, is gorgeous, with huge scarlet flowers, but I have no hopes of ever succeeding with so miffy a Southerner ; another tall Silene is Zawadskyit, which makes promising- looking rosettes of glossy green foliage (like Primula clusiana), and then sends up stems of dull, disappointing flowers. Remains only Silene Schaftae, a useful dwarf border-plant, with abundance of magenta-rose flowers through late summer and autumn. Asterias is an annual, so is compacta—big, brilliant things, greyish, glaucous- leaved with spreading heads of big red flowers; beautiful dwarf palaestina, with abundance of soft rosy flowers, is painfully half-hardy. As a rule, to tell truth, all pink 232 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Silenes, except palaestina, have too much chalk and magenta in their tones ever to please me. My prime favourite is the white-starred, dainty alpestris. Meanwhile, as we mount by the stream, over ribbed rocks, and gradually thinning herbage, the beauties of the upmost levels throng thick. These are the very axypatot exwa@ves of Hippolytos: purity is the dew that waters them, and the high Gods walk here, for all who choose to see. Against the grey stone shine in contrast the gold-and-violet suns of Aster alpinus amid the silver stars of Edelweiss. Like a dingy caricature of the Aster appears Hrigeron alpinus, and the grass is dotted with the deep, brown-crimson spikelets of Nigritella angusti- folia, delicious little Orchis, which is filled with the most rich and penetrating fragrance of Vanilla. ‘his, though I have oft collected it, I have never been able, worse luck, to get established. Down by the bed of the stream itself are the children of the bog. Saaifraga aeizoeides and the two Campanulas have been left far below, and their place is filled by the blues of Gentiana bavarica; the lighter, clearer colour of Myosotis rupicola ; the startling white- ness, against glossy green, of Ranunculus alpestris, grow- ing every minute more abundant; and the soft lilac of Soldanella with the rosy pinks of Primula farinosa. All these, of course, are for moist or marshy corners of your bog, with the exception of Myosotis alpestris and its variety, rupicola, which endure far heavier damp on the well-drained Alps than ever they will in cultivation ; where, on the contrary, though alpestris is an easy border plant, the much more lovely, delicate, and capricious rupicola requires very perfect drainage and protection from excessive moisture if you are to make it a sound perennial. For the bog, however, you may, of course, use cautiously our own brilliant native palustris, in some of its newer improved varieties, which never look better THE MOUNTAIN BOG 233 than when on the edge of water, or luxuriating in the wettest bog. But cautiously, say I; for Myosotis palustris is a rampant greedy grower, and pairs better with other such stout creatures as Mimulus. Of Primula and Ranunculus your bog may be proud. All the Alpine Buttercups, alpestris, rutaefolus, ker- nerianus, gelidus, glacialis, Traunfellneri, Seguieri, crenatus, bilobus, will thank you for rich, deep, wet soil, in which they will thrive like potatoes. Nothing is more effective in a garden than a damp, stone-strewn tract all dotted with the glossy little bushes and the big white- and-gold cups of Ranunculus alpestris. Indeed, all these high-Alpine Buttercups will thrive in almost any good cool corner, provided their soil be heavy and their condi- tions not too arid. Rarest and loveliest is a treasure from the Austrian Alps, which I have only just succeeded in procuring, after years of craving. This is Ranunculus anemonoeides—the true anemonoeides, not the pretty little Thalictrum anemonoeides with large white flowers on short frail stems, which is sometimes confused with the Ranunculus and offered in catalogues under the auguster name. The Ranunculus inhabits much the same wet shingles in the higher eastern ranges that delight glacialis in the western moraines. It has clawed, divided, fleshy leaves, glaucous and beautiful ; and immense flowers, like those of a mountain Chrysanthemum, pearly white, verging to a delicate sunset pink. From what I have seen I make no doubt this wonderful beauty will prove as easy as the rest of the group, and perhaps the finest of them all. I have already so far chanted the Litany of Primula