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VOUTH VIHOOTOLSINV 


MY SHRUBS 


7 EDEN PHILLPOTTS 
TH Prey ILLUSTRATIONS Bat 


NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY MCMXV 


ILLUSTRATIONS 


From Photographs by Messrs. R. Durrant & Son. 


RM RURGANS) 0 00 i a Romo 
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ASIATICA . f ‘ 2 Ps ‘ é P “ aia is 
MON SPECIOSUS anp CALLISTEMON SALIGNUS . . ,, » 24 
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JUNIPER anp GOLDEN CHAMECYPARIS. . . - » » 6 
BOR MNORTE ARAN in Fe ae ee a 


vi MY SHRUBS 


LONICERA HILDEBRANDTI 
LUCULIA GRATISSIMA 

MAGNOLIA STELLATA 

MANDEVILLA SUAVEOLENS 
MELIANTHUS MAJOR 

OLEARIA MACRODONTA 
PHILADELPHUS MEXICANUS 
PHYSIANTHUS ALBENS 
PLAGIANTHUS LYALLII 
PYXIDANTHERA BARBULATA . 
RHODODENDRON CAMPYLOCARPUM 
RHODODENDRON ROYLEI 
RHODODENDRON DALHOUSIZ: 
RHODODENDRON SESTERIANUM , ‘ 
.\»AZALEODENDRON “ BROUGHTONII AUREUM ” 
A ROSE IN JUNE 

ROSA SINICA ‘‘ ANEMONE” 

ROSA LEVIGATA 

ROSA BRUNONII 

RUBUS DELICIOSUS . 
STEPHANANDRA FLEXUOSA 
SUTHERLANDIA FRUTESCENS . 
TAMARIX ODESSANA 


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MY SHRUBS 


INTRODUCTION 


not generally receive the attention they deserve.’”’ The 

statement continues to be true, though things are more 
hopeful for these plants ; they are coming into their own gradually, 
and the shrubbery begins to be a valued feature of the garden, 
instead of that worthless jungle with which our fathers were 
content. Your true gardener naturally seeks and aspires to the 
unattainable, and since my patch is but little larger than a table- 
cloth, my desire has always been towards trees. This is 
the normal ambition of people with small gardens, while others, 
who possess ancestral acres, and could display a forest and plant 
pinetums for posterity, will be found to cultivate the moraine, and 
desire nothing more than enough limestone or granite chips to 
filla hatbox. For such is our contrary human nature. 

Trees, then, being out of the question here, I have bowed 
to fate in this matter, and fallen back upon shrubs, or trees that 
will preserve shrubby dimensions, until my concern with them 
has ended and I go where our “ half-hardies ”’ cease from troub- 
ling and the Alpines are at rest. Even shrubs cannot receive all 
the accommodation they desire ; but, on the principle that a lord 
would rather be elbowed by another lord than a chimney-sweep 


or a coal-heaver, I only suffer my plants to be hustled by their 
A 


ss G oe said George Nicholson, thirty years ago, ‘‘ do 


. MY SHRUBS 


equals. One hates the pruning knife, yet it has to be used, and 
if used at the right time (after flowering as a rule) no great harm 
is done. I can seldom point to “ specimens,” yet specimens 
occasionally occur here of precious things whose adult size permits 
them to reach perfection without hindrance ; and, happily, among 
these may be seen my favourite plant, Rhododendron campylo- 
carpum, a fine, well-favoured piece, seven feet high. 

Here, on our limestone crags, rhododendrons and American 
plants in general are a test by which you may separate real gar- 
deners from those who merely profess and call themselves such. 
There are, for instance, women in this locality who pass for dis- 
tinguished horticulturalists, yet exhibit neither rhododendron nor 
azalea in all their glades. If cross-examined, they answer, readily 
enough, that limestone is death to these fine things, and that 
they are therefore impossible. Yet these women, who would 
shudder at the thought of a ten-pound note for a peat-bed, will 
spend twice that amount on a hat. A glimpse of the glories of 
the rhododendron race is as nothing to them against a yard of 
ribbon and half a dead bird, or a stick of asparagus, perched above 
their fair brows. ‘They are good and gracious creatures, success- 
ful mothers and wives, but they are not gardeners at all, and must 
neither claim nor be granted that distinction. Peat, then, we need 
here, but into no limestone graves are we to thrust it, as I have 
done to my cost. The peat should be heaped above the limestone, 
so that your rhododendrons, azaleas and the rest have their roots 
safe out of the reach of the nether fires. Build your peat in islands 
rising full three feet above the stormy seas of lime, that autumnal 
rains set flowing, and all should be well. In my experience few 
really choice shrubs have much use for lime save the roses. Many 


MY SHRUBS | 3 


good things are, of course, indifferent and tolerate it, while some 
fruit bearers, such as Diospyros Kaki and Eriobotrya, and perhaps 
Feijoa, appreciate lime ; but, for the most part, my plants can do 
exceedingly well without, and I have, little by little, carted the 
local soil away from my garden and substituted beds of leaf and 
sand and peat. The native loam is so full of lime, and so largely 
composed of coarse red clay, that I feel happier without it, and 
escape many discomforts. My beds are always sweet and clean. 
There is no mud, and mud is a thing that neither self-respecting 
plant nor gardener appreciates. It is the same with shade. 
Certain flowering shrubs do their duty in shade, and many insist 


on half-shade ; but no shrub tolerates stuffiness, or deprivation 
from rain and light. I like plenty of shadow cast from south or 


west, but overhead shade is much to be avoided. Speaking 
generally, the Chilians are all peat and shade-lovers, and all ex- 
ceedingly thirsty. You can hardly over-water them in the summer, 
and they are quite content to bid farewell to the sun at noon. 
They thrive on the east side of my house, but they are protected 
from the east by a high wall and some yews and hollies. Many 
Australians are hard to please, and must be’ watched in winter ; 
while high level New Zealanders for the most part face our 
weather bravely enough. The Chatham Island plants are also 
not hardy even in the West, but the comparative smallness of their 
habitat and their propinquity to the sea mean that they would 
naturally be more tender than those from New Zealand’s moun- 
tains. Does Corynocarpus levigata stand in the open anywhere 
in England, for instance? Perhaps in Cornwall—certainly no- 
where else. My little piece lives out of doors from May till 
October ; then it sneaks into a cold house. Doryanthes excelsa 


4 MY SHRUBS 


lives out of doors with protection; but he never does anything 
more than grow unwell during January, and recover again by July. 
His health is the only thing that interests him, and he has no 
time to justify his existence. I think that I shall send him to 
Sir David Prain as an in-patient. 

Protection of plants during winter is a problem. I have pro- 
tected many a good plant to death, for your evergreen must have 
light and air, and if wrapped up within an inch of its life, that 
inch is often passed, and a withered ghost appears, when spring 
returns. You cannot bundle living things up in Archangel mat- 
ting, and tell them to be good and go to sleep for a third of the 
year. I think the vital parts vary, and, of course, the night tem- 
perature that may be deadly after a long day of rain, does no 
harm if the soil be dry. Frost following sharply on heavy rain 
always works the most cruel damage, while a long spell of 
east wind and nightly frosts are also very punishing. I believe 
in protecting with loose matting hung on stakes round a plant, 
and perhaps a little open litter packed round the stems above 
earth level. Overhead, light screens to break frosts are desirable 
and often necessary. These could be moved at any time, and 
kept off as much as possible by day, unless the weather is very 
inclement. With shrubs that have a wall behind them, I manage 
curtains of matting that can be flung off and only drawn when 
frost threatens. But I never wrap up anything permanently, or 
protect so that the earth about the plant gets too dry. If the 
drainage is carefully looked to when a bed is made, and the soil 
is all right, they seldom suffer below ground. Of course, most 
deciduous things get through our winters without discomfort ; 
but many of the noblest shrubs are evergreen, and in many cases, 


Pail et iat aE og ti) ee ane ae oe is 


a 
;: 


MY SHRUBS 5 


if they lose their new wood in the winter, the bloom will not 
come, when that is the wood they flower upon. I had what 
appeared a happy thought for protecting the buds of tree pzeonies 
last year, and packed them into straw bottle-cases. But it was 
not a success, for I bruised the buds. A screen hung over them 
to break the frost is all they need. ‘The early-flowering rhododen- 
drons must also have protection for the bud, while such tender 
folk as R. griffithianum, R. sesterianum, or R. Falconeri, though 
safe in many West Country gardens, are always a little coddled 
by me if the weather turns very cold. The noble hybrids of 
Griffithianum are, however, hardy here, and call for no care. 

What remarkable views nurserymen have, by the way, on the 
subject of hardiness in a shrub! ‘These poets always know where 
there is one specimen doing magnificently in the open air. They 
mention the identical garden, so that there shall be no deception. 
And we, with warmer gardens and equal energy and enterprise, 
picture the superb thing flourishing with us also, and emulating 
Sir Somebody’s famous piece, that was planted in early Victorian 
times and never looked back. Then we pay our half-guinea, and 
get it—three inches high, with four leaves and a hectic flush, as 
who would say: ‘“‘ The dying salutes thee.”” Of course nobody 
hears much more about it. When questioned by a jealous but 
tactless friend, we pass the matter off lightly, and say it was quite 
over-estimated, or the mice ate it, or something of that sort. But 
he knows the truth, and tells our rivals that we failed with it. 
Again, there is the shrub that the growers, with a sudden twinge 
of conscience, frankly confess needs a favoured district. Never 
trust that plant outside a stove. Still, of course, one goes on 
believing the nurserymen year after year. They expect it, and 


6 MY SHRUBS 


would be hurt if we did not. I always fall to the bait that a thing 
“‘ does well on the West Coast of Ireland.” It is extraordinary 
the number of fine plants that do well on the West Coast of Ireland, 
though they simply won’t breathe the air of the West of England. 
I shall go to the West Coast of Ireland some day, with an open 
mind, to satisfy myself about these allegations. 

There are a few points that even gardeners forget, and one 
is that for plants that would enjoy the Equator, two degrees of 
frost are quite as fatal as fifty. We struggle in snug corners with 
sub-tropical vegetation, and whisper to it hopefully that our 
winters down here are a mere flea-bite, and that everything is 
going to be all right. But we might just as well tell pineapple and 
sugar-cane that it is going to be all right, as some of our victims. 
In fact, an English winter is a very severe ordeal for Southerners, 
and, though the conditions vary profoundly, and we can certainly - 
here, on the fringe of the Channel, grow things which you in the 
Midlands must not dream about, still, we have our dour experiences 
and tragedies from which you escape. For you feel not even 
tempted to make certain experiments; but we are lulled into 
fancied security ; our fine pieces grow gigantic, and we forget 
and become vainglorious. ‘Then follows the downfall—as when, 
not many years ago, in Cornwall, every Clethra arborea of im- 
portance in the county was felled to the ground by fifteen degrees 
of frost. Ten years must elapse before these clethras build 
themselves up again. But if a Canary Islander thus suffers, 
how much more is a shrub from the fringe of the tropics in danger ? 

Leucodendron argenteum is, of course, a tree at home; but my 
specimen of this most beautiful foliage plant stands no more than 
six feet high, and has, until now, lived in a pot and emerged only 


ee a en 
F 


MY SHRUBS ~ 


during the summer. Leucodendron never goes indoors again here, 
however. He is in the ground for good or ill—and has a “ lew” 
spot between a wall and a buttress, protected from everywhere but 
the sky, and facing south. I could winter there myself; but will 
the Cape silver tree? I doubt it. My purpose is to cover up his 
little trunk and lower limbs, and arrange a piece of glass over his 
head to keep the rain and frost out of his foliage crowns; but I 
shall not swathe him, though if anything arctic happens I shall 
envelop him for the time being against it. If necessary, my own 
greatcoat shall cover him. 

The real places for our best treasures lie in glades and dingles 
amid thick woods and conifers at the mouths of rivers. There 
Embothrium flourishes and Guevina avellana towers to a tree. 
The largest plant in England of this latter glorious Chilian dwells 
within twelve miles of my home—a privilege that can only be 
realised by a good gardener. 

One word of caution must be uttered. While money and 
energy will advance most worldly concerns, these are minor 
considerations in the matter of a shrub. Money and energy may 
start a fine piece under perfect conditions, but they will not hasten 
its growth. Shrubs, in fact, are no good to an old man in a hurry. 
If you are over sixty years of age, stick to the herbaceous border, 
orchids and fruit; indeed, forty-five is none too early to begin 
growing shrubs. But you will find the pursuit worth while, for, 
though they offer no intellectual excitement, they furnish quite 
an intelligent pastime, and may serve to gladden the leisure of a 
busy man, or even keep an idle one out of mischief—provided the 
worthless individual can be grafted with proper ardour for the 
craft. 


ge MY SHRUBS 


In this booklet I propose to submit some few hundred genera, 
with their species, that I have myself grown. As yet there is no 
finality about frutescent things; but should a list of the best 
hundred extant shrubs be drawn up by one qualified to make it, 
I am sure that many of my favourites would appear therein. 


CHAPTER I 


O me the names that it has pleased man to bestow upon 
the works of nature are always interesting, and in this brief 
excursion I shall sometimes furnish derivation for many a 

household word in the gardener’s list. These you will find that you 
have forgotten, if, indeed, you ever knew them. Many are apposite, 
and many fatuous and grotesque. Imagination was needed in this 
matter, but Science saw no reason to invite the co-operation of those 
who possessed it. She muddled on, without the least poetic feeling 
for what she was about, and, as a result, a host of fine things are 
called after some utterly insignificant structural accident, while 
even more of them immortalise industrious nonentities with 
perfectly hideous names. Adam, at least, escaped this crime, 
for Tom, Dick and Harry were not invented when he opened 
his eyes in the Garden. 

In the case of Abelia, a shrub with which I may open my list, 
the quite euphonious word represents Dr. Clarke Abel, who visited 
China rather less than a hundred years ago, wrote an account of 
his journey in 1818, and passed in 1826. Not until some years 
after his death did Abelia come to England ; but now there are 
four or five of the species in cultivation, of which A. floribunda is 
easily the best. This handsome Mexican evergreen, with purple- 
crimson flowers, is prosperous in the West Country ; but it likes 
a wall, and, if in the open, should have winter protection. A. 
triflora and A. rupestris are good hardy shrubs from Hindustan 

9 B 


Ke) MY SHRUBS 


and China respectively. They flower in the fall, but have no great 
value or charm. 

Of the dwarf Abies, a delightful, little neat conifer is A. hudsonica 
and the varieties of A. sub-alpina are also good for your miniature 
forest. General mention of the natural dwarfs is made else- 
where. 

Abutilon is akin to Malva. They are showy things, and make 
great plants against a wall, with flowers white and yellow, 
crimson and chocolate ; but best I like A. vitifolium, the vine- 
leaved abutilon, whose foliage is always beautiful, and whose 
porcelain blue, or pure white, flowers plentifully cover the shrub 
in May. A. witifolium attains to a great size, and is as hardy in 
Devonshire as most other Chilians. I find half shade suits them 
best—a rule for Chilians in general. In full sun this shrub is apt 
to drop its flower-buds unexpanded. A. megapotamicum— the 
big river ” abutilon—a brilliant and cheerful gem from Rio Grande 
with blossoms of red, yellow, and brown—is worth a wall. 

With Acacia I have failed. ‘The various species tried all made 
fine plants, and for ten years A. dealbata regularly covered her 
feathery limbs with dense inflorescence ; but once only did the 
weather suffer a fine display. With February too often comes 
frost, to ruin the promise of splendour at a critical moment when 
the flower is opening. In more sheltered gardens this and other 
varieties do well. I should like to try Rice’s wattle from Tasmania 
if I knew where to get it. 

Of Acer, I have only a few examples. ‘The little Japanese 
dwarf maples make fine colour with their purple and rosy foliage on 
arockery. ‘The dark-leaved sorts are the hardiest, and those with 
the beautiful variegated foliage often fail me. They are perfect - 


ee ee en ae ae ee <n I eee aren ee ae a ae eam Bi Seg St 
‘ . ‘i tae eho Cee ye a om a a? ae aoa, F rat A te v8 SS ose 
? ¥ an 


a a a erg SN Hides Oy I a ee bo nk a CAE ee 


MY SHRUBS II 


little natural dwarf trees ; but some grow to a good size, though 
slowly. Beside Como, I saw a drift of these purple maples planted 
with blue conifers. They made noble colour, and now I have a 
purple maple and a sky-blue abies side by side. A sheaf of purple 
gladiolus supports them, and completes the little picture. Acer 
negundo is always welcome against a background of shadow or 
evergreen, and others I grow for the autumn colour they take. 
A. saccharinum, the sugar maple, is no longer a shrub, and will 
soon reach an altitude when we shall have to part. It is one of 
the first of things to light the flaming autumn signals. 

Actinidia is a small genus, and as yet I have only seen A. volubilis 
from Japan and A. chinensis flower here. The first is a fine climber, 
and the trusses of snowy little bell-like blossoms are beautiful. A. 
chinensis is also a grand climbing plant, and its furry crimson leaves 
in spring atone for a tardiness in flowering. Its yellow blossoms 
are not striking ; perhaps they will be followed by a dessert of 
pleasant fruits some day. I wait in trust and hope for this de- 
layed bounty. A. Henryi is the latest of the company to appear 


_ in England, and it sounds not much different from the last named. 


The family of Adenocarpus is scattered through the Canary 
Islands, Spain, and South of France. It affords no opportunities 
for great enthusiasm. A. anagyrus, from Teneriffe, is a fairly 
hardy evergreen of peculiar habit, with tufts of yellow pea-blossoms; 
but I should not miss it. 

Hisculus parviflora, the buck-eye, makes a beautiful little tree 
with spires of feathery white and pink blossom, like a fairy horse- 
chestnut. It fruits late, and as yet I have not gleaned ripe nuts 
from it. The word is Pliny’s, given by him to an oak with edible 
acorns. But esculus, though esculent in letter, is not in truth. 


12 MY SHRUBS 


:. californica flowers during May, and makes a shrub of great 
distinction. This should ripen its fruit. 

Akebia quinata—a Japanese climber with a Japanese name— 
flourishes in the south and takes kindly to some English gardens ; 
but here the growth is feeble and the fragrant, chocolate-coloured 
flowers are few. A. labata seems to be a sturdier plant of more 
promise. Moreover, it blooms amonth later—to its own advantage. 

Alberta magna is a handsome evergreen from Natal, with scarlet 
trumpet flowers, like a honey-suckle. It enjoys the summer in a 
sunny spot out-of-doors, but must retire to the cold house in October. 

Merely remarking that Albizzia would be welcome but probably 
useless, and smiling upon Aloysia citriodora, named after Maria 
Louisa, mother of Ferdinand VII of Spain; dismissing the 
Amelanchiers also as beautiful folk of no pressing importance, we 
may admire the dwarf almond, Amygdalyus nana, from ‘Tartary, 
which, a yard high and well furnished, makes a dainty shrub. 
For two hundred and fifty years this little Russian has been 
known in our gardens, and is still far too rare. It sets its 
bitter fruits well when prosperous. Almonds are always desirable, 
and I remember a plain nigh Toulon, where the flowering trees 
spread over leagues of tawny earth. One looked down upon 
their rosy cloud from a mountain-side with much emotion. 

Ampherephis albescens is an evergreen with pale clusters of 
aster-like flowers, while Andrachne colchica has yet to declare itself 
with me; but this plant from the Caucasus possesses virtues, and 
is quite hardy. It came from a German arboretum, and promises 
to be a graceful shrub though the inflorescence is trifling. 

