MRS.EDWAED HAVING MACMILLAN LIBRARY STORAGE ITEM LP1-B12C UBC LIBRARIES 1. iitiht%d^timi^^\ Arrcr.?irm I>C0. rr I " j J Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2010 with funding from University of British Columbia Library http://www.archive.org/details/bookofpeonOOhard THE BOOK OF THE PEONY THE PRACTICAL BOOKS OF HOME LIFE ENRICHMENT EACH PROFUSELY ILLUS- TRATED, HANDSOMELY BOUND. Octavo. Cloth. In a slip case. THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF OUTDOOR ROSE GROWING Bt GEORGE C. THOMAS, Jr. De Luxe Fourth Edition, Net, $6.00 Garden Edition, Net, $2.00 THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF EARLY AMERICAN ARTS AND CRAFTS Bt HAROLD DONALDSON EBERLEIN AND ABBOT McCLURE Net, $e.00 THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF ARCHITECTURE Bt C. MATLACK PRICE Net, $6.00 THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF ORIENTAL RUGS Bt dr. G. griffin LEWIS New Edition, Revised and Enlarged Net, $6.00 THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF GARDEN ARCHITECTURE Bt PHEBE WESTCOTT HUMPHREYS Net, $6.00 THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF PERIOD FURNITURE Bt HAROLD DONALDSON EBERLEIN AND ABBOT McCLURE ^ Net, $6.00 IN PREPARATION THE PRACTICAL BOOK OF INTERIOR DECORATION By EBERLEIN, McCLURE & HOLLOW AY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY PUBLISHERS PHILADELPHIA MODELE DE PERFECTION (Crousse, 1875) Rose type. One of the fine pinks of unusual form. Has strong stems, beautiful foliage and is a free bloomer T THE BOOK OF THE PEONY BY MRS. EDWARD HARDING WITH 20 ILLUSTRATIONS IS FULL COLOUR 22 IX DOUBLETOSE AND A MAP PHILADELPHIA AND LONDON J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY 1917 COPYRIGHT 1917. BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY PUBLISHED MARCH, 1917 PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY AT THE WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A. PREFACE ALTHOUGH the peony has been a favourite XJLin gardens for very many years, and although experts and hybridisers have been developing and improving the flower for over half a century, no book has yet been published containing the widely scattered facts as to its history and cultivation. In France and England both amateur and professional horticulturists lavished time and de- votion on its improvement. The marked success attained by them in producing incredibly beau- tiful types caused the greater appreciation of the peony to extend to this country. In America such men as Richardson, Hollis and Terry have done work along similar lines to that of the foreign experts. The peony — at present extensively grown — is constantly and rapidly increasing in popularity. Certain enthusiastic commercial growers have made peonies their specialty — sometimes peonies alone and sometimes peonies together with a few other perennials. Their judgment in specialis- PREFACE ing has been proved sound by events : on the hsts of some of these growers there are more than ten thousand names of active customers. Hun- dreds of acres are planted to peonies to supply the demand. The annual exhibition and the publications of the American Peony Societj^ have done much to awaken the interest of those who have had but a slight acquaintance with this flower. Many persons, vastly surprised on seeing the improved varieties for the first time, complain at not hav- ing been sooner shown the sources of pleasure that the peony holds. Because of the lack of easily accessible in- formation, until now the knowledge of a finer cultivation of the peony has remained the prop- erty of the comparatively small number who have made its growing either a hobby or a business. Fortunately the peony is a very hardy and friendly flower that does its cheerful best to bloom even though neglected. AVlien attention such as is ungrudgingly expended upon less responsive flowers is bestowed upon the peony, its gratitude finds expression in an increased loveliness which is more than sufficient reward. 6 PREFACE With the hope of bringing the modern peony before those who do not know it, this book has been planned. The ever-widening interest in gar- dening and the serious and thorough work of amateurs to-day encourage me to beheve that what I have written, because I love the peony, will be of interest and help to others. To Mr. B. H. Farr of Wyomissing, Penn- sylvania, my thanks are due for the auto- chrome of the rare and beautiful P. lutea. To Mr. A. H. Fewkes of Newton Higlilands, to Mr. Theodore Hobby of the Metropolitan Museum of Fine Arts and to Mr. JMorris Earle of Williams, Brown and Earle, Philadelphia, my deep appreciation of their interest and kind- ness is expressed. I especially wish to acknowledge my indebted- ness to Mr. George H. Peterson of Fair Lawn, New Jersey. As typical blooms from my ow^n recently transplanted beds were unobtainable, the illustrations in this book, with a few exceptions, were secured through Mr. Peterson's generous courtesy. The carefully prepared Bulletins on the Clas- sification, etc., of the Peony — the work of Dr. J. 7 PREFACE Eliot Coit and Mr. Leon D. Batchelor— have been of great assistance to me. I also desire to extend my thanks to Dr. H. H. Whetzel for permission to reprint his Bulle- tin on the Diseases of the Peony. Ajlice Harding Burnley Farm February, 1917 CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I. An Appreciation of the Peony 13 II. The Mythology, Ancient and Modern History of the Peony 25 III. Best Varieties ant) Their Characteristics 69 IV. Extending the Period of Bloom 103 V. Purchasing 117 YI. Where to Plant and How to Prepare the Soil 133 VII. Planting and Cultivation 149 VLll. Propagation 173 IX. The Tree Peony — Description and History 185 X. Tree Peonies: Cultivation, Propagation m^d Best Varieties 207 XI. Various Species of the Peony 221 Appendix 231 Index 255 ILLUSTRATIONS COLOUR PLATES PAGE MoDELE DE Perfection Frontispiece solfatare 16 Adolphe Rousseau 18 Reine Hortense 28 Mrs. McKinley S4 Souvenir de l'Exposition Universelle 46 Stephania 58 Felix Crousse 62 Suzanne Dessert 78 P. Tenuifolia 106 P. Officinalis 110 P. Suffruticosa or Moutan, "Caroline d'Italie 112 P. LUTE-A. 114 Gloire de Chas. Gombault 122 Alice de Julvecourt 128 Philomele 138 Mad.