that I can add little to my song of their praise. But first, in justice, I must pause to adore my novelties in the race—abhorrent from bog-treatment though they be. Now, while Auricula Golden Queen has huge obese round, 234 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS amber flowers, I have realised, this year, the superior grace and beauty of two Auricula-forms, similis and Obristii, with long trumpets of a lovely rich yellow. And bellunensis is even richer in tone, of a yellow deepening towards orange—magnificent ; then among Viscosas comes the new apennina, a gem of gems, very rare and untried. But this is a fine thriver, nobly floriferous, with round heads, on dwarf stems, of very large, round, overlapping flowers, gently pink, with a dim white eye—more beautiful than even Cottia at its best. And then, again, I have just flowered a new cousin of viscosa collected by a neighbour, and quite the most gorgeous of its kind, con- quering the finest Viscosas, Ciliatas, and Helveticas ; this is a robust grower and very free, sending up stems of four or six inches, crowned with a domed cluster of large flowers —deep, dazzling purple, with a sharply defined white eye. So far as I know, quite imperfectly, the tangled race of Primula, this beauty has no name, and deserves a good one. And now I will go on to say that rosea is the love- liest thing for the bog that heart of man can desire, growing in dense old tufts, with their feet in running water—but it will do as well in damp ordinary soil—with those matchless carmine flowers in very early summer. Then comes pale snowy involucrata, sweet and holy little plant, with glossy rounded leaves, and gracious upshoot- ing stems, another glory of ‘the bog or damp rock-work ; Parryi, large, deep purple, splendid; Deorum, with smaller but no less handsome flowers (my plants have now taken to flowering freely—but in spring, not in late summer, as their native habit is); japonica, stalwart and coarse, best fitted for the copse and rough outlying stretches; new, gorgeous little biennial cockburninana, with flowers of ardent orange ; Stwarti, if you can get it, another giant species, with great heads of purple; farinosa, of course, with its big brother longiflora, and THE MOUNTAIN BOG 235 its wee brother, scotica—not to mention its other relatives, magellanica, hakusanensis, algida; sikkimensis, tall and royal, powdery-white, with swaying peals of sulphur- yellow bells; and glutinosa with queer crowded little bunches of blue-violet flowers, which it can only be in- duced to put forth when grown in the mossiest, spongiest bog. Finally there are the giants of the denticulata and cashmeriana kinds — fat cabbages for outlying shady banks, and the new pulverulenta form of japonica, with its offspring, the flaming hybrid Unique, whose other parent is cockburniana, and his constitution poor. Then there are the North American cousins of Primula —the Shooting Stars, which love rich, well-drained, damp soil. Who the ‘I'welve Gods may be, and what claim they may have to Dodecatheon I cannot tell, but these flowers of the Twelve Gods are gracious if not dazzling creatures, large leaved, with tall stems that carry a head of little purplish, gold-pointed flowers like small Cycla- mens. Their colour is not very interesting, and their growth a trifle gawky ; Meadia is the largest, and has better-coloured varieties; pauciflorum is quite the best kind, a free seeder, smaller than Meadia and excellent for the bog, a most attractive fair frail beauty. But the rarest species of all—and indeed the only Alpine species that the twelve undiscerning gods possess, is Dodecatheon integrifolium. 'This, however, is a rare, difficult little plant, an Alpine of Alpines, requir- ing a very choice open space in the bog, with abundance of stone chips and fine peaty humus. It only grows three or four inches high, with three or four flowers in a loose cluster at the top of the stem. The blossoms, hardly smaller than those of great stout jeffreyanum and Meadia, look very large for the minute daintiness of the plant; and their colour, though running, like so many tones in this race, towards a magenta-purple, yet have so 236 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS much depth and fire, so bright an orange at the flower’s eye, that the little clustered cyclamens