That little Laplander, Andromeda tetragona, persists in a shaded, 
peaty corner, but cannot settle down to any great display. It 


MY SHRUBS 13 


_ flowers feebly and dwells with a colony of dwarf conifers. Perhaps 
if I set it among flowering plants, it would discover its possibilities 
_ and hang out more snowy bells in spring. Again, if I were to 
. a call it “ Cassiope,” it might perchance declare itself, for all gar- 
a: _deners can furnish incidents of plants that languish under one 
name, which will flourish at once when the synonym is provided. 
____ Anopteris glandulosa is a very fine thing indeed. Above the 
_ shining laurel-like leaves, hang white waxy flowers as big as a 
__snowdrop. It is rare in cultivation, but by challenging your 
__nurseryman and hinting that the shrub is beyond his reach, he 


rr may make an effort and procure it for you. Do not, however, 
es suppose he will perform this feat for less than half a guinea; he 
i E _ may indeed want more ; and he will have earned it if he procures 
4 _ youagood piece. Anopteris flourishes in a garden of a friend, who 
. _ holdsithardy. But his ideas on that subject must be discounted, for 
i _ he dwells beside a tidal river sheltered from all winds that blow. 
a Therefore give it your most sheltered spot in half-shade, and guard 
it jealously through the winter. 

Bo A good silky shrub is Anthyllis Barba-fovis—a kidney vetch © 
a X that grows six feet high. Mine, which I collected as a seedling 
_ beside the Mediterranean, on roasting sun-scorched cliffs, did 


is well for many years before it passed away. Its early inflorescence 
of pale butter-colour was often discouraged by frost, but the 
_ plant prospered until I moved it—a course it resented to the 
extent of perishing. I remember the good thing at Kew, on a 
wall, but know not if it prospers there yet. 

___ Aralia supplies many handsome species for the garden and 
_ A. Sieboldii, the Japanese evergreen, attains to a great size and 
splendour among us in the West. A. spinosa, the Angelica Tree 


14 MY SHRUBS 


of North America, has made a splendid specimen with me, and is 
a showy object when covered with its flower masses in October. 
The variegated form of A. Spinosa is also handsome. 

Of Arbutus, the austere bush, I have but the familiar A. unedo 
—a thing very fair to see with the scarlet fruit and little snowy 
bells, like lily of the valley, hanging side by side in the dark, 
shining foliage. There are many species, and some fine varieties 
for the cold house, but nothing beats the strawberry tree. That 
nice little plant of the same order as Arbutus: Arctostaphylos, 
the bear’s grape, will not live with me. A. uva-ursi is a fine 
dwarf shrub or trailer, but, like other good things from the high- 
lands, cannot suffer gladly this climate. Maybe I do not grow 
it wet enough, for a companion plant, Oxycoccus palustris, the 
native cranberry, flowers and fruits in a bog not five yards distant. 
There is a Nevada arctostaphylos that makes a fine shrub five feet 
high, but I know not if it has found its way to English collections. 

With Ardisia I have done nothing. A. japonica is the hardiest, 
but it made no show in a snug corner here, and never recovered a 
moderate winter. Possibly, treated like certain of my favourites, 
which are plunged in their pots through summer and returned 
to the cold house before November, it might flourish; but one 
cannot do too much of this work, and on the whole Ardisia, of 
Japan, does not appeal to me as worth it. A. macrocarpa, from 
Nepaul, is a very notable shrub for the stove. 

Aristea, of the order of Iridacee, may seem to have no place here, 
but A. corymbosa, from the Cape, has a shrubby habit of the most — 
charming and original character, and its clusters of deep blue 
flowers sparkle in the sword-like foliage at late autumn. It needs 
peat and sand and a bell-glass in winter. 


MY SHRUBS rs 


‘Aristolochia sipho, the tube-bearing birthwort, all men know 
as a genial climber whose straggling limbs hang forth their ‘“‘ Dutch- 


_ man’s pipes” in June, and whose foliage turns bright gold before 
it falls; while for the stove, though I pretend to no knowledge of 
_ the myriad precious shrubs that are grown there, one may be 
heartily commended : A. elegans. ‘This noble aristolochia hangs 
out its shell-shaped flowers of white spattered with purple by 


hundreds through the summer, and never fails to win applause 


for its somewhat sinister beauty. A woman once said that she 
_ thought the flower all innocence and dimity; but no: there is 
nothing of dimity or innocence about A. elegans. The plant 


comes freely from seed, and is easy to manage; few things in any 


_ stove are more splendid. 


Aristotelia Macqui from Chili is a familiar, handsome and hardy 


‘evergreen, with small green flowers and black berries to follow. 
_ The foliage is very fine. 


_ Asimina triloba pursues its even way under a warm wall, but 
this papaw from Pennsylvania proves a slow grower, and I have not 


‘as yet seen its chocolate-coloured flower, or tasted its yellow fruit. 
__ It takes its own time, and whether its ultimate performances will 
synchronise with my power to applaud them remains to be seen. 


Probably not. 


As for Athrotaxis doniana, this excellent little Tasmanian 


conifer is happy here, and its appearance delights me. It is good 


for twenty feet, but at present stands no more than two. It 
suggests a juniper with a style of its own. Altragene alpina 
loves a wall in half shade. The most beautiful variety is blue 
and white. Mine came from a great prosperous piece that 
showers over the natural rocks in the little botanical garden of 


16 MY SHRUBS 


Zermatt. ‘The pure white form of this clematis is also a good 
thing. 

Atraphaxis, or Tragopyron, 1 still seek in vain; but these 
Siberian shrubs should be hardy enough. Perhaps their scarcity 
argues that they are no great catch. 

Azalea is a countless host in herself, and one might fill the 
garden with the hardy new crosses of these invaluable shrubs. It 
is enough here to name a few that I best like, and to advise Azalea 
mollis, on half standards. ‘Thus grown, it will be found a very 
great success in small and formal gardens such as mine. A. 
Ameena hexe and A. Hinodegiri are both brilliant evergreen 
varieties ; while A. roseflora is really a treasure and worthy of 
a snug corner. The swamp honeysuckles from America are all 
good ; but A. occidentalis, a late flowerer which opens in snowy, 
fragrant trusses during July, and A. Vaseyz, another fine thing with 
palest rose-coloured blossoms in April, are my favourites. Azalea 
nudiflorum, a North American, is a great beauty too, and still 
rare in cultivation. 

One is moved at the dreadful slaughter of Azalea indica which 
obtains in this country. Thousands of this cheerful plant come 
annually to us in autumn, and make bright our conservatories 
during spring. ‘Then they are cast out and suffered to perish, 
whereas if they were plunged in a sunny corner of the kitchen 
garden, well-watered through the summer, and taken back to the 
cold house or vinery in October, they would flourish and come up 
to the scratch gaily for another year. Re-pot every third year, and 
the kindly things, asking for no more, will probably last as long as 
you do. Indeed, one cannot assert their limit of life. That prince 
of horticulturists, Herr Sander, recently told me that he has Azalea 


MY SHRUBS 17 
a ten feet through and a hundred years old, and still in full 
rand prime! I urged him to show these marvels in England, 
le is tempted to bring them from Belgium for that high 
e; but, needless to say, the moving of such monsters in 
tubs is rather a weighty matter. __ 
va loves a wall facing east, with protection from the east 
ble. In such a station this admirable Chilian will climb 
- roof. A. microphylla is the most familiar, and may be 
n ent ioned with praise for its beautiful foliage and scented in- 
rescence, like gold dust, under the leaves in March, A. dentata 
? al . interesting, and A. integrifolia, especially the rare variety 
h mc ‘tled foliage, must be a treasure. 


3 
p as 


CHAPTER II 


Bacchus, god of wine, and refers to the spicy odour of the 

roots. I forgot to smell the roots of mine when I pulled 
it up and flung it away. It is said to make a good hedge by the sea. 
It may be so. I glean also that A. xalapensis is rarely seen in 
gardens, and am not astonished to hear it. The noble race of 
Banksia is also rarely seen in gardens, though the south of France 
displays a few of these grand Australians under flourishing circum- 
stances. I remember a giant at La Mortala—Mecca of all shrub 
lovers. More than a hundred years ago the Botany Bay House 
was opened at Kew for Banksia and its allies ; and in the “ seven- 
ties ’ certain nurserymen still made a special study of them. Kew 
yet shows them under glass; though among the fifty species 
recorded, perhaps not a dozen live in England to-day. Mr. 
Boscawen is reported to have the gorgeous ‘‘ waratah ” (Telopea) 
prosperous in Cornwall; but of the Protea order I only know 
Banksia quercifolia in the open. With me it lost heart at the 
first whisper of frost, flung down its foliage and perished. And 
yet I learn that in Dorset it makes a festive display. Few English 
enthusiasts have ever seen Banksia, but let those who can do 
so consult the old “‘ Botanical Magazine,”’ plate 738, and there they 
will find B. ericefolia, and judge of the splendour and novelty of 
this genus. 


I believe we frequently err in the time of planting half-hardy 
18 


() F Baccharis, I will merely say that the name is derived from 


eo ee ae eee Teche eve a SN ee, a ae ee Pn | Ben an ta iat Dt oy eo Me Se es eT 
ey ke a ae ie eae eae eee Agee a eg ee Te RL ae aE ST Ne eC NC my a 
. 7 : ot = =e" Sas eh — => eee 


MY SHRUBS 19 


subjects. They are sent to us in autumn—often from a cold house 


—and we are apt to drag them from their pots and thrust them out, 
all unprepared, to face the worst weather that we know. Rather 
let us wait for April, then tenderly introduce them to pleasant 
nooks, and encourage them to make some useful growth before 
the period of penance and privation begins. Now, in January, I 
have a dozen fine things waiting in a cool house for spring to 
come, and they will all at least have one summer of glorious life 
to stretch their roots and hopefully face the open air of England. 
The quaint Barnadesia seems to be out of cultivation, for I 
never hear of it; but Baueria rubioides can be secured, and this 
good Australian from New South Wales, though it failed me in 


the open, now prospers against a warm wall. The pink flowers, 


like a minute Kalmia, are freely displayed in summer. Barosma 
dioica, from the Cape, made no long stay, and possibly others of 
this heath-like family are hardier. For Benthamia fragifera I lack 
room, but fine specimens of this splendid dog-wood, from Nepaul, 
flower and fruit handsomely round about. 

Berberidopsis corallina is a plant for which I entertain great 


_ regard. ‘This scandent evergreen Chilian has climbed twenty feet 
on an east wall, and its clusters of bright crimson blossoms in 


July are always greeted with applause. 

Of the hosts of the barberries, a splendid new-comer is Berberis 
Bealu, whose lax, lily-of-the-valley-scented tresses open in early 
spring. A matured plant is distinguished by its immense and 
handsome foliage as well as the pale yellow flowers. I have, 
too, a fine piece of the old B. japonica, and the glaucous leaves of 
B. trifolata look well on the rockery. For beauty of habit no 
shrub beats a specimen of B. stenophylla ; Fortune’s berberis is 


20 MY SHRUBS 


also a handsome foliage plant ; while other fine shrubs, among more 
recent novelties, are B. sanguinea, from Mongolia, and the Hima- 
layan, B. insignis. B. gracilis, of Mexico, though tender, is worth 
a trial, and B. trifoliata, mentioned above, is also a Mexican and 
not quite hardy. One must name with great praise also B. Fre- 
monti, with glaucous foliage, and that bright little July flowering 
shrub, Wilson’s berberis, from China, with yellow flowers and bright 
red berries. 

Betula nana, the dwarf birch, stands but three feet high, and 
makes a delightful addition to my forest of little conifers. There 
is a pendulous variety of this mite that one would welcome. Big- 
nonia grandiflora is disappointing, for, while my specimen prospers 
exceedingly, and increases from year to year, its heavy flower- 
spikes are produced so late that the night temperatures begin to 
fall and the hours of sunshine shorten before it blows. Once, 
some years ago, the shrub did itself justice, and then it was a great 
spectacle ; but since that occasion only an occasional blossom 
has opened its splendid orange-yellow cup. Vitex agnus castus, 
the chaste tree, does the same. It prepares fine points of inflores- 
cence during September, and never opens them. The plants dwell 
side by side under a south wall, and no more can be done for them 
here. The Bignonia is worthy of a cold house ; the Vitex is not. 

Biglovia, sacred to Doctor Jacob Bigelow, author of “ Florula 
Bostoniensis,” is a hardy little shrub from California, which hangs 
out modest yellow panicles in summer and likes half shade ; while 
Billardiera scandens, from New South Wales, is about the only 
native fruit of Australia—a little pretty berry, which follows a 
drooping flower. It is a climber for a cold house, and no addition - 
to dessert even at its best. 


ree 


BOWKERIA GERARDIANA 


MY SHRUBS 21 


Bowkeria gerardiana deserves greater praise and attention. 
From South Africa it comes with snow-white flowers, shaped like 
a calceolaria, that sparkle forth in July. This rare and beautiful 
shrub is recommended to all who dwell in the south and can give 
it wall space. Indeed, Mr. Wyndham Fitzherbert, who probably 
possesses the finest specimen in England, will show it to you seven 
_ feet high upon a southern slope far from all shelter. But he is a 
magician, and we common men can only admire without seeking 
to emulate his feats of horticulture. Brachyglottis repanda attained 
to magnificent dimensions with him, too, as I remember ; but this 
attractive New Zealander will probably puzzle you to satisfy. 

Brachysema acuminatum is a very beautiful but tender shrub 
for a snug wall. The flowers are rich scarlet, like a small clianthus ; 
the foliage is bright silver. This New Hollander must be treated 
_ with great respect out-of-doors, but it is well worthy of a cold 


 house—in peat or sand with perfect drainage. 


Of Boronia, named by Dr. Sibthorpe, after his faithful servant, 
Francis Boroni, who perished at Athens, that fragrant and delicious 
treasure, B. megastigma, thrives in some Devon gardens. But 
_ only lucky people, with whom Providence is on the best of terms, 
can show it really prosperous to you out of doors. I have tried 


and failed, yet I shall give Providence another chance to offer a 


ete es 


SO ee ee es ee eh cee EN ee as eh ae DR a a I i A a ee a a ee Oy eee ee ~ o¥ _—. « - on 
= mae ‘ Sy So eg yee a eae . Allert al Sok. ‘ eS ea pitinns : ts of eS ino nk a ep ge - Pe et Pata fi le i ea J 
~ wee. - “ ¥ ~ : =a, yy ie . uate " " - 3 Amn r= a" ae ~ 2 
7 “<> R cata ¢ 7 . ss : = oat i , 
i \. ; % 3 “4 


helping hand in this matter. I hope good Boroni had a spike 
of the shrub in his hand when he lost his life, and I should 
like to think that it scented many a holy place of old, when the 
Golden Age offered flowers to its goddesses. As B. megastigma 
comes from South-Western Australia, however, this dream seems 
vain. But when did it settle at Athens ? 

Bouvardia triphylla, with most brilliant scarlet corymbs, a 


Dip) MY SHRUBS 


plant named after an old-time director of the King’s garden at Paris, 
is a Mexican of great beauty, exceedingly rare in cultivation. With 
a little nursing through winter, it thrives in favoured gardens, and 
no more splendid thing brightens an August day. If you can 
tell me where this may be secured, I shall thank you. At present 
I know of two pieces only, and neither belongs to me. There are 
many good garden hybrids ; but B. triphylla is far finer than any 
of them. 

Bridgesia spicata has few friends, but I like this Chilian’s pale 
pink masses of inflorescence in March, when competition is not 
keen. It is quite hardy, makes a huge bush on a wall, and if you 
prefer to call it Ercilla, the Peruvian name, not a soul can blame you. 

The purple tassels and golden balls of Buddleia are familiar to 
every shrub lover, but a choice species, with delicate creamy 
racemes and most delicious fragrance, is B. astatica. ‘This proves 
quite a hardy Indian with me, and scents its corner of the garden 
from September to the frosts. It is a good thing, and so is B. 
paniculata—a plant with silvery foliage still seldom seen. Sir 
James Colville’s fine Buddleia, when well grown, makes a mag- 
nificent appearance with its cherry-coloured clusters of flowers 
and silver-green foliage. This is perfectly hardy, and a valued 
friend owns perhaps the best piece in the West Country. ‘Twenty 
feet high it stands, and it was grown from seed that the owner 
himself collected in the Sikkim Himalaya. I thank him gratefully 
for my picture, which came from his famous compound. B. 
auriculata, a very recent arrival, I have as a gift from a kind 
professional ; but it proves to be B. asiatica over again. Herr 
Sander has some notable new rosy hybrids of B. variabilis. 
Buddleia, by the way, renders immortal the name of Adam 


A COLVILEI 


I 


UDDLI 


B 


Ne ee 


BUDDLEIA ASIATICA 


MY SHRUBS | 23 
tain of British plants is still preserved, and 
e the august Ray not seldom mentions in his 


bP ae 


i islcotcn, from Spans | is a good evergreen that will 
1 its yellow umbels anywhere, The sea-green leaves 
nt colour, and the plant I think quite worth a corner 


is not a popular shrub as a specimen, but Buxus 
; makes a good little tree with alee considerably 


CHAPTER II 


which I have done little. It flowers occasionally, but 

shows no heartiness, and makes but scanty growth. I 
suspect this piece is of poor constitution, for plants, like animals, 
vary much in their physique, and there is no obvious reason why my 
cesalpinia should not prosper. ‘This chronic invalid must have its 
troubles ended, and I will try again with a sounder specimen. A 
wall, full sun, and good loam should meet its requirements, and 
enable it to produce the handsome yellow flowers with crimson 
stamens. That grand shrub C’. Galliesii, from South America, has 
also failed with me, after several trials. Probably I cannot keep it 
dry enough in winter. 

Calceolaria integrifolia thrives well beside the sea, and hangs 
out its golden bunches freely. It is a Chilian, but enjoys full sun, 
with a wall behind it for choice. C. violacea also loves sunshine, 
but is not quite so hardy. Its little corollas of pale violet, spotted 
with a darker tone of the same colouring, are mildly interesting. 

A more important pair are Callistemon speciosus and C. salignus, 
the scarlet and white bottle-brushes. These fine things, from 
Australia, love a warm corner in peat, and there prosper and make 
good growth from year to year. The winter they much dislike, 
and the younger foliage is often nipped in frosty weather; but 
they come through bravely enough, and flash out again brilliant 


and cheerful when June returns. 
24 


@ ZESALPINIA JAPONICA is one of the fine shrubs with 


LLISTEMON SPECIOSUS AND C. SALIGNUS 


DWARF CONIFERS 


MY SHRUBS | 25 


f allicarpa longifolia is a deciduous shrub from Japan, with 
lowers in violet spikes and violet berries to follow. My infant 
a well, but has not yet. blossomed. The other varieties 


welcome enough. Here, too, are yews in miniature, 
ain junipers, of which Juniperus hibernica nana, like a 
ie shaving-brush, can cheer my most dejected hour. To 


a a porcelain tray or bowl, the sihsle battle of a tree against 
g and tempest and time. These solemn atoms rightly 
‘ar deeper emotions than my fat and prosperous dwarfs ; but 
al of a northern Vandal like myself is prosperity, peace, and 


ere is no desire in me to emulate their emaciated master- 
s. I respect their ideals and applaud their ambition; I 
: hg genius who can give you a whole country-side—its 
: and complexities, ase and forests, and cloud-capped 


r blasted maple upon its dizzy crags; I will not make an 
D 


26 MY SHRUBS 


allegory of a starving cupressus, or tell the whole secret of in- 
domitable will conquering abominable bad luck in the shape of a 
thirsty and lop-sided thuya lingering upside down against fearful 
and cruel odds. No—TI see the spiritual significance, and I worship 
the Wisdom of the East, that has lifted gardening to these soulful 
heights ; but I go on trying to make my things lovely above ground 
and happy below; and I am quite certain that they prefer my way, 
because, like myself, they know no better. 

Calodendron capensis has languished in a pot for years, but 
made no effort worth the name ; Callicoma serratifolia still awaits 
me. The latter is the black wattle of New South Wales, and is 
declared to be a very desirable shrub. 