\iie de Vatry 152 Mad.'LME Bucquet 156 Asa Gray 170 Porcelain of the Kang Hsi Period (1662-1796) 188 HALFTONE PLATES COURONNE d'Or SO Marie Jacquin 88 Page from Herbarius of Arnoldu8 de Villanova, Published IN 1484 40 Page from Ger.vrd's Herbal, Published in England in 1597 42 DUCHESSE DE NeMOURS 50 Aurore 54 Festiva Maxima 72 Sarah Bernhardt 80 Le PRINTEilPS 108 Madame Lemonier 122 11 ILLUSTRATIONS 12 PAQB Madame Calot 124 Peonies in Landscape Planting on Miss Morris's Estate Near Philadelphia. 136 Claire Dubois 144 Stalk of Albiflora Showing Terminal Bud Which Should be Left and Lateral Buds Which Should be Removed or Pinched Off 162 Dormant Healthy Peony Root 162 Madame D. Treyeran 166 La Tullpe 176 Un'named Seedling of Herbaceous Peon-y, Single Type 180 Madame Jules Dessert 182 P. MouTAN (Tree Peony) 202 Reine Elizabeth 210 Diseases of the Peony 237 ^L\P Showing Localities in Which the Most Important Peonies ARE Native 26 AN APPRECIATION OF THE PEONY THE BOOK OF THE PEONY CHAPTER I AN APPRECIATION OF THE PEONY ' " Full of set flowers, Full is my chamber ; Thou art most stately, White peony." — HakJcu. THE peony of to-day — too little known and too seldom sung — the brilliant result of years of steadfast devotion and untiring effort on the part of peony lovers and hybridisers, is the most superb and commanding flower which the garden holds. The iris, Oriental poppy, fox-glove, holly- hock, lily, dahlia and chrysanthemum each has its own special radiance, yet each is surpassed by the peony with its magnificence of mass and per- ^ I have adopted the spelling generally used in this country and approved by the Century Dictionary. In England " paeony " is the customary spelling. The botanical name is Paeonia. 15 THE BOOK OF THE PEONY fection of detail. The rose, fine, exquisite and fragrant as it is, must yield first rank to the mod- ern peony, which by reason of its sheer wealth of splendour and majesty of presence is now entitled to be called the Queen of Flowers. The compelling charm of the improved types of peony lies not only in their grace and comeli- ness, but in the infinite variety of both flowers and foliage. Starting with single blooms, like huge anemones, through semi-double flowers, re- sembling water-lilies, and various enchanting forms of doubling up to the solid mass of petals, as in Avalanche, the peony holds one spell-bound in admiration. The wide diversity of foliage and habit of growth makes the plants an object of alluring interest. The leaves of certain sorts of peony are much divided and fern-like ; of others, broad and strong with leathery quality. Usually varnished and lustrous, they run in colour range through many shades of green — often tinged with copper or with red. Some kinds are dwarf and bushy; some of medium height and spreading growth, and others tall with a bold outline. All, however, have an air of sturdy character and self- reliance. 16 Bomb type. SOLFATARE (Calot, 1861) A peony of exquisite beauty and distinction AN APPRECIATION OF THE PEONY Fondly as I esteem the rose — ^heretofore the accepted standard of lovehness — I feel that the peony has the advantage over it, not only in su- periority of flowers, but in other important points. The peony has no thorns to surprise or cause dismay. After the peony blooms its foliage re- mains an adornment — a contrast to the small and scanty leaves of the rose, which are often dis- figured and unsightly. All through the garden season the peony has a landscape value which the rose lacks. And, last but not least, the peony requires neither spraying nor pruning: to the conscientious owner, burdened with the number- less details of spring garden-keeping, this is a welcome relief. Fifty years ago the word peony meant one thing: it referred to the red " piney " of unfra- grant memory, which, though highly prized and desirable at that date, suffers when compared with the beauties of to-day. Now the word peony conjures up a large variety of shapely flowers packed with glossy silken petals in a hundred shades, tints, and combinations of white, pink, yellow and red. One who sees for the first time typical specimens of the modern peony is thrilled 2 17 THE BOOK OF THE PEONY with their breath-taking loveliness: even those who know well all the fascinations of the flower are stirred by it to new wonder and delight each recurring year. Lest I be thought too loud in my praises of the peony, I will quote from one of many enthusi- astic authorities — a book, too, which is not essen- tially a horticultural work. No one, I venture, will consider the Encyclopaedia Britannica given to exaggeration in its statements, yet this is what it says about the peony : " P^ONY (botanically Paeonia ; Nat. ord. Ranuncula- .ceae q. v. ) , a genus of plants remarkable for their large and gorgeous flowers. There are two distinct sorts, one of the strong-growing herbaceous kind, with fleshy roots and annual stems, derived mainly from Paeonia albiflora and P. officinalis ; the other, called the tree peony, stiff'-growing plants A^dth half-woody permanent stems, which have sprung from the Chinese P. moutan. " The herbaceous paeonies usually grow from 2 to 3 ft. in height, and have large, much-divided leaves, and ample flowers of varied and attractive colors, and of a globular form in the double varieties, which are those most prized in gardens. They usually blossom, in May and June, and as ornaments for large beds in pleas- ure grounds, and for the front parts of shrubberies, few flowers equal them in gorgeous effect. " The older varieties of P. albiflora include Candida, 18 ADOLPHE RUUS.