at the crown of that frail stem have a strong charm—especially if you collect this Dodecatheon in its native haunts. I came upon it high in the Canadian Rockies, near the last limit of herbage. All around the stones were triumphing over the vegetation ; above, in a vast amphitheatre, were walls, screes, escarpments of naked rock, falling, in terrific arid precipices, or long slopes of débris, towards a green icy lake a thousand feet lower down. And here, nodding amid the rare, sickly grasses, waved the ardent, few- flowered clusters of the Dodecatheon, and, as I gathered up its roots, a striped squirrel—who must have been one of the Twelve Gods in avatar—came and sat on a stone and chittered angrily at me for removing his treasures. But alas! in cultivation, I have never succeeded in doing anything with WDodecatheon integrifolium, though one would have thought my soil and climate sufficiently Alpine, sufficiently reminiscent of its own. Yet another large cousin of the Primulas there is, which is good for a sheltered rich corner, not too select, on the outskirts of the bog. This is Cortusa Matthioli, whose variety grandiflora is better than the type and better than the other species of Cortusa. 'These Cortusas throw up each year large, bristly, soft green leaves, like shaggy versions of the Wood-sanicle, or Primula sinensis, and then, on a tall stem of about a foot, clusters of pendent Primula stars, which are of a dark and brownish red. ‘They are interesting rather than brilliant, but are well worthy of a place if you have room. MORE OF THE SMALLER BOG-PLANTS 237 CHAPTER 21! Wore of the Smaller Bog-plants In this long interval, while we have been pursuing our stream without comment, we have mounted past the limits of the grass, over a final tract of Ranunculus pyrenaeus, and are wandering amid the soaking shingle, where the river is born, and lies hidden at his source like Iamos, in beds of blossom. And this is Ranunculus glacialis, whose snowy, great cups glitter everywhere above the wet and glistening stones. Beyond there is nothing more, except, perhaps, one golden flare, amid the greyness, of Geum reptans. All around are Androsace glacialis, Campanula cenisia, Viola cenisia, Gentiana brachyphylla, Chysanthemum alpinum, Myosotis rupicola, Papaver alpinum, Iberidella, Ranunculus alpestris, the ugly little forms of Savifraga varians, Saxifraga Andro- sacea, and Saxifraga biflora. But of these only the Saxifraga varieties, the Androsace, the Ranunculus and the Chrysanthemum, inhabit the wettest places; and in cultivation wet is fatal for both the Androsace and the Saxifrage. Chrysanthemum alpinum is a pretty little creature, though, and very fairly easy to establish in the shingle of the bog or the moraine-garden. It has camomilish leaves, quite bright and glossy green, with impressive snow-white flowers, golden-eyed, and exactly like those of its big cousin, Chysanthemum leucanthemum, of every English hayfield, though a little smaller than the 238 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS Ox-eye, and carried on stems about three or four inches from the ground. Lapponicum and nipponicum are very close cousins, even if not actually brother-forms of the same Alpine and high-Arctic species. Chrysanthemum Zawadskyi is another bog-plant of easy culture—rather taller than alpinum, rising to five or six inches, with ferny foliage and stocky, stolid flowers, whose white is tinged with soft pink. As for Chrysanthemum Tchihatchewi, this must go far, far from the bog, a ramping, ferny carpeter, making wide mats over the driest, rubbliest places. Its beauty is its foliage, its recommendation its violently robust habit, and its love of hopeless, worthless, dry places where nothing else will grow; its flowers, on five-inch stems, are rather small dull daisies, white, with greenish-yellow eyes. Most august of the family, of course, is Chrysanthemum indicum, the parent of a priceless garden race; but Chrysanthemum indicum has no other claim to a place, for it is a tall, leafy, gawky weed, with heads of minute, uninteresting flowers. For the very choicest corners of the bog, in fine, damp shingle, very rough and fiercely drained, should go some of the marsh Saxifrages—our own rare Hirculus, in its variety major; its Arctic cousin flagellaris—if you can get hold of it; androsacea, if you think its small flowers of dullish milk-white are worth the trouble. Stedlaris is so easy that you can put it in any very wet place; so is rotundifolia from the woods below ; biflora, on the other hand, lovely frail trailer with its great crimson-purple flowers, this, although luxuriating in the wet grey glacier-mud when at home, is more difficult to please when out on a visit—alas! as a rule, not sojourning long in one stay despite the best attention. It requires very careful treatment in the cool, well-drained rock-work. As for aeizocides, this is quite a rampant grower, and may GARDEN, IN THE OLD fg an et . a ea : . | ‘4 ' » _ A . 