Calothamnus pyroleflorus is a stout, dwarf, deciduous shrub 
from Alaska, with chocolate-coloured flowers and an iron consti- 
tution against cold ; but it will succumb swiftly to too much hot 
sunshine. ‘The newer C. Baxteri is an Australian evergreen with 
crimson flowers—beautiful, but not too easy. | 

Calycanthus floridus, the Carolina allspice, pursues its way in 
half shade, and produces its lumpy chocolate-coloured flowers, 
while C’. macrophyllus is also going ahead handicapped by per- 
petual shade. We put upon these willing customers, and, because 
they will do their duty in shade, though quite as fond of an 
occasional sunbeam as most other living creatures, condemn them 
to live without a ray. 

Camellia does well in half shade here, and I have Gauntlett’s 
splendid hybrid—pure, single white, with yellow anthers, together 
with good pieces of the double Japanese white and red. C. 
latifolia, a hardy species, also does well. C. Sasanqua died, but has 
appeared again in a cooler corner, and as for C’. reticulata, the 


MY SHRUBS ~ 27 


n of them all, so far she has only dwelt out of doors in a cool 
bed during summer, built up her bud, and then came in when 
mber returned. Each spring I decide that she shall go to 
ad definitely ; but she prospers so splendidly in a pot, and is 
-a glory for the house during March, when she blossoms, 
in a pot she still remains, with sundry other treasures. Of 
e, on a sheltered wall, in half shade facing west, the splendid 
) is hardy here, yet even in Devon one seldom sees it really 
srous out of doors. ‘The large flower is a rosy crimson, 
-double, and enriched by a splendid tassel of golden anthers. 
ne could wish to see Capparis spinosa, the European caper 
in our gardens or upon our walls, for it might, with slight 
weather a Devon winter; but I have no knowledge of the 
ib nearer than Provence. It is a beautiful thing, and would 
tobably germinate and prosper if seed were sown in the nooks of 
a good old brick wall facing south. 
oe ante buxifolia, from the Peruvian Andes, is a fine shrub, but 
ult and very tender. I have failed to flower it against a wall, 
and even now, in a cold house, it puts forth its long, trumpet- 
4 ce purple blossoms but seldom. This is mere bad fortune, or, 


oms. There are caraganas still skulking about in corners 
; but I slight them, and occasionally, catching sight of one 
nting his insignificance, drag him up and give him away to a 
id who professes to like them. Caragana gerardiana is a 


_ Carmichelia australis from New Holland, has been a great 


28 MY SHRUBS 


with tiny inflorescence in summer. This, too, is pea-flowered, 
but may pass for its lilac-pink and general joyfulness. It dwells 
on a south wall in peat, side by side with Carpenteria californica, 
from the Sierra Nevada, a noble shrub with clusters of snow-white 
flowers, yellow stamens, and handsome evergreen foliage. It is 
hardy here, and a quick grower when prosperous. 

Cassia need merely be named, and Cassinia all men know; but 
Castanopsis chrysophylla, a beautiful little dwarf from Oregon, with 
a golden reverse to the dark green leaves, is still rare. I have failed 
with it, but am trying again, for it is an admirable little shrub. 

Ceanothus thyrsiflorus as it occurs at Kew, and might behave 
in your garden with ample room, is a very beautiful thing, while 
of hybrids C. ‘‘ Gloire de Versailles”’ is very happy here. The 
family is not among my favourites—a misfortune it survives without 
difficulty. : 

Cephalotaxus Fortunei is a beautiful Chinese conifer, and the 
species most likely to succeed in an English garden. It resembles a 
shrubby yew, and has small, plum-like fruits. | 

For the dwarf forest there is no more perfect little pendulous 
conifer than Chamecyparis filifera aurea. This is among my 
treasures, and its little golden arms droop to earth most delightfully. 
It is often called a Retinospora; indeed the names are inter- 
changeable. My photograph will show it to you embracing a little 
Juniper. 5 

Concerning Choisya ternata, it need only be repeated 
that this Mexican is perfectly hardy and admirable in every 
way ; while Czstus, too, has become a beautiful commonplace in 
its many forms. My picture of C. albida I submit because the 
plant was collected by me as a tiny seedling on a snowy day in 


VOINUYOAITVO VINVINAdYVO 


CISTUS ALBIDUS 


ES napa moras 


hed 
"3 ‘ : 
2 
. . 
¢ . 
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* 
* ™ 


CERASUS SOLFATARA 


MY SHRUBS ~ 29 


the Esterelles, and came home in a matchbox. Now its silver- 
grey, tormentose foliage and purple flowers are an addition to a 
xck border. The true C. ladaniferus, or gum cistus, is still the 
est of the genus, and the true C. purpureus is also splendid. A 
y gem still too rare is C. Alyssoides with bright yellow blossoms. 
‘Chimonanthus fragrans, from Japan, has made huge bushes here, 
d its leafless boughs, covered with most fragrant yellow and 
flowers in January are welcome. Spikes a yard long can 
picked without hurting these splendid growers, and I am safe 
serting that Winter-sweet should be upon the south wall of 
+ dwelling-house. Chionanthus virginica, the fringe flower, 
st has not responded to my care. I have grown it for years 
nd never seen a bloom—probably because it was too dry. Peat 
in a cool corner seem indicated. C’. retusus is a splendid new 
Ciharexylum quadrangulare: the Lyre-wood, a desirable ever- 
2 with sweet white flowers, perished here during a mild 
sr, and perhaps is not even half-hardy. Yet again Dorset 
been quoted as flaunting a fine specimen. Therefore it shall 
: attempted once more. No Devon man will be outdone by 
se t without a struggle. I am trying C. bessonianum now, and 


ure from Japan. Cerasus solfatara is a rare gem—a hardy 
cherry, with most delicately-tinted blossoms of pale lemon and 
e and green. Nothing can be more beautiful than its delicate 
bels among the young amber-coloured leaves. You shall also 
d it under the name of C. lutea. C. itlicifolia, which I 


30 MY SHRUBS 


lack, by the way, is a very handsome wall plant; and among 
the best of the many splendid Japanese cherries may be named 
C. “ ama-no-gawa,” a shrub of upright growth, with lax clusters 
of large and palest pink blossoms. For this good thing, and C. 
solfatara, too, I have to thank that mandarin of the garden, Mr. 
Reginald Farrer, from whom also came to me notable Japanese 
tree pzeonies—deep scarlet and crimson, rose and white. Cerasus 
pseudocerasus—‘‘ James H. Veitch ’’—you cannot omit, and C. 
sinensis pendula rosea is another great treasure among these shrubs. — 

Cestrum or Habrothamus will flourish here in some of its species 
and the friend whose cherry-coloured Buddleia has been named 
with praise, has given me a C. auruntiacum from Mexico which 
thrives in the open. Its crimson clusters of bloom are strikingly 
handsome during May, and should be oftener seen. 

Ceratonia siliqua, the familiar Carob or Locust tree, does well 
on a wall, and appears hardier than might be supposed ; but my 
plant, grown from seed, is only a few feet high, and whether its 
small flower will ever appear I know not. I remember masses of 
its dusky, evil-smelling pods in Cyprus, and the sickly taste of the 
pulp. It makes a handsome tree in the East, and its fruit, of course, — 
is of commercial value. 2 

Cercidiphyllum japonicum is a good, little, neat, deciduous 
shrub without any special charm, and of Cercocarpus parviflorus, 
from Mexico—a Fothergilla-like shrub—I can only report that it 
languishes and wants to go indoors; but Cercis siliquastrum, the 
Judas tree, flowering as it does while still of shrubby size, must 
be held a treasure. The bright rosy inflorescence hides every 
naked bough sometimes, and, not content with that, my piece, 
now grown to twenty feet, thrusts out clusters and tufts of flowers 


CERASUS “AMA-NO-GAWA” 


CESTRUM AURUNTIACUM 


MY SHRUBS | 31 


_the stem and from every joint and corner where the possi- 
of a bloom exists. The foliage, too, is very handsome and 
yes are the last to fall in autumn. It has never fruited here. 
tiny Chiogenes serpyllifolia, the creeping Snowberry from 
America, did well in a boggy pocket, set its little fruits and 
d at home; but it was smothered by coarser things and 
gotten, and now it has disappeared. It is a good and dainty 
} ap, and easy enough in wet peat. 

: scandens is an old favourite—a tremendous climber 
mm North America—whose orange-coloured berries and autumn 
mts are very effective. It needs to be kept in bounds, and is 


th Citrus I have not succeeded out of doors, save partially 
he case of the deciduous C. Zrifoliata from Japan. This 
ny customer, though it flowers freely, with large, lax, snow- 
blossoms that come before the triple leaves, has not set fruit 
_ It would probably add little to the joy of my dessert if it 
ough you who have seen and grown the oranges, will perhaps 
chat grapes are sour. 
matis would need a booklet by itself. ‘The word is Klema, 
, and a few members of the genus are here, notably C. 
isa lobata, a beautiful creamy-white flowered species from 
Zealand. It is tender, and shares an Archangel mat with 
_Lonicera Hildebrandti and Ruscus androgynus when frost falls and 
he east wind blows. Here, too, are C. virginica, C. lanuginosa, 
graveolens—a pretty yellow species from Chinese Tartary— 
nontana rubens, absurdly over-rated, C’. vitalba, in the arms of 
w tree, and one or two of the shrubby species. But I am not 
fond of the race, though C. cirrhosa I appreciate, when its 


oa 


32 MY SHRUBS 


little cream-coloured flowers, spattered with dull purple, appear in 


v4 


| 


“hy 
“ee 
~* 

hg 2 


January, and C’.. coccinea has a character of its own, and looks more _ 


like a red fruit than a flower. Its hybrids are good. . 

Clerodendron fetidum, from China, though the leaf is un- 
pleasant, has trusses of fragrant pink flowers, while the newer 
C’. Fargesit sports white blossoms, followed by most beautiful azure 
fruits set in pink stars. C’. fallax, from Java, has scarlet panicles, 
and makes a splendid shrub for the stove; but more beautiful 
still is that monarch of stove climbers, C’. Balfouri, with its clusters 
of snow and crimson from Old Calabar. Clerodendron is a fair 
deceiver, according to her name; but I know not in what her 
guile consists. 

Clethra arborea is the best of this genus. I think it vain to 
attempt this out of doors, save in the most sheltered gardens by 
the sea. In our Western river estuaries it occasionally thrives ; 
but there always comes a sharp winter to lower it to the ground, 
and, though it will break again from the earth, it is then a case of 
waiting for the snowy panicles of bloom for several years. It is 


a Madeira species, but less hardy than Pinus canariensis, the blue 


fir, from the same favoured island. I think the rest of the Clethras 


come from America, but I only know the common C. alnifolia. — 


C’. paniculata, from Carolina, sounds a fine thing, in the style of 
the tree clethra above named. 

Clianthus, well-named from Kleios, glory—the Glory Pea, or 
Parrot Beak, of New Zealand—is a very splendid wall shrub, and 
C’. puniceus, with the variety C’. puniceus alba, is eminently success- 


ful on a wall. They flower and seed freely, but since the flower — 
racemes are set in autumn, if the cold is severe, an Archangel mat _ 


may well be used to protect the bud against injury. C. Dampiert, 


PUNIC 


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MY SHRUBS ~ 33 


1 New South Wales, is a glorious thing for a cold house. It 
ficult, but will prosper when grafted on the hardier species, 
on Caragana. A use for Caragana! 'The pale, silver-green 
we and huge scarlet and black blossoms make a notable 
It is Lucifer’s own flower. I have attempted it out of 
rs without success, but it is worth a pot and some trouble. 
Cneorum tricoccum is a hardy shrublet from the Canary Islands, 
‘with yellow flowers and triple seeds—interesting, but only botani- 

lly. C. pulverulentum, from Teneriffe, is said to have more 


I failed to please, but C. heterophyllus is a handsome 
sse creeper, and may take to you. Corynocarpus levigata, 
scarlet blossoms, is an evergreen tree in New Zealand ; but 
1 me a little shrub. It flaunts in a peat bed during summer, 
it ste s off before the cold weather comes. I find that the plum- 
e fruit is eaten by natives, and also the kernels of the stones, 
t only after their poisonous properties are dissipated by steaming 
feeetion in salt water. So now I am perfectly ready for 
ynocarpus, when the glad time of harvest shall arrive. 

vestita needs a wall, and a snug one. This fine 

plant has pea-shaped scarlet flowers and a scandent habit. 
el ul winter protection is necessary. 
_ Chorizema Lowei, a dainty Australian, I have seen out-of-doors 
Cornwall, but nowhere else. 
For Cotoneaster’s legions, I lack space and inclination ; but 
horizontalis has crept in from somewhere, and certainly is 
very fine thing. C. rugosa Henryi, from China, is also here, 
n a most beautiful drooping habit and crimson-orange berries. 


> flowering thorns also are sadly overlooked in my garden, but 
E 


34 MY SHRUBS 


they grow too large for me, and a friend, who owns perhaps the best 


collection of Crategus in the West Country, generously makes me 


free of it. 3 

Convolvulus Cneorum, from South Europe, is a splendid shrub, 
and its mound of silver sparkles throughout the year, brightened 
at flowering time by countless pale blossoms. Coprosma, on the 
contrary, I cannot praise. The best, C’. Bauerina picturata varie- 
gata, is not hardy—what could be with such a name ?—but it 
makes a handsome pot plant. The hardy species that I know is 
a mean thing. 

The Dog-woods are worthy shrubs, and I have too few. Cornus 
Mas argentea is like a little tree of gold in spring before the leaves 
appear. This cornelian cherry, from Austria, should be in all 
collections. It fruits occasionally, but one has no desire to rob 


it twice. The tiny C’. canadensis proceeds leisurely in a peat bed. — 


Coronilla Emerus is a hardy evergreen here with fragrant yellow 


blossoms, while Corokia, from a Maori word meaning “ Kia’s claw,” 
is a hardy New Zealander, welcomed by colonials of that country — 
as familiar rubbish from their bush. C. cotoneaster is a network 
of crooked little implicated branches, amid which in spring, shine — 
innumerable yellow stars, followed by occasional dull crimson — 


berries ; while C. Buddleioides has a different habit and will make 
a larger plant, but the blossom is similar, though of a paler tint. I 
have, also, C. elliptica, whose manners and customs are not as yet 
declared ; but it looks to be something between the other two. 
Correas are useful and beautiful South Australians. They 
seem hardy enough here, and make good growth, flowering in 
spring and onward. Perhaps C. cardinalis is the most showy. 
Corylopsis pauciflora, of the tribe of hamamelis, hangs out tender 


A a 
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COLLETIA CRUCIATA 


MY SHRUBS 35 


lemon-coloured racemes of flower before the leaves appear. But 
it does not get on with me, and ought, by this time, to be more 
important than it is. C. spicata is a much finer thing in my 
opinion. They come from Japan, and like half shade. 

Colletia cruciata, a Chilian, which reminds us of Philibert 

‘Collet, the famous French botanist, hails from Rio de la Plata, and 
is a hardy and spiny foreigner unlike anything else in any garden. 
The cruciform growth resembles rows of miniature anchors ; the 
leaves are minute, few and far between; the flowers are innumer- 
able upon a successful specimen, and make the plant white in 
October. They are sweet ; but smell colletia with care, or he will 
stab you in a tender place. C. ferox and C. horrida live up to 
their names; but C. horrida in flower is dainty and pleasing. 
_ The dwarf Cryptomeria, is good for your rockery, and C. 
elegans, in its miniature form, makes a really fascinating subject. 
It appreciates half shade and abundant moisture. C. japonica 
nana should keep it company. 

Cyrilla racemiflora, from North America, goes its quiet way in 
peat and shade ; but its lauded spikes of white blossom have yet 
to appear. 

Cytisus in a myriad forms I should welcome, but there is no 
room for many of these beautiful stragglers. C. precox, however, 
is here, and C’. purpureus incarnatus, with pink flowers, succeeds as 
a standard. C. racemosus, the fragrant, attains to great size, and 
appears to be perfectly hardy in our Western gardens, and C. 
Ardoini, the smallest that I know, will prosper on a moraine with 
the least saxifrages. C’. schipkaensis is a little white beauty from 
the Schipka Pass. This I have loved and lost, for the snails loved 
it even better than I. 


36 MY SHRUBS 


Cydonia flowers and fruits with abandon. I have a crimson, 
a scarlet, a pink, and a white. The last is a superb little rock 


shrub, and never fails to deck its boughs with orange-coloured 


fruits when autumn comes. C. Maulei, from Nepaul, has a dis- 
tinctive, brick-red bloom. There are nurserymen who will tell 
you that its apples are edible. One would like to see them proving 
their words. Few more beautiful flowering things exist, by the 
way, than C. vulgaris, the quince. 

I have missed Crinodendron hookerianum, which you may call 
Tricuspadaria hexapetala if you prefer to do so. It is among the 
noblest shrubs, and still far too rare in gardens. From the 
dark evergreen foliage, the crimson flowers depend—waxlike and 
very brilliant. This splendid Chilian attains to great size, and 
sets fruit in our gardens. No worthier shrub could stand for 
ever linked to the august name of Hooker. C. dependens has 
white flowers in the eyes of the nurserymen ; but these poets are 
gifted with a sense of colour denied to many of us purblind 
amateurs. | 


eer 


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DAR 


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HOOKERIANUM 


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4 


ENDRO 


CRINOD 


CHAPTER IV 


tiny Japanese shrub that thrives in a shady peat bed 
beneath a wall. It attains a height of five inches, and 
decks itself with white-scented flowers. The scarlet berries I have 


Uw: the idiotic name of Damnacanthus major, | have a 


s _ yettosee. It has strong opposite thorns, and was therefore handi- 
___ capped by the above name from damnao, to conquer, and acanthos, 
__ aspine. Could anything be sillier ? 


Then comes Daphne, a precious plant in most of its manifes- 


7 a _ tations, though not so fond of this garden as one could wish. 


D. genkwa, the Japanese lilac, has perished thrice, and must 
be tried once more—against a wall; while D. indica or odora, 
dwells near my stokehole, and enjoys that comfort in cold weather. 


cr My variety, D. marginata, has foliage outlined with gold, and in 
“4 full flower, about the middle of March, looks well, and scents its 


secluded home. The habit is straggling, but the plant really 
‘must be grown where it will grow, for there is no fresher fra- 
grance in any garden than that of its pale pink flower clusters. 
D. Cneorum is capricious, but will often flourish well in half shade, 
with compost of loam, sand and leaf. Nor does it resent a reason- 
able measure of lime in the soil. D. blagayana, another European, 
is a splendid evergreen with trusses of fragrant blossom. This is 
a granite lover, and on a granite moraine will wander cheerfully 
and bloom in early spring. A successful piece is a pure joy ; but 
you seldom see it prosperous. D. Mezereum flowers freely on its 
37 


38 | MY SHRUBS 


naked wood in March, and the white variety sets handsome, 
orange-coloured berries, that make the plant striking when autumn 
comes. JD. ponticais hardy, and handsome and sweet ; D. laureola 
Phillipit has a particularly attractive arrangement of foliage from 
which the green flowers peep in January. D. oleoides is a very 
neat and trim dwarf Daphne, with pink flowers and an excellent 
constitution. ee 

Daphniphyllum never interested me. It suggests a rhododen- 
dron without blossoms, for the blossom is nought. D. glaucescens, 
however, has beautiful foliage, and I should admit this shrub were 
space available. 

The delightful Darwinias, named after Dr. Darwin who wrote 
‘The Botanic Garden,” a poem of ancient repute, I do not find in 
catalogues. Doubtless these fine things from Australia will not 
dwell out of doors with us; but one would like to learn where 
they may be seen under glass. 7 

Over Datura I draw a veil. We do not get on, and are therefore 
better apart. 