2.5 C) a “ rot ~. o 4 ‘ 4 | “— > te ts LATA ON A LINGI RAGA AXIFE MORE OF THE SMALLER BOG-PLANTS 239 be put in any marish place, not too choice. 1 Cymbalaria, brilliant little annual, thrives and seeds abundantly in every dampish corner or flat, making, if you choose, a dainty golden contrast with the pale pale purple cruci- form stars of Jonopsidium acaule, similar in size, habit, requirements, easiness, daintiness, and charm. ‘These, when established, will seed themselves independently from year to year, and need no more care than the occasional scattering of a little fresh seed. And, for dank rocks near the bog or overhanging, you have Savifraga Geum, umbrosa, mutata if you love beauty and_ curiosities ; pennsylvanica, hieracifolia, and erosa if you desire coarse and stalwart uglies. On dank, shady ledges, too, thrives riotously one of the queenliest of all Saxifrages—my well- beloved lingulata, with long, loose plumes of snow, which I am now establishing in the cliff above the Lake at Ingleborough, in places exactly similar to those damp shelves, from which I collected profuse mats of it near St. Martin Lantosque. 'The hypnoeides group, too, will be happy on rocks in the neighbourhood of moisture, while one of them, splendid aquatica, will prosper even in the bog itself, though, being large and stout, it must be cautiously introduced—and alas, that none of the Bur- seriana group will tolerate the bog! Nevertheless, in this section, I must pause again to congratulate myself on some beautiful novelties. Who Paulina may have been—unless it was Lollia of that ilk, who ran, so disastrously for herself, against the Augusta Agrippina in the great matrimonial stakes for the hand of the Emperor Claudius—I have no notion. ‘No matter, no matter, if I can get at her, I doubt if her mother will know her again ’—so bitterly do I envy and grudge her monopoly of a most rare, lovely little new Saxifrage, which challenges Gloria, and extinguishes Boydi and even beautiful Faldonside. Saxifraga Paulinae, from some- 7 - ee 240 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS where in Italy, is a thrifty, vigorous little plant, tufted, spiny, silvery as Boydi, but evidently more vigorous and solid. The flowers, too, are larger than those of Boydi, freely borne, and of a pure, exquisite, lemon yellow. So far Paulinae is very rare and very wee; when it has grown larger I can foresee it will claim high royal rank among its kin. Another novelty is pretty Petrarchae, also an Italian—like rochelliana in flower, and like Boydi in growth. Obristit has not flowered yet, nor has the hybrid jaeggeana, but Obristii is clearly a cousin of coriophylla. Corymbosa is simply luteo-viridis, dalmatica is a twin to aretioeides, and beautiful Burnati is worthy of his parents—aeizéon and cochlearis. The sad tale of Gentiana bavarica has been told already ; and the same sad tale lies against pyrenaica, imbricata, and rare little pumila, with four cleft flowers of sombre sapphire; and there are but few Gentians that will help to glorify the ordinary bog. Pnewmonanthe will lift its deep blue trumpets on stiff wiry stems in the heathier, . drier corners; arvernensis, being the same plant, but magnified, will do likewise in the same conditions; septemfida cordifolia, prostrate, with its clusters of immense blue blossoms, will flop happily about on a damp, well-drained ledge, in any light, rich soil; verna and acaulis, in really dry and torrid districts, find their only chance of life in the bog, though in nature, and with me, in my Alpine air, they would both abhor it and refuse to grow; and the glory of asclepiadea has received its due place in the larger bog-garden. Nor