Decaisnea Fargesi, from Sutchuen, is still an infant, but makes 
good growth, and will some day give me yellow flowers and blue 
fruits. A Berberis can do as much, and indeed Decaisnea belongs 
to that race. It is deciduous, and the species D. insignis, from 
the Sikkim Himalayas, is honoured with a star by Nicholson and 
credited with edible fruits. Most fruits are edible for that matter, 
but when the lord of creation uses the word he means, of course, 
his own palate and stomach. After all, “‘ edible ” is quite a relative 
term. A schoolboy will assimilate what the middle-aged man of 
letters would shudder to approach. Curiously enough, a whole- 
hearted service to art ruins the digestion. Ask any artist worthy 


DESMODIUM TILLAZFOLIUM 


MY SHRUBS 39 


of the name, and they will support me. Indeed it is a criterion: 
really fine artist has a good digestion. I never met the great 
ist who would, save in a greedy moment, trust his system 
| a gooseberry, or the distinguished painter who could 
it a mince-pie with kindly eyes. As for musicians of real 
ace—heaven knows what they can eat. They drink, however, 
d so preserve life. 

ecumaria barbara—from decuma, a tenth, in reference to the 
id structure of some of the flowers—comes from the United 


ee foliage, and hangs out its yellow flowers at the point of the 


he ots for nine months in the year. Desfontainea spinosa loves to 
jwell in half shade and peat. It looks like a holly, but has splendid 
ipet-shaped scarlet and yellow flowers in August. From the 
indes it comes, and if the bloom tarries, despair not so long as 
1e plant i is well. It grows slowly, and may take a year or two to 
ett down. My piece demanded three years to reach blooming 
but has been generous of blossom ever since. 

Desmodium penduliflorum is a Japanese herbaceous shrub, and 
OU id be cut down after flowering ;, but a nobler thing is D. 
jefolium, a big climber with trifoliate leaves and innumerable 
2s of pale lilac blossom in August. This shrub I rate highly. 
3 a tremendous grower, and to attain perfection should be 
pruned hard after the fall of the leaf. To the race of Desmodium 
belongs D. gyrans, that vegetable wonder from the East Indies, 


40 MY SHRUBS 


who wags his foliage merrily, signalling by secret code to his 
neighbours in the forest. 

Deutzia need not detain us, but if you lack D. Kalnicflonai 
new hybrid with clusters of pink flowers, obtain it. D. Lennei 
is also a worthy shrub. ‘The larger species are valuable additions 
to the shrubbery. : 

Disanthus cercedifolia, said to produce glorious autumn colour, 
is with me as an infant. This Japanese tree will doubtless pre- 
serve shrubby dimensions as long as my interest in it survives ; 
but Distylum racemosum, also from Japan and still uncommon, 
makes hearty growth and hangs out a strange crimson inflores- 
cence among its shining leaves. This interesting shrub is an ever- 
green kinsman of the witch hazels. A west wall in peat appears 


to suit it admirably. Dzosma ericoides, from South Africa, a neat 


little shrub with white flowers, has been garnered, and a like fate 
would have overtaken D. vulgaris, that makes such splendid bushes 
in the South of France. With adequate protection, however, they 
might endure. Diospyrus Kaki, the Japanese date plum, whose 
name in Greek means “ celestial food,” has blossomed generously, 
but set no ambrosia for me. It made great growth, flowered 
abundantly, and promised a crop year after year in a noble spot 
under a south wall ; but now I have dragged it away to my reserve 
plantation, and there I care not what happens to it. Perhaps 
now, slighted and neglected, it will surprise me. D. lotus should 
be tried, for that is hardier. But I never see this species in 
catalogues. . 

Dorycnium rectum is a rather good, pea-flowered shrub from 
South Europe, with downy foliage and pale pink blossoms. It 
throve with me for two years in a sunny place, then perished for 


ee Se ee 


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MY SHRUBS Ar 


asons concealed. It is a great flowerer, and might, perhaps, with 
lvantage have been pruned back hard in autumn. 
9p Winteri, from drimys, sharp or acrid, furnished a 
ous febrifuge before quinine cut it out; now I think the latter 
g has taken the place of Winter’s bark, but speak as a layman. 
| Dri rim: ys is a beautiful evergreen, and its loose milk-white clusters of 
| ors s make a very handsome shrub of it in spring. Here I grow 


i 
ae 


iti ‘ful so displayed. D. aromatica, from Tasmania, is also in 
vation, but is not so effective. 


s native of China, which crowns its naked twigs in February 
rosettes of little, sweet-scented yellow flowers. ‘This is a 
thing, but rather delicate with me. I think it likes a warm 
er and light soil. 


ties, of which I givesed with £. acsophy ils: a large shrub, 
under surface of whose leaves are like frosted silver. The 
e flowers, generously produced during autumn, cluster in the 
of the leaves. E. glabra aurea has a fine golden variegation, 
soon makes a beautiful specimen; while E. multiflora is a 
some, deciduous species from Japan, which fruits abundantly 
a fine summer with golden-brown berries, dry and tart. E. 
entea, the Missouri silver tree, is another choice shrub from the 


i. y World. £. umbellata, too, from China and the temperate 
F 


42 MY SHRUBS 


Himalayas, is a very good thing, with silvery foliage and fragrant 
white flowers in June. Against a wall this will prove — 
evergreen. 

Eleutherococcus Henryi is, 1 suppose, one of Mr. Hein s many 
finds. It has a rubus-like look, and the deciduous, five-foliate 
leaves are handsome. The white flowers are globular and the 
fruits in black clusters like ivy-berries. This plant enjoys full 
sun and is quite uninteresting, save to the botanist. 

Elaocarpus reticulatus is a handsome evergreen, with lovely 
corymbs of fimbriated flowers that rise out of the axils of the 
leaves. This admirable Australian will demand a very snug 
corner, and the small piece that you may buy can aly be left 
in the cold house for the present. 

Elsholtzia Stauntonii, a semi-shrub recently brought to our 
gardens from China, attains to considerable size, and erects spikes 
of carmine pink blossoms above its mentha-scented foliage. It 
is hardy, and resembles a gigantic mint. : 

I have no fitting place for Embothrium coccineum, that prince of 
flowering shrubs from the Andes. I think the plant did its best 
with me, and a fine vigorous piece, six feet high, that came from 
Cornwall, flattered hope awhile in a cool corner amid things larger 
than itself. But Embothrium could not conquer the crumpled 
rose-leaf in his lot, and he could not tell me what it was ; and so 
he died—I dare say of my ignorance. Thrice have I tried him ; 
thrice have I failed with this glorious plant. But he thrives to 
west and east of me, reaches to arboreal dimensions, and decks 
himself in early summer with a flame of fire. 

Enkianthus campanulatus is an excellent and ornamental de- — 
ciduous shrub which suggests a pieris at first glance. The blossom 


ELA OGCARPUS RETICULATUS 


INOLNOVLS VIZLIOHOSTH 


a 


ae ey 
Aue 


Pian 


MY SHRUBS 43 


is red, bell-shaped and drooping. It is hardy, and will prosper ina 
shady peat bed. Other varieties of the species in cultivation can be 
secured, and £. japonica has white bells and fine autumn colour. 

_Entelea arborescens, from New Zealand, blossoms in a small 
State, and my plant hung out a fine show of flowers and set its 
prickly seeds afterwards, though not above two feet high. It is 
a pretty thing with white-stalked cymes of bloom, but doubtfully 
hardy. Mine flourished in half shade last summer, but it is at 
this moment wintering comfortably in a cold house—to reappear 
in May. 

Epacris, another very fine New Zealander, will not succeed out 
of doors though, with protection and thought, it might be pre- 
vailed upon to do so. In a pot it is a difficult customer, and few 
succeed for long with this beautiful dwarf. I scorn hybrids as a 
tule, but some of the hybrids of epacris are most distinguished. 

_ Ephedra distachya \ooks like a hippuris or “ horse-tail,” and, 
indeed, that is the meaning of its name. I had a good piece of 
this South European, but death, for reasons I could not discover, 
overtook it in a sunny spot, and, though it reached two feet, and 
- was comely and happy to the eye, it set no fruit. When the scarlet 
berries are ripe, Ephedra must be a showy object, and I am trying 
it again. 

Epigea repens is a gem that I have loved and lost. This fair, 
pink-flowered, fragrant treasure throve and bloomed in a very 
dark corner, but I think it was too dry, for the worst of these gloomy 
corners often is that they lack moisture. But of dwarfs there are 
few more exquisite than this little ground laurel from the Northern 
States—and few more difficult. 

Of Erica I can show nothing novel save E. urceolata, a rare 


44 MY SHRUBS 


heath with yellow blossoms. It was found in Cornwall by Mr. 
Gauntlett, and is supposed to be a seedling from mixed seeds 
sent home by a sailor. It is hardy in the West, but its habitat I 
do not know. 

Where, nowadays, are the superb Cape heaths of the olden 
time? I fear, while we daily add new treasures to our collections, 
many things quite as fine have dropped out of cultivation—perhaps 
out of existence altogether. Take the gladiolus. All our fat, over- 
blown hybrids put together cannot equal in charm of colouring or 
exquisite delicacy of form the old Cape corn flags discovered and 
figured more than a hundred years ago. Civilisation has probably 
destroyed these gems for ever. Yet no hybrid of Lemoine or 
Child’s may be named in the same breath with them for distinc- 
tion. Indeed, all hybrids, in my experience, lose more than they 
gain over the wildings. The rose is the solitary excuse for “ gar- 
dener’s flowers ” in a garden and, protest as you may, I will assert 
that the species of rosa are far more beautiful than any plump 
and prosperous “ tea ” or ‘‘ hybrid tea ” in existence. 

With that interesting dwarf, Erinacea pungens, formerly known, 
as Anthyllis erinacea, from Spain, I have failed entirely without 
visible reason, though it is declared to be easy enough. My piece 
was certainly very minute, and with these scraps, which are often 
all we can get, it is wiser to grow them on in a pot for a year or 
two sometimes until there is enough of them to take their chance 
in the open. The shrub is very choice, and Clusius is said to have 
cried with exultation these words, when first he found the little 
pale blue beauty: “‘ Plante nova et tota elegans!” Yet its name, 
adapted from the original appellation, means a hedgehog. There 
are some people who will only see the prickles in everything. 


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EUCALYPTUS COCCIFERUS ALPINA 


MY SHRUBS 45 


trya japonica, now Photinia, but Eriobotrya still for me, is 


ds and have a little colony of this excellent, quick-growing, 
evergreen. ‘The white blossoms are said to appear on 
sd plants in Devon and Cornwall, but the fruit will not set 
. Doubtless, in a cold house, one might ripen it. The 


ottest Australia. E. intermedius, now wintering in a cold 
goes out next spring under a sunny wall, but I am not 
e of success. It is well worth a pot in any case. 

llonia exoniensis, with small, creamy-pink flowers and 
orous habit, is a good choice variety of this familiar evergreen 
from South America. E. macratha has become a handsome weed 
‘the West Country, but the white-flowered E. philippiana is, 
, better worth growing. 

alyptus occurs here very sparingly. I name only E£. 


1 often makes splendid specimens near our coast-line, and 
we seen a fine tree in full flower not far distant ; but a hard 


will not, however, survive an English winter out of doors. 

10 Yedoensis is a very handsome, deciduous variety from 
n , which has not yet given me its yellow blossoms and scarlet 
ts; while of tiny things, the dwarf species whose foliage is 


46 MY SHRUBS 


splashed with silver makes a beautiful specimen upon a rockery. 
Others worth growing in a small garden are E. alatus, another 
Japanese, whose foliage turns pink in autumn, and £. Jatifolius, 
with white flowers and scarlet foliage in autumn. L£. nanus linifolius 
is a dainty dwarf with beautiful fruit ; and one may also mention 
E. radicans microphyllus—a mite for the moraine. 

Eurya latifolia variegata has splendid foliage of dark green, 
pink and white. But this Japanese shrub is tender, and will need 
a very snug wall and close attention when the frost comes. 

Eupatorium weinmannianum makes a huge bush quickly in the 
West. This South American flowers in late autumn, and hides 
itself behind a cloud of pinkish bloom followed by pearly grey seed 
vessels. ‘The blossom smells of cocoa-nut oil; but what matter? 
Things that look well in November may be forgiven much, 

Eucryphia pinnatifolia stands among my twenty-five favourites. 
The beautiful thing has flowered with me ever since it was two 
feet high, and blossoms more generously each successive year. 
The noblest piece in England—grown to a tree—belongs to Mr. 
J. Bolitho, of Penzance, and is worthy of devout pilgrimage. 
Chili has sent us few greater treasures than this glorious shrub. 
The petals are large and white, and from their midst a sheaf of 
delicate stamens spring with pale pink anthers. £. cordifolia, an 
evergreen species also from Chili, is declared to be equally splendid 
‘and hardy. | 

Exochorda grandiflora I gave away—not in the right spirit, but 
merely because it grew too large for me. It is a very handsome, 
hardy shrub, akin to spirza, with snow-white globular blossoms. 
Its habit is to make a large mound of green and for proper display 
it needs abundant space. 


VYIOHILVNNId VIHdAYONGA 


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CHAPTER V 


@ THING of beauty is not a joy for ever in a garden. I 
. like shrubs to rest and come in their seasons, for any 
MA flower that persisted all the year round would bore us to 
ad lose its welcome. But shrubs die as well as rest ; and 
sir seasons return, and they do not, and we miss them. 
imbricata, the queen of the potato family, too often perishes 
reaching her prime. When successful, the unskilled mis- 
for a heath, since this South American has heathery foliage 
profusion of small white tubular blossoms peeping from it. 
of Chili she comes, but I think enjoys more sunshine than 
her countrymen. I have seen this shrub, but not grown 
feet high. The excellent Francisco Fabiano of Valencia 
biana’s godfather. 
ag beeches make beautiful frutescents during infancy, and 
rpurea tricolor should be in your garden with F’. asplenifolia, 
-leaved beech. F. pendula, too, is beautiful as a small 
‘There are good evergreen species of this genus in cultiva- 
yut I do not possess them. 
lugic paradoxa, from New Mexico, is tender and not very 
i. ‘The flowers are white, the habit sprawly. It succeeded 
ere, but a frosty night and forgetfulness on my part finished 
Fallugia and I have not repaired the loss. 
_ Feijoa sellowiana is a superb Brazilian evergreen quite hardy 
upon a wall. The wonderful flowers appear in pairs; but 
: 47 


48 MY SHRUBS 


ripe fruit has not yet been seen in England, I believe. The petals, 
a waxy crimson that fades to white, support a sheaf of little red 
pins headed with gold. I have found the promise of fruit, but it 
never swelled to any size, for Feyoa blossoms into late August, when 


the solar heat begins to lessen. Don da Silva Feijo, Director of 


the natural History Museum at San Sebastian, has given the precious 
shrub its name. 

Fendlera rupicola is a plant for a warm wall, and has beauty 
when really successful. ‘This white-flowered Texan has a slow 
habit of growth. Some years must pass before it blossoms abun- 
dantly ; then the sprays are fair to see. It thrives, or throve, on 
a wall at Kew. : 

Forsythia we have always with us. My F. suspensa is twelve 
feet high, and spires up into golden splendour during April; but 
the bullfinches love the buds, and often I find a sad litter beneath 
the plant when March has returned. I admire, but do not esteem, 
the bullfinch. T'o see these faithful couples haunting my pears and 
plums in spring-time is among my most distressing annual ex- 
periences. All birds are welcome here save the ‘“‘ bud-hawks,”’ but 
they come unbidden—the most fearful enemy of deciduous shrubs. 

Of Ficus, one may mention that in the stove F’. radicans variegata, 
from Japan, is quite beautiful. It showers its little green and 
silver foliage liberally, and, for indoor decoration, a fine plant of 
this dwarf fig cannot be excelled. But return it quickly to the 
moist heat that it loves; otherwise it will shed its foliage and 
delight you no more. ! 

I understand that handsome little conifer, Fitzroya, from Tas- 
mania, is hardy with us, but have never seen it out of doors. Yet 
I would try the shrub did I know where it was to be found. 


‘4 


en _ = 
SE Oe eee ee ee 


a MY SHRUBS 49 


| a The conifers are a great fascination to me, and, for another and a 
‘. better world, I have already designed a pinetum, that shall be 
the delight of those gardening spirits that will accept my invitation 
to gather there. I can see something in the style of Vallambroso, 
with pines leaping, like mighty columns of silver, to their crowns 
of darkness against the everlasting blue. But the nomenclature 
shall all be changed, and my pines named afresh by horticultural 
‘seraphim. Captain Fitzroy, R.N., was a great and good man; 
but in that pinetum above the stars, things will not, I hope, be 
called after even the most distinguished members of the Services. 
Take Fluggea, so named after the excellent Flugge, a cryptogamic 
botanist. Now, is it fair to call an innocent, green-flowered 
East Indian, with white berries, ‘‘ Fluggea””? Emphatically no. 
ig Moreover, one is unconsciously influenced by names, and _ that 
psychological fact should have been remembered by Linnzus and 
other heroes who handled this delicate matter. Fluggea is simply 
handicapped out of the race—like many other good and more 
important people. 
_ Fontanesia has been grown and cast out. It is rather a mean 
thing from China, in the privet style, and resembles somewhat a 
small-leaved phillyrea; but it lacks the fragrance of that more 
worthy shrub. 
____ -Fothergilla Gardeni has tufts of sweet-scented, sessile flowers in 
a May, and makes a handsome bush after passage of years. This is 
an American and kinsman of Hamamelis. There is a finer species 
now in cultivation which I have not seen. 
_ Fremontia californica stands high among great shrubs ; but this 
glorious golden mallow is not easy, and one seldom sees it pros- 


perous in England. The flowers are almost of an orange hue, and 
| G 


50 MY SHRUBS 


a rich brown tomentum clothes the young shoots. Colonel 
Fremont did well to bring this notable plant into cultivation, and 
I continue to hope for success. My first piece attained considerable 
size, then died; my second, under more sunny circumstances, 
died without attaining any size whatever ; and now I have two, side 
by side in peat, under a west wall. They are, however, different, 
and it would seem that there are two species of Fremontia, or else 
it has a wide range of variation. One has large irregularly-shaped 
leaves, and the other comparatively small foliage of uniform pattern. 
They have weathered the winter well, and both flowered. The 
blossoms are similar. A friend sent me pressed flowers and leaves 
from its habitat recently—both things very beautiful to see, and 
the blossoms were much finer in colour than my home-grown ones. 
The generous man added a packet of ripe seed, and soon I hope 
to hear of a successful family which may become acclimatised from 
tenderest youth. 

Fraxinus ornus, the manna ash, I lack ; but this very handsome 
dwarf tree should be planted if reasonable space is yours. The 
tassels of grey-green flowers are ornamental and fragrant, and 
five-and-twenty feet will be its probable limit of height. 

Fuchsia in many varieties is hardy here, but the winter cuts 
most of mine back pretty hard. They are the better for this 
natural pruning, however. fF. procumbens is a delightful little 
New Zealander for the sunny rock garden, whose dull crimson 
fruits crowd the plant in autumn, and F. pumila is also a neat, 
small upspringing species for the same locality. 

F.. splendens and F. corymbiflora, from Peru, and F. triphylla, 
from the West Indies, are all superb greenhouse species. F. 
excorticata, from Maori-land, is also now at our disposal with large 


et eee ee ee 


MY SHRUBS SI 


ywers and scarlet fruit ; but as it ascends to fifty feet high when 
osperous, this would seem not everybody’s fuchsia. The genus 
mnours Leonard Fuchs, a German botanist of distinction, and it 
‘ Testing to note the “Botanical Magazine’s” hand-painted 
picture of F. coccinea, judged to be a subject for a stove when first 
troduced in Kew from Chili in 1788, but now the most popular 
garden shrubs. 


resting of this family. ‘The latter, with large amethystine blue 
ui s and pretty pink bells, increases here in peat; the former, 
it] 1 white blossoms and scarlet berries, will not prosper with me 
sun or shade. Both are Himalayans, but their needs are different. 
ther do the other Gaultherias, save the robust G. shallon, go 
urd much with me. 
_ Gaylussacia, of the vaccinium order, makes but a mean show, in 
" peat bed. Its berries, though they have some reputation in 
orth America, are neither sweet nor agreeable here. Beside it 
little Genista sagittalis, with peculiar winged and jointed limbs, 
creases and flowers freely. I have the white broom too; and, 


T his splendid Spaniard I saw for the first time at San Remo, 
ere its fragrance filled a large garden and its silver-green graces 
or pest concealed under a shower of white flowers. There is 


wrance—so fresh and clean—is not exceeded by any growing 
ag. In Spain and Morocco this shrub is used to strengthen the 
ndhills ; in England, I fear, it cannot be counted on to succeed at 
‘out of doors. It is tender, and flowers much too early for safety. 
ve it, therefore, a cold, dry, airy house, and a bed of peat and 


52 MY SHRUBS 


sand. Then you will include no more delightful plant in your 
collection. Under the name of Spartium monospermum, it appears 
in the ‘‘ Botanical Magazine.” 

Genista humifusa is a pretty little prostrate shrub with bright 
yellow blossoms, for the choice rockery. 

Ginkgo biloba may serve for a shrub, as it will not be secured 
more than a few feet high and is a slow grower. This sacred 
“‘ maiden-hair tree,” from Northern China, is quite hardy, and 
fruits in France, but not, I think, with us. You shall find nothing 
like it, for it is a monotypic genus, whose relations belonged to 
remote geological periods, and only appear in fossil forms to-day. 
Therefore welcome this survival, who for the absurd sum of two- 
and-six will join you and add a unique distinction to your garden 
close. 

Gleditschia, which sounds like somebody throwing a stone 
through a pane of glass, soon makes a neat little feathery tree. I 
have only G. tricanthos, the honey locust, from the United States ; 
but it has not flowered or set its beans with me. G. Delavayi is a 
splendid species from Yunnan now within our reach. 

The Globularias are neat sub-shrubs from Mediterranean 
shores. They climb the rockery with great agility, and their blue 
flowers, like big jasiones, stud the bush pleasantly in summer. 
Mine is G. vulgaris ; but I have a very tiny variety collected on 
the hills above Grasse, which I take to be G. minima. It is a mere 
green carpet on a limestone moraine—smaller even than my 
treasured Salix serpyllfoha, a willow to its wee catkins, which I 
collected above Zermatt on wet rocks. 

Gonocalyx pulcher, from New Grenada, would probably stand 
against a wall here, but I never see or hear of this fine monotypic 


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MY SHRUBS 53° 


int. Gordonia lasianthus, the loblolly bay, my nurseryman 
tly but firmly denies me, though I believe the superb thing 
uld do in half shade with camellia. It grows among the swamps 


e clan. G. anomala, with yellow flowers, would have to be 
en in during winter, for it is a sub-tropical Asian. 
rabe wskya glauca is another stranger to me. It is a Peruvian 
reen, has rambling, climbing habits and blue flowers. This 
_ Shall secure for the sake of its ridiculous name. Not that Mr. 
rabowsky was ridiculous, or a rambling climber. This excellent 
DC y flourished in early Victorian times, when nobody was 
revillea sulks with me, and will not perform. “It is a most 
ing circumstance,” says Curtis, ‘‘ when plants afford char- 
by which they may with certainty be distinguished.” That 
s upon the characters. For instance, you can with cer- 
y distinguish my Grevillea thyrsoides from all others by the 
that it refuses to blossom. Its red flowers ought to flash, 
1 on, all the year round, but they never flash at all. G. 
urea died after flowering, and now I want that admirable wall 
, G. pendula, with white blossoms and a beautiful habit. I 
not find this desirable plant in dictionaries or catalogues, but 
find it on a wall in one of our great West Country gardens 
n a walk of me. There, too, grows the specimen of the 
1a avellana | have already blessed. It is a tree forty feet 
with glossy evergreen leaves and cherry-coloured fruits 
in late autumn. Chili can hardly hold a more splendid specimen. 
Certainly England does not. Guevina avellana is deliberately 


54. MY SHRUBS 


called LElaodendron spherophyllum pubescens by some people. 
One drops a tear and hurries on, 

Gymnocladus canadensis, the Kentucky coffee tree, is a slow 
grower. I secured some small pieces from France three years 
ago, and at present they have not put on six inches. Some day its 
handsome, bi-pinnate leaves will be three feet long; for the 
moment, standing but eighteen inches high in its socks, Gymno- 
cladus cannot fairly be asked to manage this. 


CHAPTER VI 


EALOUSY is an abominable vice, yet who can think of 
_ the resources of Kew without a pang? No doubt they 
would tell you there that the Government cares nothing 
yeauty—only for utility, and is always worrying them—not to 
y the most glorious shrubs and trees, but to make two blades 
rass succeed in the room of one, to produce potatoes as big as 

, and double the seeds in every ear of corn. Upon these 
ial problems the intellect of Kew is bound to descend, 


msider those incomparable lines in Dr. Darwin’s “ Botanical 
mn,” already mentioned. No wonder Kew is a little uppish 
imes when she remembers them :— 


* So sits enthron’d in vegetable pride 
Imperial Kew by Thames’s glittering side ; 
Obedient sails from realms unfurrowed bring 
For her the unnamed progeny of Spring ; 
Attendant nymphs her dulcet mandates hear, 
And nurse in fostering arms the tender year, 
Plant the young bulb, inhume the living seed, 
Prop the weak stem, the erring tendril lead ; 
Or fan in glass-built fanes the stranger flowers 


With milder gales, and steep with warmer showers.” 
55 


56 MY SHRUBS 


But we poor struggling amateurs enjoy none of these privileges : 
not for us do obedient sails bring fine things from realms un- 
furrowed ; not for us do obedient nymphs our dulcet mandates 
hear ; we cannot sally forth, like Sir David Prain, flower-crowned 
and followed by a host of tripping horticultural fairies. Nobody 
fans our perspiring sub-tropicals in glass-built fanes. When 
girls go into my glass-built fane, they only fan themselves. It is 
true that another sort of nymph tripped into the Nation’s orchid 
houses not so long ago, and they neither propped the weak stem 
nor led the erring tendril ; but for the most part, and subject to 
those little trials from which no human institution in these thrilling 
times is free, Kew has the gardening world at her feet, and we 
creatures of an hour cannot fail to be jealous of her and envy her 
amazing privileges. I ought to go to Kew in a humble spirit, and 
haunt its glades and glass for six months before daring to write 
this little book about shrubs. But I shall not. These are my 
shrubs that I am talking about, and not one of them came from 
Kew. I believe I have got about two that Kew has not got. If 
it knew of these, Kew would send messengers with rich gifts in 
exchange ; and I should slight them and entreat them scornfully, 
and send them back to the Royal Gardens empty-handed. I 
have got my “ vegetable-pride ”’ too. 

Not that Hakea eriantha, from Australia, ministered to it; this 
good evergreen died at the first onset of November without a 
struggle. ‘To-day it was here, to-morrow it had vanished. I 
remember no frost, or other peril, though it is true it came with 
that familiar danger signal, ‘“‘ a good plant for favoured gardens.” 
Yet others have survived with the same warning on their foreheads. 
I remember that Melaleuca perished out of hand, and sundry of its 


Z * a alld Aida 3 
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RO Ta aE hire tds Sit a Seal tare RE ee Oe PA PRAY WO 


MY SHRUBS 57 


congeners. I fancy these Australians can easily be drowned in 
our wet winters, and possibly need as much protection from rain 
as frost. 

_ Halesia tetraptera is a familiar North American, but H. hispida 
ayems not so common. This Japanese variety is very beautiful, 
ith pendulous racemes of pure white flowers. H. corymbosa, as 
seen at Kew on a wall, is a grand subject. Here, however, one 
passes it without emotion. 

_ Halimodendron argenteum, the salt tree of Siberia, I have had, 
grafted on laburnum, for a good many years. It prospers and 
seems healthy, but its blossoms ought, I understand, to be rosy 
_ purple, whereas they come yellow. I have only seen them figured 
_ in the “Botanical Magazine” (under Robinia halimodendron), and 
_ they indicate a beautiful flower. I thought the stock must have 
dominated the scion, but this is not so. What, then, have I got 
instead of Halimodendron ? 

_ Of Hamamelis, the witch-hazel, I grow three species, and all 
are kindly and quick to lighten February with their countless 
yellow stars on naked boughs. H. mollis, from Japan, a really 
splendid hardy shrub, with handsome foliage, is the first to flower; 
and this year sparkled brilliantly through January. The blossoms 
are like golden spiders with purple bodies. H. zuccariniana is 
‘smaller and of paler inflorescence, while H. arborea differs little 
“save in size from the last-named, and flowers before it. These 
admirable plants are too uncommon. 

__ _Hedera minima is a neat, little upright ivy for the rock-work. 
It refuses to climb or creep, and its frutescent habit justifies me in 
-Maming it here. I have not seen it flower. 


The legions of Helianthemum need only to be named with 
H 


58 MY SHRUBS 


approval. That rare Britisher, H. polifolium, grows within a walk 
of me, and its white petals and golden eye gladden a rockery, for 
such is its abundance on certain limestone crags not far distant; 
that to transfer a plant or two wasno crime These sun-roses can 
be cut back hard when their mounds become too large to control. 

Hermannia candicans did well in peat on a wall for some years, 
and hung out little yellow bells the size of the lily-of-the-valley. 
But after the fashion of too many other Australians, it faded away 
_ gradually, and is now with me no more. JH. lavendulifolia is a 
small Cape species of good repute. 

Helichrysum antennaria is a neat little hardy shrub with white 
flowers, rare in cultivation, though very worthy of it ; while Heimia 
grandiflora is also hardy and very handsome. Nesea this Mexican 
is called by the elect. It has willow-like foliage and bright yellow 
flowers, which climb up the long stems and make a beautiful shrub 
of it in August. My plant is five feet high, and still growing. 

Hibbertia dentata is a splendid climber with dark purple foliage 
and yellow flowers. I have seen this fine Australian in great form 
near Penzance, but it is only a plant for very snug gardens. For 
a cold house wall nothing could be more attractive; but I find it 
not in the catalogues. 

Hibiscus also; save H. roseus and H. syriacus, belong to the 
greenhouse, or stove. Hibiscus is a good and brilliant deciduous 
shrub of many gardeners’ varieties. 

Hippophe rhamnoides, the sea buckthorn, is a_ beautiful, 
silvery, hardy plant of wide distribution. But the shrub is 
dicecious, and unless you mate it, the orange-coloured berries will 
not appear. 

Hoherea populnea stands ten feet high with me, and has made a 


MY SHRUBS 59 


: handsome evergreen shrub under the shelter of a wall. This lace 
bark or ribbon wood, of New Zealand, is a fine thing; and nearly 
_ hardy. The flowers are white, and appear in spring time at the 
end of the branchlets, but the plant needs to attain some size before 
| _ bearing them. : 

B _ Hovenia dulcis is a rare, deciduous shrub from Japan and the 
_ Himalayas, but a wall is probably the place for this choice thing 
_ at home; and, until it has attained some strength and substance, 
you will do better to keep it in a pot and winter it in a cold house. 
_ I have only just procured a piece, and cannot speak as to the white 
_ flowers and sweet fruit. It thrives and is much used in Australia. 

Hydrangea is also here, but this is a shrub that won’t blow blue 
with me, though H. paniculata as a half-standard is well enough. I 
_ suppose one needs iron tonics to coax hydrangea blue in a limestone 
soil; I heard that peat would do so; but it did not. One might 
have thought that H. azureus from China would have come true, 
but this turned as pink as the rest. You must see Hydrangea in 
_ Cornish gardens to know its real glory and loveliest shades of azure. 
_ Hymenanthera crassifolia is a neat and trim New Zealander, 
_ of the best constitution. The evergreen foliage is very small, and 
_ the inflorescence is minute, while bright white berries cover the 
plant during autumn. It is a good grower, and soon makes a 
‘specimen for the rock-work when suited below ground. dH. 
chathamica is also in cultivation—a dissimilar plant in every 
respect, and not, to my mind, so attractive. 

Hypericum 1 recognise as a most valuable and beautiful shrub 
in its many species; but for me it possesses no personal charm. 
_ HZ. coris, which I collected in the South, has made a prosperous 
little bush on a rockery. It is hardy here, and should be cut back 


60 MY SHRUBS 


pretty well in autumn. But, of the shrubby hypericums, 1 have 
sent mine into the world to please those who appreciate them. 
H. fragilis is very beautiful upon the rockery, and, of course, H. 
repens. The new H. leve-rubrum is orange-scarlet, very striking, 
and doubtfully hardy. 

One would dearly like to grow Ilex in all its admirable forms ; 
but for these most interesting shrubs I have no room on a generous 
scale. A few common varieties occur, where scraps of original 
shrubbery have not been cleared, but of hollies interesting to a 
collector I can show only the delightful dwarfs, J. Mariest and J. 
Pernyi. ‘The former is spineless, and has small leathery leaves and 
a neat habit. It flowers abundantly, but must be diccious. To 
see it in berry would be a noble experience. J. Pernyi is a little 
Chinese holly of dense habit and foliage, after the usual prickly 
pattern. J. “ Taraio,” from Japan, now within your reach, must 
be a very splendid variety of the species. ‘The whole race has 


great interest, and I think all hollies are hardy. ‘They tried to grow 


them at the Cape once, and kept them in shade with ice to their 
foreheads ; but it was useless : none survived a Cape summer. 

Illictum anistum is dull, though sacred in Japan. They decorate 
the tombs of their loved dead with it. The anise-scented species 
should have some care in winter, but is of no great worth. J. 
floridanum sounds rather more attractive, but I have not attempted 
this species. | 

Indigofera is not very hardy ; but I. gerardiana stands well in 
the open, and would probably thrive anywhere, though of Indian 
blood. Given a wall, it makes a very handsome bush, with fern- 
like foliage and rosy-pink blossoms. J. decora, from China, is even 
better, but not quite so robust. 


MY SHRUBS 61 


Inga pulcherrima, a noble evergreen, Mexican, with scarlet 
flowers, thrives in Cornwall, but I have not attempted it here, or 
seen it attempted. | 
Ixora may be mentioned too, of course, for the stove. There 
no more gorgeous shrub than this, and no hothouse can be 
ed complete without it. Think of the name alone—a fearsome 
idol—to whom the flowers were presented as a peace 
. They may still be, for all I know to the contrary, and 
y ought to turn Ixora from his wrath, if the demon has any 
aste or esthetic feeling... . There are many species of the 
aus, but J. coccinea is the most splendid. As long ago as 1690, 
ame to Kew from Malabar. It made but a short stay, and was 
troduced some hundred years later by Dr. John Fothergill, 
name,” as Curtis says, ‘‘ to medicine and botany ever dear.” 


the only one who has failed to flower this Mexican. Perhaps 

; ‘stove might tempt it. I must try it there, for those who 
t € seen it prosperous in India, speak with enthusiasm of the 
} : blossoms. As a foliage plant alone, it is very beautiful and 
thy of culture. 


onia, from Australia, is apparently out of cultivation and 


6a MY SHRUBS 


white flowers in terminal cymes; but a good hawthorn pleases 
me better. | 
Jasminum goes without saying. F. primilinum is a handsome 
Chinese species near to F. nudiflorum, but a shy bloomer with me. 
F. beestanum, the red jasmine, is not exciting. It grows as fast on 
a wall as any of them, and flowers generously with small dull 
crimson blossoms. . polyanthum for the greenhouse I know only 
by repute. It is an exquisite pink and white climber from Yunnan. 
Juniperus takes many attractive forms for a small garden and 
I esteem these little trees highly. ¥. bermudiana furnishes the 
wood of our so-called “‘ cedar” pencils, and Nicholson records 
that it is rarely seen in England ; but few others are tender and 


the dwarf varieties make a precious addition to the rockery. I 


suppose there are fifty in cultivation, and of these among the few — 


that dwell with me, I specially commend 7. communis hibernica nana, 
a delightful, little upright tree. It lives with Chamecyparis filifera 
aurea, and they make a lovely harmony in blue and gold. The 
juniper of my picture has towered to the dizzy height of twenty-two 
inches. ¥. c. hibernica compressa is even more sublime. This is 
the least of all conifers. ¥. pachyphlea is another treasure, as blue 
as the sky and of graceful bearing. ¥. Sabina, the Savin, is an 
ornamental dusky juniper; and the weeping variety, especially 
good. #. virginiana, the red cedar, in its various forms, is also 
valuable, 7. virginiana globosa being a specially precious pigmy. 
There are many other most worthy species of small juniper, 
notably a small variety collected by me as a seedling in Switzer- 
land. It is quite common, but I have yet to learn its proper name. 


i nn Ne ne ore 


CHAMACYPARIS 


OLDEN 


‘ 
7 


JUNIPER AND ( 


JARF 


DW 


CHAPTER VII 


HEN building walls, be generous and do not cramp a 
fine creeper for the sake of a few feet of bricks and 
mortar. I schemed a wall a good few years ago, and 

that eight feet was high enough for anything invited to 
but far from it. Ambitious things were at the top in 

1e, and some have easily climbed to the summit of pillars 
wall which were never set there for them. Now certain 

s wrestle with the roses for a row of arches that connect 


extensive programme. 

dsura japonica will probably follow suit; but this fine, 
ardy climber with small, pendent white flowers and cori- 
3 leaves, though in brisk advance, has not yet been here 
enough to break boundaries. There is a Kadsura with 
ated foliage—not always an additional charm—but in the 
of this shrub possibly an advantage. 

: 2 was much in evidence a year ago, but one does not 

e Biicsting greenhouse crassulas so often now. I never 
rnired them. 
-Kalmia latifolia is a great shrub, given proper conditions. 
: best that I have seen in Devon grew among the foothills 
Dartmoor in cool deep peat; but none in England, I suspect, 
attained the twenty feet recorded from this Kalmia’s home 
; a 3 


64 MY SHRUBS 


in the South Alleghanies. Nothing is finer than these fresh ¢ 
beautiful shrubs, with their bright evergreen foliage and cory o q 
clear pink bloom. ‘That it approves peat and half shade is certé 1 
but it may thrive equally under other conditions. I suspect, how 
ever, like so many. Americans, it is intolerant of lime. P 

K. glauca is a choice dwarf species; but K. angustifolia is 
not to be commended. This shrub from Canada has a poor 
wiry habit, and nothing much to atone for it. There is, too 
K. angustifolia rubra, which has good friends, but I have not s seen 
this red-flowered variety. 

Kennedya, with which may be reckoned Hardenbergia, is : 
valuable and beautiful climber for the greenhouse or cold house. 
I grew one from seed, and satisfied myself that it was very good. 
The species mostly produces scarlet flowers of varying shades ; 
but there are purple, and blue Kennedyas also. In Algiers I 
recollect a handsome blue species. The bloom is in the style 
of Clianthus, though not so large as the Glory Pea, and the habit 
always scandent. I suppose they would be useless in the open. 

Kerria japonica, though a mid-Victorian, may still rank as a i 
most valuable flowering shrub. Who rejoices not to see its 
jovial gold in the spring sunshine ? Either upon a wall or in the 
shrubbery its graceful wands are equally at home. . 