have the Gentians many relatives adapted for the marsh; the one noticeable branch of cousins are the Swertias. And these are poor relations indeed. The essential splendour of the Gentians, of course, is their blue; and the Swertias, on leafy stems about a foot high, carry loose spikes of starry flowers which are of * MORE OF THE SMALLER BOG-PLANTS 241 the dullest speckled slate-colour imaginable. ‘The type of their whole race is the common Swertia perennis ; all the others are hardly distinguishable, and the sole recom- mendation of the family is the absolute ease with which any and all of them will prosper in even the wettest parts of the bog. I know no Evythraea for the bog; those bright heads of clear pink Gentians are specially adapted for em- bellishing the bare, dry downs of southern England ; culture, as a rule, they resent. Cicendia, or Gentiana, pusilla I have collected in Swiss bogs, and vainly sought on Dorset moors, following that ominous trail of Mrs. Yeobright and ill-starred, tragic Eustacia. This Cicendia, very delicate and frail, is hardly a plant for the garden, if ever it could be induced to grow there. Nor are the Campanulas of any great note for the choice, high-Alpine bog. The moraine is their pet nursery; Scheuchzeri, however, thrives in wet marsh, pusilla is tolerant, and our own dainty little hederacea is the sweetest of bog-trailers, with wee bells of pale blue on invisible, thread-like stems. This, however, is hard to establish, and must, I think, have tough, coarse grasses to ramble through and seek cover in before it can be made truly and permanently happy. Few things can be lovelier than the mixture of this delicate, gentle azure, with the delicate, gentle flesh- pink of Anagallis tenella, another wee native marsh-plant, which by a happy touch of nature is often found with the Campanula in wet places of the West. The Bog- pimpernel, near cousin of the Primulas, is an absolutely prostrate thing, creeping about with branches of glossy little round green leaves arranged in pairs. In due time, in summer, these are hidden from sight by a profusion of stemless flowers, large, starry, of an exquisite shade of pale rose. I have seen the Anagaillis on Surrey heaths ; I have seen it on a wet rock in the Lakes, where Ruskin Q 242 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS used to go and worship it; and never does the almost exotic charm of the plant evaporate; it is so profuse and so lovable in blossom that one can hardly, somehow, believe a thing thus richly dainty to be a native of our well-trodden, humdrum land. And, with the blue of Campanula hederacea, the Pimpernel becomes loveliness made more lovely. Nature, when she turns her mind to the matter, is indeed a cunning artist, and arranges many a picture of bewildering beauty. Have you ever seen the orange of Arnica blending, on a high, rough mountain- side, with the violet daisies of Aster alpinus and the great shaggy bells of Campanula barbata, soft and pale in their delicate china-blue? Or the violent sapphire of Gentiana bavarica grading with the gentle azure of Myosotis rupi- cola against the ardent matted rose of Androsace glacialis, with the snow-and-gold of Ranunculus alpestris to com- plete the harmony? Or, for a subtler effect, a meadow crowded with the celestial stars of Gentiana verna, amid the innumerable lilacs, mauves, purples, tyrian darknesses of a hundred million mountain pansies ? The most subtle picture, though, that I ever saw, lies far back in my memory of the Alps. I was descend- ing through a golden sunset, from Beatenberg to noisome, clamorous Interlaken. ‘The evening was clear, calm, and radiant; the town lay very far below us, unseen, unguessed, unguessable amid the benign tran- quillity of the hills. And suddenly we came out into a marshy clearing of the woodland, falling away steeply down towards the sunset. And the whole slope, against the fiery light of the West, was thick with the soft rose of Primula farinosa, abundant as sands of the sea, and among it everywhere stood the livid, purple spikes of Bartsia alpina, incandescent and amethystine in the red glow. Now the Alpine Bartsia, with dull, labiate flowers, is coloured, bracts and leaves and all, with a most MORE OF THE SMALLER BOG-PLANTS 243 wonderful sad deep shade of plum-colour, which, by itself, is haunting