Kéelreuteria paniculata, a monotypic genus from North China, 
grows swiftly when satisfied with the conditions. My specimen 
has after eight years attained to the dignity of a little tree. I $ 
deeply toothed, pinnate foliage is ruby-red in spring, and turns 
to a fine pale orange in autumn; while during a hot summer 
it sends forth long, upright pannicles of yellow flowers. The € 
in their turn produce a conspicuous capsuled fruit when September 


KOELREUTERIA 


PANICULATA 


MY SHRUBS 65 


comes. Kéelreuteria is a shy flowerer, but, hearing doubtless 
of my booklet, it performed this year, and I photograph a spray 
accordingly. K. pp. japonica is a variety said to be less hardy than 
our plant. 

Laburnum is a small but popular genus, oust some people 
have the greatest objection to its chill, yellow tresses. L. Vossiz 
on a standard is very handsome, and the bloom trusses the largest 
that I know. Waterer’s laburnum is also a famous variant on 


the familiar form. 


Lagerstreemia indica is no good out of doors to me, and not 
very useful anywhere. This sub-tropical Chinese shrub must be 
very beautiful with adequate culture. It lingers under shelter of 
a wall with peat to live in; but the leaf falls early in autumn, 
and no flower has ever appeared. I may have had an invalid, 


and must try again. 


Lantana is frankly an indoor shrub, and has never greatly 


g attracted me at that; but Lapageria, named after Josephine 
— Lapagerie, Empress of the French, who solaced many an un- 
quiet hour with growing things, will smile on a sheltered wall. 
_ TI have L. rosea, perhaps the hardiest, in a snug corner facing 


west, and, though no great grower out of doors, it fails not to 


ay 


en ee ee 
reer ies fe : 


brighten late autumn with its wax-like bells. Two perfect 
blossoms hung there on Christmas Day. At times of lengthened 


__ frost an “* Archangel ” protects the plant. 


Lardizabala biternata, which resembles a climbing berberis, 
is another admirable Chilian for a west wall, and also a winter 
_ flowerer. Like Lapageria it requires a cold house for perfection ; 
- but will do its duty in the open air. The blossom is purple, 


and not particularly effective. 
: I 


66 MY SHRUBS 


I know of no dwarf Larix, but, if one exists, should dearly 
like to add it to my miniature forest. The only deciduous dwarf 
in that absurd grove is Betula. All larches are exquisite, but so 
swift is their growth that after a few years they occupy far more 
room in a small garden than can be spared. I have always a 
larch growing here, but its activities are called to cease long 
before it reaches maturity. 

Lasiandra macrantha is a noteworthy Brazilian which thrives 
in snug Cornish gardens, but needs a cold house at Kew. 
The shrub has beautiful foliage and brilliant blue flowers in 
late autumn. Few gardeners can count upon success with this 
valuable plant in the open; but all should grow it under 
cover. It is often called Pleroma macranthum, and at Kew 
it manages somehow to prosper as Tibouchina Semidecandra. 
Please tell me where one may procure this noble shrub, for I 
know not. 


Of the laurels I grow but few, and best I like Laurus camphora, 


the camphor laurel. It would seem that this should be referred 
to Cinnamomum, and grown in a cold house; but my specimen 
against a south wall has now ascended to ten feet, and stood some 
harsh weather without faltering as L. camphora. It is a very 
beautiful Japan shrub, saturated with camphor in all its parts. L. 
nobilis is a common weed in this region, and the wild pigeons 
come for the berries during autumn. But many escape them, and 
seedlings of the sweet bay are grubbed up every year in hundreds. 
L. nobilis regalis is a fragrant dwarf variety that promises well. 
L. Sassafras officinale makes a good, but not a showy shrub. The 
leaves take strange shapes sometimes. In Virginia they manu- 
facture beer of the young shoots, and perfumers use an oil ex- 


fone healt 


MY SHRUBS 67 


tracted from the bark. I have partaken of a decoction of sassafras 
myself, but it did not renew my youth, and could by no possibility 
have been mistaken for beer. Otherwise I should have persisted 
with it. LZ. Benzoin, known also as Lindera Benzoin, the Benja- 
min bush from North America, is another neat, deciduous laurel, 
with aromatic scent and inconspicuous yellow flowers which 
appear before the foliage. 

For Lavatera I care not. It grows enormously and straggles 
helplessly. Anon it becomes top-heavy, and sags in the ground. 
It is a hysterical, excitable plant, always growing and crying for 
attention. 

_ Lavendula dentata, grown by a friend from La Mortala seed, 
seems hardy, and is an ornamental early flowering bush; while 
L. Stachas, another Mediterranean lavender, is said to be 
quite hardy. L. vera I collected in a neat form upon the hills 
above Grasse. The blossom is smaller and paler than gardeners’ 
varieties. The white-flowered lavender, too, is good to grow. 

_ Ledum latifolium is a little shrub from Canada and Green- 
land’s icy mountains. The flowers are white in close umbels 
and the whole plant seldom exceeds eighteen inches in height. 
‘This Labrador tea is a peat lover, and would probably enjoy 
more sunshine than it receives with me. A good specimen is a 
_ beautiful sight. Mine improves yearly in a bed of Tiarella. 
_ Ledum (or Leiophyllum) buxifolium likes shade, and succeeded 
well for some years with me; then the exceedingly charming 
dwarf passed. 

Leonotis leonurus, the Lion’s ear combined with the Lion’s 
tail—named a phlomis of old—is a remarkable and splendid 
a shrubby thing from the Cape of Good Hope. Its whorls of 


68 MY SHRUBS 


orange-scarlet, sessile blossoms, make the most splendid colour 
October can show in the garden. It might be more correct to 
say November, for it shares with some other treasures the 
habit of very tardy flowering. Thus, though pretty hardy, it is 
always a doubtful shrub in the South. When the flowers pro- 
mise, watch the weather and protect them against cold nights. 
It is a good plant, and if successful out of doors, obtains to a 
great size. Set the Lion’s tail under a south wall, and cut it 
back pretty hard after flowering. I have a valued friend who 
performs wonders with Leonoiis. 

Leptospermum, from Australia, is beginning to hold its own 
in gardens ; but these shrubs need winter care unless their home 
is perfectly sheltered and there exists overhead protection of trees. 
The frost injures them quickly. JL. stellulatum, L. lanigerum, — 
and L. bullatum are here. The last is a New Zealander, and 
opens its little white stars in May. I protect these plants, but 
doubt if the first-named needs it, though the last certainly does, 
and slight cold soon cuts the finials. L. levigatum makes a tree, 
and must be a splendid object on a large scale. It is very 
beautiful of shrub size. I have, too, a neat dwarf species on a 
limestone rockery. It thrives, but has not flowered as yet. 

What of Leschenaultia? Perhaps the name has frightened 
nurserymen away from this good Australian. Nicholson com- 
mends it héartily, and describes some splendid species. Their 
flowers are all colours of the rainbow, and certain of them ought 
to be attempted out of doors in the West Country. L. biloba 
major is described by the master above-named as “ perhaps the 
finest blue-flowered shrub in cultivation.” Then why on earth 
are we not all cultivating it? The genus is admittedly difficult, 


LESCHENAULTIA BILOBA MAJOR 


a 


MY SHRUBS 69 


but not seldom a plant that is one long nuisance in a pot will 
become as amiable as you please out of doors. Leschenaultia 


are a little folk, and might surely repay our attention, I have 


two plants of L. biloba major, whose beautiful flowers—something 
between a blue butterfly and a lobelia—crown the heathery 
foliage in sparse corymbs. L. formosa is scarlet. I do not hear 
of it in cultivation. My specimens flower in spring, and then are 
plunged in a peat bed until the late autumn. 

Leucadendron argenteum has perished in a snug corner. I 
feared that it would, though it could not have been treated better 
ina nursing home. It is a most beautiful tree, of the Proteacez 


___ order, with leaves like dull silver. Even such a small specimen 


as mine, six feet high at death, added to the joy of the garden 
by its rare distinction, and I miss it much. 

Leucocyclus formosus is a neat little composite shrub for the 
rockery, with beautiful grey serrated foliage, like feathers, and 
daisies for flowers. 

Leycesteria formosa, a monotype, is of course common enough, 
yet too graceful and interesting to be hackneyed. From the 
temperate Himalayas it descends, and its strange white flowers 
in chocolate bracts are freely born on bending shoots. It is 


_ almost evergreen in our gardens, and increases very rapidly. 


Pheasants eat the fruits, it is said (probably as a corrective after 
a debauch on mangel), but in my garden the berries turn into 
little plants, and generally choose most impossible places for 
their germination. 

___ Libonia used to be popular as a greenhouse shrub, but I think 
it has gone a little out of fashion. This Brazilian lacks charm 
and is no use save under glass. 


70 MY SHRUBS 


Ligustrum also leaves me cold ; but L. aureum, the golden privet, a 
resides in a corner, and is often picked for indoor decoration. a 
Limoniastrum monopetela, from Sicily, attained to a good size, 


and its grey-green foliage and original habit made an interesting — : 


shrub of it. But it perished without showing a flower, and I 
have started it again under very favourable conditions. It is 
inclined to be tender, but probably succeeds well enough in the 
South of England. 

Liquidambar styraciflua, a hamamelis, whose species occur in 
the Levant, Japan and elsewhere, is famed for its fine autumn 
colouring. These trees grow slowly, and are shrubs for practical 
purposes. My variety—the sweet gum—is of North America, 
and has not shaken out its yellow catkins as yet. Neither has the 
autumn colour of the foliage been at all remarkable. L. for- 
mosana, from China, is now in cultivation. You can use the 
timber of this species for tea-chests, I find, should it fail to please 
you. 

Liriodendron is another tree, and will not give you its sweet- 
scented, tulip-like blossoms until it attains to something like 


adult size. The finest specimen of this famous American that 4 . 
I have ever seen was in a friend’s garden at Petersham, nigh 


Richmond-on-Thames. 

Lomatia ferruginea is a Chilian, and quite hardy in the West. 
Its fernlike, evergreen leaves and rusty stems make a good shrub 
of it, and reconcile me to some patience in the matter of its 
crimson flowers. It grows slowly in any soil, and appears to like 


full sun. Other varieties grow in Australia, but I do not know 4 


whether they are cultivated. The plant is allied to Embothrium, 
but a great deal easier to please. 


# 


MY SHRUBS 71 


_Lonicera Hildebrandti, an evergreen honeysuckle from Upper 


q _ Burmah, makes the rest of this race look small, and its huge 


~ blossoms hang in splendid clusters amid the deep green leaves. 


_ The purple bud, three to four inches long, opens pure white, 


then turns cream colour and presently becomes orange yellow. 
Grown on the south wall of my house, and protected as far as 
possible at moments of undue cold, it prospers—one of the most 


striking climbers in any garden. I have but few other honey- 
_ Suckles, including the very fragrant, pink, L. syringantha, a dainty 
_ climber in a small way, and another still more minute, but hardly 

less sweet, L. pileata—a Chinese evergreen shrub, that looks like 
a privet, but harbours clusters of little white trumpets in Spring 

and purple berries afterward. Of the common or garden honey- 

‘suckles Gauntlett’s grand L.‘‘ Scarlet Trumpet” is to be specially 
commended, and, for the rest, you doubtless have your own 
_ favourites which you would not change for mine. 


. e __ Loropetalum chinense is another plant of the tribe of Witch 
_ Hazel. But the flowers are white and the shrub is evergreen. 


Li) REE Re ee 


; It seems delicate, and a light frost suffices to pinch it; yet it 
__ makes good growth in half shade, and, if prosperous, will bloom 
ina youthful state. The lax blossoms hanging beneath the little 
branches are a fair sight in spring. 


Lotus peliorhynchus, the Pigeon’s Beak, from Teneriffe, adds, 


_ with its grey foliage and scarlet blossoms, to the glory of Southern 
_ gardens, but is difficult in our rockeries. Indeed I have never 
seen it really prosperous out of doors, save in Cornwall, near 
a _ Penzance, though there are inspired people elsewhere who declare 


___ it succeeds with them under the sky. My own experiments have 
failed. 


72 MY SHRUBS 


With Luculia gratissima I name one of the very best shrubs 
in my little group. This evergreen from the temperate Hima- 
layas is almost hardy, but since it makes up bud in late autumn 
and flowers during December and January, it cannot dwell all 
the year out of doors. Failing the border of a cold house, my 
plan has been to grow in a large pot, which is plunged in half 
shade on a peat bed during May, and taken in again when the 
trusses of bud have set at the end of October. At Christmas 
the bright pink and splendidly fragrant blossoms appear, and 
for a few red-letter days the plant joins the family circle. It 
then returns to the cold house, as the dry air of a dwelling-room 
daunts it. Among Luculia’s other virtues you may number the 
fact that the blossom cluster keeps pink and sweet and perfect 
for a month. One ought really to write a poem to Luculia, 
whose native name, Luculi, has happily been retained. There is 
a second species, L. pinceana, from the mountains of Khasia, 
which I know not. But the flower is white, and is said to possess 
even a richer fragrance than the Himalayan. Lose no time in 
securing this precious shrub. 

The tree lupin is a genial evergreen nobody for a spare 
corner. There are many varieties of Lupinus arboreus in 
cultivation, but none much better than the old yellow type. 
Gauntlett’s ‘Snow Queen,” however, is to be specially 
esteemed. By the way, I have a giant lupin here over seven 
feet high—a herbaceous purple variety grown from seed sent 
by a friend in Florida. The colour is not unpleasing, and 
the flower very fragrant. ‘This enormous species might be 
crossed with some other lupin, and produce a great herbaceous 
hybrid. 


* 


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= MY SHRUBS — . 73 
-chinense is a hardy, deciduous shrub which soon makes 
4 specimen. The drooping habit is graceful, but the little 
flowers, fading to brown, are inconspicuous. They are 


es followed by orange-scarlet berries ; but this Box Thom 
fruit very freely with me. ; 


* 
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hahah 


CHAPTER VIII 


T is perhaps a mistake to mention greenhouse shrubs, 
as I do from time to time in this brochure; but my sole 
intent is to add to your store of things that may belong to 

the garden for a considerable part of the year and need only be 
protected at their flowering season. Thus Mackaya bella, whose 
pale lavender blossoms appear in June, may, after flowering, be 
put out and plunged in a sunny bed, to its own great advantage, 
until October. I believe this to be a very desirable method 
with many shrubs that cannot be trusted to weather the winter. 
Mackaya, named after Dr. J. F. Mackay, of “ Flora Hibernica ” 
fame, is a handsome evergreen, and comes from Natal. There 
is only one species of the genus known. It appears to be rare 
in cultivation, and my piece came as a very little plant from a 
German nursery. Hard wood must be made, or it will not 
flower. 

Maclura auruntiaca has gone. It grew into an immense bush, 
and was probably planted in too rich a soil. Year after year it 
waxed in size, and did nothing but grow and annoy other things. 
This Osage-orange is well spoken of by those who have seen a 
seemly fruiting plant, but until my own eyes are satisfied, I shall 
not try it again. ) | 

One comes with joy to the glorious company of Magnolias. 
Most of them, however, demand more space than I can give 
them, though a few are here. Magnolia Campbell, from Sikkim, 

74 


ep 


; 
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~ 


‘ — eo 2 
SD te ae A ee 2 


> 


fey s a s 


: ae: 
ae aay a ED i 
inn ee et eS rr Pi on 


amie 
Pisa 


$ 


MAGNOLIA STELLATA 


MY SHRUBS 75 


is their king, and I have known men who built their camp-fires 
of the wood. It is tender, and needs a wall, and protection in 
very cold weather. I have not flowered it yet, but hope to see 
its wonderful rosy blossoms some day. Meanwhile, it is pleasant 
to mark Campbelli’s growth and very beautiful foliage. M. con- 
spicua, the Yulan of China, grows swiftly, and soon attains flower- 
ing size. Its blossoms are white, while those of M. Lennei are a 
pale purple. M. stellata covers its naked limbs in April with 
scented stars of purest white ; while M. Osaka is the darkest that 
I know, and its blossoms are the colour of chocolate—almost 
black in the bud. Magnolia parviflora resembles M. pumila, 
as figured in the “ Botanical Magazine.” Pumila was held doubt- 
fully a magnolia once and, without consulting China, whence it 
came, certain worthy botanists of Madras proposed to call it 
Guwillamia after Lady Gwillim. Curtis, however, declined the 
suggestion, ‘‘though desirous of paying every respect to that 
amiable lady.”’ We all know people who would add a delight 
to a flower by lending it their names, but botany must be 


_ respected. M. pumila, which I do not find in modern cata- 
___ logues, is an evergreen, and cannot therefore be M. parviflora. 


M. fuscata is, however, allied to the other Chinese dwarf. This 


_ beautiful little magnolia, whose fragrant stars are a pale auburn, 
4 a _ is evergreen, and, though a slow grower, seems well worth while 
. _ for the cold house. Mine flowers yearly, though it is but a foot 
q 4 a high yet. The leaves are bright and shining. Of course that 


notable giant, M. grandiflora, is on the wall of every flower-lover’s 
dwelling in the West Country, when there is room for it, and 


j ( many good specimens thereof flourish and flower abundantly in 


the open. Its giant blossom of pale cream is among the finest 


76 MY SHRUBS 


and sweetest flowers that blow. M. macrophylla, of which I 
possess a young plant, is a gigantic deciduous species with huge 


foliage and blossoms ten inches across. But M. Delavayt, another 


grand plant, for which I thank a valued friend, promises to make 


a swifter growth than the last-named. It is a superb Chinese 


evergreen with large white flowers, still too rare in cultivation. 
The young leaves of a fine specimen are most beautiful. 
Curtis writes of the magnolia that there is “a magnificence 


about the plants of this genus which renders them unsuitable 


subjects of representation in a work the size of ours,” and if 
you substitute ‘‘ garden ” for work, the words unfortunately hold 
true for most of us. But you should obtain half a dozen from 
the immense variety to be secured, or if that is too many, and 
you prefer to represent magnolia by a single species, then set 
M. grandiflora against the south face of your house, or M. conspicua 
where it will have room to stretch and grow. M. conspicua alba 
superba is the variety to choose. To Pierre Magnol, Prefect of 
the Botanic Garden of Montpellier, nearly two hundred years 
ago, belongs the name of this notable and fragrant family. I set 
them near to rhododendron in my regard. 

Malpighia belongs to the greenhouse and stove. I tried the 
fruits of M. glabra, the Barbados cherry, when visiting that 
coral island in the past, and liked them little. Mandevilla suave- 
olens, from Buenos Ayres, is a splendid deciduous climber, with 
flowers like a white jasmine, but three times as large and scarcely 
less fragrant. The fruit is most curious—twin, round pods above 
a foot long and joined together at the point. 

Manettia coccinea really will not do out of doors here. It is a 
gem from French Guinea, and I have seen it flourishing superbly 


a a i aR ae i a ea Ge 4 Se ae eee 


LA aca Ye 


eon ae ener erst 


MANDEVILLA SUAVEOLENS 


aie 
ean 


oe 
§SS 


MELIANTHUS MAJOR 


MY SHRUBS 77 


and ascending to the roof tree of a Cornish mansion on a southern 
wall. The little scarlet and yellow flowers of this choice climber 


are very dazzling and effective. 


Margyricarpus setosus, from the Andes, sows its own white 
berries, and is always with me. It has no great charm or interest, 
and makes but a struggling thing on the rock-work. 

Medicago arborea, a lucern with orange pea-flowers and very 
ornamental foliage, is an excellent and distinctive shrub for a 
sunny wall. I have lost this good European, and must renew 
_ my acquaintance. 

Melaleuca, of Australia, has failed me too often. I have tried 
various species, and M. hypericifolia really looked happy until 
there came a winter that struck death through his coverings. 
Now another species is wrestling with another winter, and offers 
little hope, though under a snug west wall in peat. Perhaps the 


peat is the mistake, and a drier compost would suit it better. 


Melia floribunda will, I trust, prove hardy. It is a variety of 


4 _ M. Azedarach, and had that good plant’s fragrant lilac blossoms, 
4 _ and bipinnate foliage. I have but a little piece, and suspect it 


____isa slow grower in our climate. M. Azedarach, the bead tree, is 
_ beautifully figured in the “Botanical Magazine,” and has long 
__ been a common object of cultivation in the East and through 
South Europe. The nuts are threaded for rosaries, “‘ to assist 
the devotion of good Catholics, for which purpose they are 


___ peculiarly suited, having a natural perforation through the centre,” 
says Curtis. What we want, however, is a nut to assist the 


- devotion of bad Catholics. 
_. Melianthus major is among the most beautiful shrubs for a 


Warm corner of the garden and its mass of great glaucus foliage 


78 MY SHRUBS 


arrests the most casual spectator. From the Cape it comes, 
and would seem to be hardier than most of it congeners. ‘This 
honey flower is not great in the matter of blossom, and its 
long, red-brown bloom-spike does in no way add to its charm. 
The stems are hollow, and if winter brings disaster, you can 
cut the shrub down, mulch the remains, and trust it to spring up 
cheerfully again. M. pectinatus must be a choice addition to 
the greenhouse, but I know it not save by repute. M. minor 
has pink flowers, and needs the comfort of a cold house. 

Meliosma myriantha came, saw, and perished; but this 
Japanese plant should stand with us, and must be attempted 
again, for it succeeds in the gardens of Cornwall. 

Melicytus ramiflorus, from New Zealand, is a hardy little 
evergreen with good foliage and trim habit; but my piece has 
not revealed its white flowers yet. 

The Menziesias do not flourish here. M. empetriformis should 
be a very beautiful little shrub when well grown. It comes 
from the North-West States of America, and is smaller than 
M. polifolia, the Irish heath. 

Menispermum canadense has handsome foliage, and climbs 
quickly in half shade. It flowers with small tassels of mean 
inflorescence, but I have never seen the seed, which gives the 
Moon Creeper its name. 

A neat Mesembryanthemum, and the hardiest that I know, is 
M. uncinatum, with stiff shrubby habit and pink flowers in 
August. Doubtless there are others of the Fig Marigolds that 
would do equally well, and M. edule, the great Hottentot fig, 
sprawls over our rockeries and opens its pale yellow flower very 
generously. My heart has never gone out to this huge family. 


aes 
fe: 


MY SHRUBS 79 


Metrosideros should prosper where Callistemon will, but per- 
chance it is more tender, for I seldom find it in catalogues. I 
have a tiny piece of the new M. diffusa, a scarlet-flowered dwarf, 
and must acquire M. florida and M. lucida anon. 

Mimulus glutinosus is a shrubby monkey-flower from Cali- 
fornia. You may know it and value it as Diplacus. The corolla 
is of a buff or auburn colour, and, thanks to the kindness of a 
friend, I have a good piece of this evergreen with rich chocolate 
coloured blooms. It is not quite hardy, and should have a snug 
and sunny spot. Mimulus g. puniceus, from Western California, 
has orange-scarlet flowers. 

Mitraria coccinea, a monotype with dark evergreen foliage 
and scarlet tubular flowers, should be grown, like most other 
Chilians, in peat with shade. These plants from the Andes live 
in rain clouds for a large part of the year, and are very thirsty 
subjects. But Mitraria is perfectly hardy, and when prosperous 
presents a superb appearance, thronged with its pendent and 
brilliant scarlet blossoms. It is of a climbing habit, and looks 
best on a wall. 

Moltkia petrea is a very diminutive shrub, and will thank 


you for a limestone moraine. This choice atom from Dalmatia 


should ascend to six inches high, and open violet eyes among 
grey leaves if all goes well with it. 
Why do we not hear more of Montanoa? It might do better 


than many tender subjects, and Nicholas pronounces the species 


M. bipinatifolia a striking shrub for summer sub-tropical gar- 
dening. This Mexican should be encouraged, and I shall be 
delighted to welcome it if anybody will give me an opportunity 
to do so. But I have never seen it in a catalogue. 


80 MY SHRUBS 


Of Muehlenbeckia I have a giant, a dwarf, and a species 
between the two. M. complexa we all know, and how it will 
climb anywhere and creep anywhere. Its trailing masses swiftly 
strangle lesser things. Little M. nana is a carpet plant, and very 
neat, while M. varians would rival M. complexa in its size if long 
neglected. The Muehlenbeckias come from Australia and New 
Zealand, and there is nothing hardier in the garden. 

Mutisia Clematis, from New Granada, and WM. decurrens, out 
of the Chilian Andes, would not live with me on a west wall 
in half shade. I suspect the trouble was below ground, and 
that they wanted less moisture at the root. But M. Clematis is 
certainly hardy with us—in reason—and I doubt not rejoices a 
few Devonshire gardens with its large, orange-scarlet, dahlia- 
like flowers. 

Myoporum letum is a huge grower, but tender. This Australian, 
so happy on the Riviera, has bright leaves dotted with transparent 
spots. ‘The flowers are small, in whitish yellow clusters. I have 
lost it once or twice, and, for some curious reason, friends 
continually present me with pieces of it, so it has been renewed. 
But I do not admire it in the least. 

Myrica asplenifolia hung out its fragrant foliage here for 
some years, then the shrub died without visible reason; but 
M. cerifera, the Candleberry Myrtle, still flourishes in damp 
peat. It is not very interesting, and not half so fragrant as our 
own precious wilding, the Sweet Gale. 

Of true myrtles I have four species, but by no means great 
examples of any. Myritus communis is, of course, an everyday 
shrub in the West, and I prefer the form of this evergreen with 
small leaves. M. bullata, from New Zealand, is not so hardy, 


MY SHRUBS 81 


_ but has wintered well with the protection of a mat at times of 
_ frost. The flower is pink and the foliage curiously blistered— 
- hence the name. The mature leaves turn a dull pink. M. Luma 
a has snow-white, fragrant flowers and a fine free habit. I have but 
trifling plants ; but know of some in Cornwall that stand five and 


oe 
ie 
~~ 


twenty feet high. This is among the most splendid of Chilians, 
and the shining evergreen foliage against the red bark of the 


" boughs is a delight when the noble shrub is out of flowering. 


M. Ugni’s beautiful flower bells are a pale pink, and its berries, 


_ after a hot summer, ripen into the most delicious fruit. One 


cannot imagine a more aromatic and choice dessert. From 
Valdivia comes this invaluable myrtle, and it is worthy of a 
warm wall. Should Providence smile, and send you a crop of 
fruits, net them, otherwise your birds will have them before you 


_ do. Her Majesty Queen Victoria was fond of these myrtle berries, 


and they are really a dish to set before a queen. My plant 
stands four feet high, and is still growing. The real name of 


oy. Luma, by the way, is Eugenia apiculata, but when you have 


once gone to the expense of a metal label, you ignore the vagaries 


_ of science, and cleave to the old paths. After all, it doesn’t 


really matter to you what I call my shrubs, any more than it 
matters to me what you call your golf clubs. 
_ Myrtus tormentosa, from China, must be a very noble myrtle, 


; a with white woolly buds, and bright pink blossoms as large as a 
| 3 , penny piece. It flourished at Kew nearly a hundred and fifty 
_ years ago, but I know not if the Royal Gardens still possess this 


beautiful plant. Perhaps, like many a treasure from the past, 


2 7 it has gone out of cultivation. Curtis suspects that a greenhouse 
might serve its purpose rather than the stove; but possibly, 


L 


82 MY SHRUBS 


given a chance, M. tormentosa would grace a sunny wall of the 
West Country. The very latest thing in myrtles is M. nummu- 
larifolia, from the Falkland Islands, concerning which my far- 
famed friend, Herr Reuthe, tells us that the price can be learned 
on application. In my green youth I used to respond to this 
invitation, and rush in where angels fear to tread ; but the result 
has usually been so shocking, that I have long abstained from 
probing these gloomy mysteries. 

Of the fragrant myrtle race are the famous Pimenta, the all- 
spice trees that bear cinnamon, cloves, and pimento in the West 
Indies and tropical America. 


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CHAPTER IX 


I suspect my piece belongs to the invalids. Yet I know 

that it is hardy here, and can flower and fruit under the 
conditions it enjoys in my garden. In prosperity this Nandina, of 
Japan, makes a very beautiful specimen, and suggests a white 
flowered Berberis, to which order it belongs. There is a new 
variety within reach now: JN. purpurea, which must be secured, 
for it may prosper better than the type. 

Neillia opulifolia has been cast out, and I think Neviusia alaba- 
mensis will follow suit. The first is a mean Spirea; the second 
bears flowers which look pleasing in a photograph, but are really 
rather dull. Neviusia is somewhat in the style of Fothergilla, but 
not so effective. This shrub increases by undergrowth runners 
at a great rate, and its tenure of a good corner grows precarious. 
| With Nerium Oleander I can do nothing. It seems the least 
_ kindly of Mediterranean flora here. Cool, damp corners, not 
lacking in sunshine, should suit this lovely thing with protection 
in winter, but I know of few succeeding respectably out of doors. 
Perhaps I do not grow it wet enough. 

Nierembergia frutescens is shrub enough to be mentioned with 
praise. This Chilian proves nearly hardy in a warm corner, and 
its pale blue and white flowers and pretty flax-like habit make it 
a desirable plant. 

Notospartium Carmichaelia, the Southern Broom, is a mono- 

3 


3 Nts DOMESTICA has never thriven with me, and 
F 


84 MY SHRUBS 


typic genus of great beauty and interest. This is the Pink Broom — : q 


of New Zealand—a beautiful shrub worthy of a warm and sheltered 
corner in full sunshine. It grows slowly but steadily when pros- 
perous, and withstands severe cold. From New Zealand, few 
pea-flowered plants come to us, and certainly none of them can 
rival this very fine thing. I am fortunate in a piece that makes 
good progress and blossoms generously during early summer. 
Light, well-drained soil is probably the secret of success. 

Nuttallia cerasiformis is a good shrub, but it does not unmated 
produce its little plum-like fruits, though countless flowers may 
cluster on the branches in earliest spring. This Californian is 
polygamo-dicecious, whatever dreadful domestic arrangement that 
may be. The result at any rate is a childless plant with me. It 
makes a beautiful shrub when well grown. 

Nyssa multiflora—pleasantly named for once after a water 
nymph, instead of an eminent deceased botanist—should be here 
in my little bog. This North American is a small tree, but might 
join my collection for some years if I could find it and prevail 
with it to prosper. 

Ochna multiflora should be attempted in a greenhouse, for this 
shrub from Sierra Leone is full of interest. The fleeting yellow 
flowers are very fragrant, the fruits quite extraordinary. Upon 
a fleshy crimson receptacle are placed the seeds—green at first, 
then black. There is no more interesting or original plant. Mine 
reached to 5 feet high with great rapidity ; then it became un- 
wieldy, and was neglected and perished. A fallen seed or two 
germinated in the stove where it was wont to dwell ; but the seeds 
I tried to grow never came up. For a choice indoor collection 
nothing more attractive than Ochna can be proposed. ‘There is 


MY SHRUBS ° 85 


Jlearia furnishes some very splendid additions to the iciibe 
i > : indeed all the cultivated species are worth a : place. 


is also a tremendous grower. Its foliage is handsome, its 
-of no account. The genus comes from Australia and New 
, and O. nummularifolia—so called because its foliage does 
the least resemble a money-wort—is a New Zealander of a 
habit and most distinctive bearing. It differs from the 
every way except in charm, and no better dwarf shrub will 
d for a corner of the rockery. From a height of 4000 feet 
mes. O. nitida, another New Zealander, is a neat bushy 

y ‘with white flowers and shining, dark green foliage, and 
ulata is the most familiar garden variety—a delightful bush 
‘asmania. O. Haasti will not have escaped your attention ; 
O. msignis is still very rare in cultivation. It has splendid 
ty foliage, with thick, white under-down and large daisy-like 
ers, borne singly on 6-inch stalks. It is hardy here, and of a 
dy dwarf habit. O. Traversii is another very choice species of 


86 ~ MY SHRUBS 


doubtful hardiness. In its New Zealand home it attains to the 
size of a tree, but such energies are not likely to be displayed in 
England. 

Ononis rotundifolia is a bright little shrubby pea from South 
Europe. The flowers are pink, and it will thank you for full sun 
and very light, sandy soil. O. fruticosa has purple flowers and less 
charm. These have vanished from my garden patch, but they 
used to smile here of old. O. Natrix, too, I had—a yellow Rest- 
harrow—but that made only a short stay. ? 

The hardy Opuntias have been welcomed and received with 
hospitality in arid rocky corners having full sun and perfect drain- 
age; but they can make little of our wet winters and’ moisture- 
laden air. All have passed to their rest, and not one ever opened 
a flower during the most promising summers. 

Origanum Dictamnus, from Crete, is a delightful sub-shrub for 
the sunny rockery. A shower of dull pink blossoms covers the 
Dittany in late summer, and after flowering, it is best to cut it 
back hard. 

Osmanthus aquifolium looks like a dark-leaved holly with un- 
usually graceful and sinuous habit. This beautiful evergreen 
comes from Japan, is perfectly hardy and very effective. After a 
fine summer, tufts of very fragrant little snow-white flowers peep 
from among the leaves, but some hot sunshine in July and August 
is needed to summon the November bloom. O. zlcifolia, often 
given as a synonym of the above-named species, is in reality of 
different habit and foliage. O. myrtifolia is a beautiful little 
dwarf species; while, of comparative novelties, the splendid 
O. Delavayi, a Chinese hardy shrub with small neat foliage and 
sweet flowers in April, cannot be excluded. It is a generous 


MY SHRUBS 87 


flowerer, and soon makes a specimen on a sunny wall. Few 
recent acquisitions are more attractive. 

Osteomeles anthyllidifolia, another Chinese evergreen with 

flowers like a small hawthorn, makes a big wall shrub, but lacks 
much interest. It is about as attractive as Famesia, and, for a 
limited garden, many better things occur to one. 
__ Osyris I do not find in cultivation, though it is a graceful little 
shrub. O. alba is a Mediterranean plant with delicate, willowy 
branches, on which appear white flowers, followed by small red 
fruits. I have seen it, but never collected it. 

Othonnopsis cheirifolia is a glaucous, evergreen sub-shrub from 
North Africa, whose charm lies in its handsome foliage. This 
tagwort is quite hardy on a sunny rockery in the west, and opens 
its bright yellow daisies during October and November. It is a 
great grower, and must be cut back hard in late autumn. The 
clippings, if planted in a corner of the nursery, will soon strike 
and enable you to supply the county. 

Oxycoccus, the cranberry, will give you its fruit if grown in a 
sunny marsh. I have the lesser plant, but should like O. macro- 
carpus, the American, who comes to us by the barrel, and must be 
a gracious sight when in full fruit. 

Ozothamnus thyrsoides is a successful plant in many Devon 
gardens, and there is great charm in a fine piece of this handsome 
and graceful Australian. The foliage is like a rosemary, and the 
inflorescence, which covers the shrub in late June, a pearly white. 
The plant is a little tender, and will well repay slight protection 
in harsh weather. It appreciates sunshine and a light soil. 

My tiniest shrub at present is Pachystima Canbyi, from the 
mountains of Virginia—a neat, little red-flowered evergreen for a 


88 MY SHRUBS 


peat bed. It arrived only last autumn, and seems contented and 
full of growth. : 

Peonia cannot be enlarged upon here, but I find that Pzon, the 
physician, is said to have given the precious plant its name, and 
the word is used by Theophrastus for the family. The countless 
varieties of P. Moutan, from China and Japan, are gorgeous addi- 
tions to any garden where they thrive. I have a few good pieces 
that came directly from the East, but here the bud is developed 
so early that the plants need close attention if frost is in the air. 
They make magnificent specimens in favoured gardens, and I have 
seen the old P. Moutan with a hundred immense blossoms displayed 
on one plant. A good mulch of well-rotted cow manure in autumn 
is very desirable, and plenty of water through the summer. The 
choice varieties are generally struck on common stocks, and when 
vigorous points thrust up round your plants they should receive 
a cold welcome and be removed well below the soil. P. luteaisa 
rare Chinese shrubby pzony, which failed with me, but must be 
attempted again. , 

Paliurus aculeatus, the Christ Thorn, has a pale yellow inflo- 
rescence in July. ‘This deciduous Mediterranean shrub is only of 
botanical interest. It shares, in common with many other prickly 
plants, the legend that from its branches was woven the Christian 
Saviour’s crown of thorns. 

Panax is near Aralia. I have an infant plant of P. Murrayi, 
a deciduous species from Queensland. It grows steadily, but 
slowly. 

Parrotia persica is a stately little tree, whose autumn colours 
of purple, scarlet, and gold are really magnificent. ‘This admirable 
plant is hardy, and thrives anywhere in full sunshine. The 


MY SHRUBS 89 


uncommon P. Facquemontiana, from Kashmir, will now join you 
for the absurd sum of three shillings and sixpence. This is even 


_ more generous than the Persian, for it gives good white flowers 


in spring as well as the autumn fireworks. It is a smaller plant 
than the other, and will take some time to reach a flowering size, 
if I may judge by my little piece. 

Passiflora cerulea, from Brazil, and its invaluable white, scented 
seedling, P. ‘‘ Constance Elhott,” which first saw the light in this 
county, thrive on a sunny wall, and I dare say other species of 
this immense family would do the like. Some people profess to 
enjoy the golden fruits, but they are sickly fare. I tried P. quad- 
rangularis in the West Indies. The Granadilla, as it is called, is 


@ thought a luxury there, but time did not permit me to acquire 


the taste. 

Pentstemon Scouleri and P. cordifolius are good shrubby species 
for a warm wall. ‘The latter attains to a considerable size, but is a 
Californian, and will demand winter protection. 

Periploca graca, from the Orient, is a hardy, deciduous climber, 
with little chocolate flowers. This old plant serves well to cover 
a rough corner or clothe a summer house. Beside mine, I set 


a Rosa levigaia, and now poor Periploca waves despairing arms 


through the monster rose, whose gigantic growth and evergreen 
foliage is smothering the life out of him. But he is climbing up 
into a thicket behind, and so escaping leafy death. 

Pernettya, fine thing though it is, cannot be spared the neces- 
sary space in my garden. A prosperous bush of P. mucronata, 
10 feet across and covered with its light pink berries, is a beautiful 


a sight familiar to me. These Mexican shrubs make mighty masses 


in good loam, and I think the neighbourhood of the sea delights 
M 


go MY SHRUBS 


them, for I have never known any to thrive far from it. P. ciliaris 
has a handsome white blossom. Why is P. furens handicapped 
with such an adjective ? 

Perowskia atriplicifolia is a sage-like shrub of no great interest, 
with hoary foliage, and wands of purple blossom in late autumn. 

Persoonia, a handsome race of Australians, seem to belong to 
the greenhouse. Some attain to trees, and must be very beautiful. 
The ‘ Botanical Magazine”’ figures P. linearis most attractively. 
Another beautiful Australian race, of which I do not possess a 
specimen, is Petrophila, of the order of Protea. It seems doubtful 
if Petrophila is represented in England at all for the moment. 

Petieria ramentacia is a Dalmatian, and was there recorded by 
Herr Franz Petter. This uncommon little pea-flowered plant 
resembles a small laburnum, and graces the sunny rockery. 

Peumus citriodora, from Chili, makes a very handsome and 
shining evergreen shrub in a shady and sheltered nook. The 
foliage is wonderfully spicy and fragrant, and a happy plant will 
prove a pleasant neighbour. | 

The great family of Philadelphus, the Mock Oranges, need not 

detain us, but among my favourites is, for once, a hybrid: Gauntlett’s. 
 P. “ Monster,” a magnificent flowering shrub worthy of its name. 