and subtle enough in all conscience, without any sickliness or indefiniteness of tone. But the colour of the Primula, rich and dainty pink, is of precisely the shade to fulfil and double the attraction of the other. And the two plants together in mass form a picture more perfectly satisfying, I verily believe, than any other floral harmony that I have ever seen—except perhaps that of delicate, butter-coloured T'ulipa Batalini among the lavender stars of Anemone robinsoniana. Bartsia alpina is a rare native of our northern mountain- bogs; you will meet it here and there in Westmoreland, round Malham Cove, and in all the streamlets of Upper Teesdale ; I have never found it easy to establish, and have, at times, suspected it of some morbid tendency in the matter of its root-system, so delusively simple is it to collect and plant. Anyhow, for the bog-garden, it isa case like Mrs. Allen’s vain longing for acquaintance— ‘Despair of nothing that we would attain’; and, may I add, ‘ Unwearied diligence our point will gain.” But I think I had better say ‘ may, with all due respect to the Divine Jane, and the edifying unknown authority—was it a copy-book ?—from which she quotes. Besides Anagallis and Bartsia, our own marshes give us some valuable things. For the common bog-Asphodel, Narthecium ossifragum—the ‘ Bone-breaker,’ because its glow deludes you into sloughs where you break your legs —with its sturdy stout spikes of golden yellow, and its little swordlike growths of leafage, like a wee Iris, is good and very easy for any rougher corner in damp, heathy soil. Very much smaller, choicer, and less brilliant is Tofieldia palustris, a rarity which, like so many other rarities in England, makes one in the aristocratic band that turns Upper Teesdale into the Almack’s of British plant-life. Tofieldia is like Nartheciwm in growth, but 244 ALPINES AND BOG-PLANTS very much daintier, with only one or two growths, and a fluffy little spire of small pale-yellow flowers. Canali- culata, from the Alps, is rather bigger, and both are interesting for the bog, to combine with the rather similar pink and white spikes of their compatriot, Poly- gonum viviparum. As for our rare bog-Orchids, Liparis and Malazis, let no one, I would urge, attempt them, or nurse hope of growing them. Dull little greenish things, they are no great loss; but the same sad advice applies to three royally beautiful marsh-Orchids from North America—Pogonia, Calopogon, and Arethusa—plants of the spongiest, wettest peat-bog, loving to grow in cushions of the living Sphagnum, like the Cranberry. The Cranberry itself, with flowers like wee crimson Cyclamens on thread-like stems, is very pretty and harmless for the bog; Andromeda polifolia is larger, with rosy bells of blossom, and no less easy. Then there are our own native Pinguiculas, vulgaris, and the very rare white-flowered alpina, for the same facile culture as I have already described for grandiflora. But lusitanica and bizarre vallisneriaefoha are too diffi- cult for any ordinary garden. Sitsyrinchiwm anceps is an attractive little plant, native to one patch of ground in western Ireland, and delightfully free and happy in the bog —a small bulbous thing, cousin to all the Amaryllids, with grassy foliage, and big stars of bright- blue that break from the rush-like stems. This delights in wet ground, and seeds itself freely without effort ; and altogether is a treasure. Even more glorious is the similar, larger bellum, for much the same, or drier treatment; and most glorious of all is grandiflorum from British Columbia, rush-like and very fine in growth, with thready, waving stems that break out in February and early March into immense wide pendent bells of an ardent silky sheen of violet. This lovely, lovely thing is MORE OF THE SMALLER BOG-PLANTS 245 perfectly comfortable in the garden, if only you give it a select corner in light peaty soil, in a position, for precaution’s sake, where spring winds and rains may not too violently assault the delicate fabric of the flower. Sisyrinchium striatum, to warn my readers, is totally different ; in growth big and coarse, like a German Iris, with crowded spikes of stupid little straw - coloured blooms. This likes an ordinary dryish border—and doesn’t deserve it. Not unlike Stsyrinchium anceps, again, is the Blue Rush of Provence.