It grows 15 feet high in a year or two, and pours forth a Niagara - 


of huge and fragrant flowers. P. purpureus maculatus is of more 
modest size, and the snow-white blossom has a purple heart and a 
precious fragrance all its own. ‘They are hardy, but P. mexicanus, 
my favourite, will thank you for a wall. ‘This produces large semi- 
double flowers of a creamy white, most exquisitely scented. It 
has a pendulous habit, and is almost an evergreen in our climate. 
Philesia magellanica is a rather difficult little Chilian, not often 


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MY SHRUBS 91 


seen in prosperity. I have flowered it, and, on better plants than 
mine, admired a dozen of the red bells hanging together in the 
crisp, dark green foliage. Probably moisture, and plenty of it, is 
necessary, with a soil free from lime. The best piece that I have 
seen—a respectable bush—prospered in full sunshine, though 
some experts advocate half shade. 

Phillyrea decora, the Jasmine Box, is a hardy evergreen with 
pretty pointed foliage and a small, white spring inflorescence of 
great sweetness. It prospers in half shade in peat with me, though 
is not, I fancy, particular. Other species of this South European 
shrub are equally satisfactory and easy, but I know not if they 
possess the same fine fragrance. 

Phlomis fruticosa, the Jerusalem Sage, is an old favourite from 
the Mediterranean, whose hoary foliage and dusky yellow whorls 
of flowers remind me of childhood. Then I was wont to pluck 
the trumpets for the honey drop at the bottom of them. A hardy 
shrub is this, and a great grower in some hot rough corner. 

Photinia serrulata is a handsome Chinese tree, and here it attains 
to full size and makes a splendid specimen; but much room is 
needed for this beautiful flowering evergreen, and I am on visiting 
terms with some excellent examples, so need it not. 

Phylica is a South African, with most distinctive dusky green 
and silver grey foliage. The inflorescence is trifling, but the habit 
most handsome and striking. ‘The species are two: P. buxifolia 


and P. ericoides. 1 have seen Phylica happy in Cornwall, but it 


is not hardy, and at Kew a temperate house harbours this fine 
j Physianthus albens is a climber from Brazil, hardy in our sheltered 
nooks by the sea. It attains to great size when prosperous, and 


92 MY SHRUBS 


makes swift growth. The flower is pale pink, the fruit as large as 
your fist. It succeeds with me, but to see it in perfection a visit 
to our cliffs is necessary, where, in a public garden, it surpasses 
itself. | 

The great race of the Pieris attain in some cases to trees among 
our glades. My favourites of this far-scattered genus are the 
white-flowered P. floribunda, from the United States, with P. formosa 
and the pink-flowered P. nitida, from Japan. P. cassinefolia and 
P. pulverulenta, from the Southern United States, when prosperous, 
are superb, deciduous Andromedas, with large white bells for 
blossoms. P. japonica flowers generously and grows finely. Its 
spring foliage, in crests of red above the green, is a feature of this 
shrub. 

Pinus canariensis will succeed here in a snug corner. My 
custom is to shorten the main branch, which soon loses the sky- 
blue colour that gives the fir its charm. Then younger points 
spring up, and you get a most effective shrubby bush of azure 
hue. The pigmy P. montana and the neat little P. “‘ Tanyosho,” 
from Japan, must go into your rockery along with the beautiful 
dwarf, P. Strobus—a real gem. 

Of Pimelea, from Australia, I have secured seed which has not 
yet germinated. ‘To discuss these admirable and beautiful shrubs 
on this foundation would be vain; but Piptanthus nepalensis has 
long prospered here, and, though some do not admire its pale 
yellow, laburnum-like blossoms, they please me well enough. 
From the temperate Himalaya comes this effective evergreen. 

Pistacia Lentiscus, the mastic-tree, is a handsome evergreen of 
economic value but no great garden interest. It grows but slowly 
in our climate—a charge not to be brought against Pittosporum. 


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MY SHRUBS 93 


_ This great genus makes splendid growth on our shores, and most 

of the Australian and New Zealand species thrive and attain to 

mature size. | 

_ Than P. crassifolium there is no more elegant and beautiful 

fo shrub in any garden. I have a seedling ten years old and 
o feet high of most beautiful shape. In spring myriads of little 

chocolate-coloured bells appear among the leaves, and seed ripens. 


with me, and thus far proves a dingy object and leaves me 
cold. But she is young, and may have some surprises hidden. 
There are many other varieties of this beautiful race which I 
have not seen. 

_ Plagianthus Lyallii is another worthy New Zealander which 
thas given great delight to friends in my garden. The serrated, 
drooping foliage on bending boughs is beautiful in itself, and the 
snow-white flowers, like cherry blossom, crowd its wands in July. 
‘There is no more splendid thing in any garden when prosperous. 
With me it stands against a 9-foot wall and has far over-topped it. 
Ina hard winter it loses most of its foliage, but is none the worse. 
The ground beneath it was green with seedlings this spring. Other 
varieties of Plagianthus are inferior, so be sure you secure Lyall’s. 
High botanists now doubt if this most notable shrub is a Plagianthus 


94 MY SHRUBS 


at all, but let not that deter you. This Plagianthus by any other 
name would smell as sweet. 7 

Plagiospermum sinensis is a new shrub from Manchuria. I 
regret to learn that it takes after Maclura; but my plant 
may perhaps be trained into nicer ways as it has come to me 
so young. 

The dwarf Piceas—varieties of P. excelsa—are all most desirable 
for the rockery, and soon make beautiful miniature trees ; they are 
the neatest and hardiest of little shrubs and a perpetual delight. 
P. glauca also should not be missed. 

Platycarya strobilacea, a rare North China monotype, I have 
never seen ; but it is said to prosper in the South of England and 
I hope it may be doing so. 

Podocarpus chilina is a rare conifer from the Andes, and, though 
a tree, will remain of shrubby size as far as you and I are concerned 
if we buy it now. Mine is four feet high, and may be six before I 
cease to take interest in it. It has a very distinct habit, with deep 
green narrow foliage, and in July it erects clusters of little pale 
yellow catkins. In Cornwall thrive noble specimens of this fine 
fir. Podocarpus andina is the Plum Fir from the Andes. This 
remarkable plant produces fruit of the size of a grape and is 
one of the few conifers to do anything so clever. Moreover, the 
fruit may be eaten, for it is agreeable. Prunopitys is the synonym 
of this interesting evergreen. 

Polygala Chamebuxus is a neat dwarf, with yellow and white 
flowers. I collected a pretty dark pink variety in Italy, and 
there is a brown variety also. But the good little thing dwells 
here no longer in any form. It too quickly dies out with me. 
P. grandiflora make a big shrub, and I have seen it very handsome 


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MY SHRUBS 95 


in North African gardens ; but it would need much care with us 
save in a cold house. : 

Polygonum baldshuanicum is now generally grown, but not 
always with success. It likes plenty of cool root room and its 
head in the sun. ‘The best I know lives in a pear tree. 

Pomaderris apetala is an Australian evergreen with trusses of 
small yellowish flowers resembling Ceanothus. ‘The foliage of 
this Victorian Hazel is effective, but no great interest attaches 
to the plant. A hard winter garnered mine, and it was never 
renewed. 

To Protea, that glorious genus of wonderful African shrubs 
and trees, we merely do obeisance and pass on. A cold house in 
winter and a warm corner out of doors in summer is all they need ; 
but I find none in cultivation in the West. P. lepidocarpon, from 
the Cape, might be hardy here; but I know not where that 
wondrous shrub is to be found in England. 

In Prunus I am poor; but possess P. Mume, a Japanese, and 
among the first to flower. The shrub makes a good specimen, 
and its snowy blossom appears at the end of February in a reason- 
able winter, before the blackthorn. P. triloba, too, I have, and 
big pieces of P. Pissardi ; but it never sets its dark purple fruits 
with me. From Persia comes this old favourite, and Gauntlett 
reports a new and exquisite variety with bright double rose flowers, 
One merely apologises to this great genus, pleads lack of space, 
and passes on. 

Psidium, the Guava, is of course out of the question, but 
Punica Granatum, the Pomegranate, makes a fine show and opens 
its wax-like scarlet blossoms generously through a hot summer. I 
have not known it to fruit—indeed the single-flowered variety is 


96 MY SHRUBS 


shy of blooming at all; but the young foliage is most beautiful 
and the shrub a worthy resident for a sunny wall. 

Purshia tridentata is a little American shrub with yellowish 
blossoms of no great charm, but the triple leaves are neat and 
distinctive. 

Pterocarya caucasica, of the walnut race, is a tree, and, unlike 
some tardy growers, will soon show you that it is. But encourage 
it in a corner for the sake of its youthful grace and beautiful ash- 
like foliage. When it outgrows your garden patch, the fate of 
other too pushing, too busy people may fall upon it. 

Pyrus, in the shape of the flowering crabs, you cannot deny 
yourself. P. floribunda and P. spectabilis should join you. I have 
P. arbutifolia from North America, a small species, whose shining 
autumn foliage turns to most splendid crimson before it falls. 
P. “ John Downie,” too, is a most splendid object in spring and 
autumn. None fruits more handsomely than this. P. salicifoha 
argentea pendula must be a fine thing when successful, but my — 
standard of this beautiful shrub sulked and never took kindly to 
its new home. I must try again. 

Of tiny sub-shrubs, Pyxidanthera barbulata, from New Jersey, 
succeeded with me on a sunny rockery for a season. ‘The Pine- 
barren Beauty has a prostrate habit, and might easily be mistaken 
for a saxifrage. Some dire disaster overtook my plant, and it died 
suddenly from causes beyond my power to diagnose. I now have 
it again in peat in a pan, which is plunged in a shady corner for 
the greater part of the year, and blossoms under a cold frame during 
April. It is then covered with buds like pink pearls, that break 
presently into little white, fairy, five-petalled flowers. But Pyxi- 
danthera does not derive from pixy. 


PYXIDANTHERA BARBULATA 


CHAPTER X 


UILLAJA SAPONARIA, a Chilian soapwort, is rare in 
cultivation, though I do not suppose it difficult. It 
makes a considerable evergreen tree when at home, and 

is said to have fragrant white blossoms. Mine perished in a cool 
peat bed, and must be renewed. 

Rhaphiolepis japonica is a treasure, and I know few handsomer 
evergreens. This hardy shrub has a neat, branching habit and 
leaves of polished dark green. Its panicles of snow-white blossoms 
have a touch of pale carmine in the midst, and open during May or 
June. The falling leaf takes on a splendid crimson. In half shade 
this very fine shrub prospers well, flowers profusely, and sets its 
dark red berries. It came to England in 1865—the same year that I 
did—and neither of us is half as well known as we ought to be. 

Rhabdothamnus Solandri is a dwarf evergreen New Zealander, 
with pretty little serrated leaves and bells of blossom, a dark orange- 
‘red, striped black. It is tender, but does well here in a peaty 
corner with a larger shrub above it, whose foliage affords the 
necessary protection. 

Rhaphithamnus cyanocarpus is an evergreen Chilian with small 
_ coriaceous foliage, blue flowers, and bright blue berries. Mine 
grows in the open rockwork, and will soon be too large for that 
position. Its points get somewhat nipped by frost, and, when I 
move it, I shall set it against a protected cool wall, and hope that 


it may survive and prosper. 
97 N 


98 MY SHRUBS 


With due solemnity we now approach Rhododendron, the Rose 


Bay, king of all flowering shrubs, at once the joy and despair of 


the small shrub-grower. While clinging as ever to the species, 
one must grant that skilled hybridizers have done splendid work 
upon this august genus. By mixing fresh blood with the monarchs 
of the race, they produce plants which only yield a little in distinction 
to the species from the Himalayas, while flowering considerably 
later, and so bringing their bud uninjured through the early months 
of spring. The greater number of rhododendrons from India 
are hardy ; but their early flowering habit means that the expanding 
truss is exposed to our coldest temperatures at its most critical 
period of development, and so we lose our bloom, though the 
shrubs do not suffer. Yet it is said that there are finer Himalayan 
rhododendrons in Ireland than on the Himalayas, so all whose 
fate calls them to dwell in the West Country within salutation of 
the sea may attempt this supreme manifestation of the shrub. 
But patience is essential. ‘Though fine flowering pieces of the great 
hybrids can generally be secured from the best growers, with the 
species it is different, and choice old china is not so rare as fine 
specimens of the nobler rhododendrons in search of a new home. 
The race ascends from the tiniest shrublet, in R. Ramtschaticum, 
to a tree, where R. arboreum towers splashed with spring crimson, 
and good specimens of the hardy Pontic hybrids are of course 
within all men’s reach; but if your space is limited and your 
patience without limit, then get the best at once, give them half 
shade and shelter, and, above all things, remember that as surface 
rooters they are most thirsty shrubs, and need ample watering in 
dry weather. A spraying of the foliage with water is also much 
to be advised after fierce sunshine. 


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WOdYVOOTACNVO NONANAGOGOHY 


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MY SHRUBS 99 


Here, where I dwell on a limestone crag, the Rhododendron 


- demands peat, and if the peat bed be lifted up above the limestone, 


instead of buried in it, so much the better. Peat graves with 
walls of the local soil are dangerous. It is wiser to make peat 
mounds into which the lime cannot percolate during the rainy 
seasons. 

I have some fifty rhododendrons, and my favourite plant of 
all the garden is R. campylocarpum. From an elevation of 14,000 
feet on the Sikkim Himalaya comes this precious shrub. It stands 
7 feet high, and in early May the bud breaks a rich orange-red and 
opens into clusters of loose, butter-coloured bells of wax-like 
substance and most perfect shape, with a splash of dark ruby at 
the bottom of each cup. It is a generous flowerer, and not seldom 


I disbud in autumn, and reduce its promise by a hundred points 


for the sake of the plant. I would travel to the Sikkim, and even 
climb 14,000 feet, to see R. campylocarpum spreading its pale lemon 
light under the mountain mists of that wondrous region. ‘There 


is a hybrid between R. campylocarpum and that good rhododendron 


*“ Prince C’. de Rohan,” which is a mixture of yellow and pink, 


with the habit of the former plant. This is but an infant with me, 
and has yet to blossom. 


R. cinnabarinum hangs out blossoms of hot, cinnabar red, and its 
young foliage reveals a delicious, glaucous duck-green. R. Roylet 
and R. blandfordieflorum are near it, the former with most dis- 
tinguished plum-coloured little trusses brushed with delicate 
bloom ; and that exceedingly splendid plant, R. Thomsonii, is even 
more striking in the same style. R. Griffithianum (Syn. Auck- 
landit) is the superb parent of many great hybrids, including “‘ Pink 
Pearl,” Manglesii and its fine forms “ White Pearl” and Gaunt- 


100 MY SHRUBS 


lettti. The parent—# mighty grower—has loose trusses of pure 
white trumpet-like blooms, and from its young foliage falls a tatter 
of crimson bracts as the leaves open in late April. R. decorum is 
the Chinese R. Griffithianum and has fragrant flowers of purest 
white ; but it is not such a great grower. From that famous raiser, 
Gill of Tremough, I have “‘ Triumph ” and “‘ Glory of Penjerrick ””— 
magnificent hybrids, with enormous, bright, crimson trusses—while 


of other species that are reasonably hardy with a little care against — 


high winds, I own R. Falconeri, whose mighty leaves have a felt 
of dormouse-coloured tomentum beneath them and R. eximium, 
which displays still more of this rich felt and foliage only less 
splendid than its kinsman. Both are from the Sikkim. R. grande 
(Syn. argenteum) has a dazzling silver underdown and an exquisite 
habit ; but it is a tardy flowerer.. R. Dalhousia lives out of doors 
in summer and makes up bud there, then comes indoors and flowers 
during spring before again emerging. It is a straggling, epiphytic 
shrub, from the Sikkim, where it climbs into oaks and magnolias ; 
but its lovely, loose trusses of lemon-coloured blossom make it a 
great favourite with me. ‘The blossoms are as big as an average 
lily, and are much more like Lilium sulphureum than its own family. 

R. Smirnovi, from ‘Transcaucasia, is a neat rhododendron 
with purple flowers, and R. triflorum has small pale yellow blossoms 
in threes and fours. It comes from 8000 feet levels of the Hima- 
laya, and might perhaps have been left there without loss. It is, 
however, a kindly flowerer, and would make a good cross with 
something of more importance. Then I have hybrids of R. 
arboreum—generous flowerers at six feet high and good for pretty 
trusses of pink and scarlet bloom. R. barbatum, again from Sikkim, 


has splendid blood-coloured blossoms. R. Nuttallit,from Bhotan, a 


WISNOH TVG NOYWONAGOGOHY 


MY SHRUBS IOI 


is tender, and retreats from its place in a peat bed when October 
comes. The beauty of the new leaves alone makes this plant a 
treasure. They are a wondrous rich old-rose colour, and retain 
their red veins until mature. The flower is white and fragrant, 
but my plant, though healthy enough, has made no blossom yet. 
It is a shy bloomer even in expert hands. R. calophyllum, another 
Bhotan species, also withdraws from the open during autumn, 
though in Cornish gardens it flourishes in sheltered glades. This 
is a grand rhododendron with lovely foliage, as the name implies. 
The white blossom is very large and fragrant, with three to five 
trumpets on the truss. The species attains to no great size, and 
is easily managed in a pot. 

R. Sesterianum, a hybrid, is very splendid; but the buds 
should have protection against frost and the whole plant be given 
a snug corner. The mixture of rosy red and white make the 
fragrant trusses a great joy in May. The flower is among the 
largest of all. That fine hybrid, “‘ Lady Alice Fitzwilliam,” is 
only a little less distinguished, and blooms more freely. The 
lovely R. fragrantissimum also resembles these, but is more tender, 
and should winter in a cold house. R. yunnanense, a noble and 
hardy Chinese species, has large flowers two inches across, white 
spotted crimson, or lavender and brown. R. formosum is of 
Bhotan, and tender—a fine species still rare in cultivation. 

Of dwarf varieties, R. racemosum, another Yunnan species, is a 
neat deciduous shrub, whose rosy flowers are among the earliest 
to appear; R. kamtschaticum, also deciduous, is but a few inches 
high, and demands a cool, damp, shady corner in peat. Its little 
solitary flowers are a bright purple, as large as a kalmia bloom, 
and it is rather hard to please. This year one fine blossom has 


102 MY SHRUBS 


appeared with me. R. ferrugineum, the Alpine Rose, from Euro- 
pean Alps, I have collected in Switzerland and above Como. It 
is a neat shrub with rust-coloured underdown to the foliage and 


red or white flowers. R. glaucum, from the Sikkim, prospers at — 


the feet of R. campylocarpum, as it does in its native habitat. The 
trusses are old rose colour; the foliage smells like pomatum, 
but what matter? Nobody is obliged to prove it. I much like 
these sprightly little shrubs, and am attached also to R. ciliatum, 
from 10,000 feet levels of the Himalaya—a hardy and handsome 
dwarf with pink trusses of blossom, very large for the size of the 
plant. R. intricatum is another splendid evergreen from Yunnan, 
not so hardy as those named, yet safe enough in a snug corner. 
R. ochroleucum (Veitch) is a dwarf hybrid—I think from China— 
very pale yellow, with pale brown freckles; and R. govenianum, 
a purple, scented species from America, is also a neat dwarf for a 
pocket in a cool rockery. R. amenum is a Chinese dwarf that 
makes a fine solid bush, though its small flowers tend dangerously 
near magenta. | 

R. campanulatum, from the Himalaya, is a beautiful hardy species, 
with bell-shaped white or lilac blossoms. It is hardy and looks 
well as a shrub, but my stout piece has yet to flower. R. precox 
is a child of R. dauricum, a dwarf, Russian, deciduous species. 
It flowers in March, and its pale bright purple trusses often get 
nipped by frost if not protected. R. pentamerum is a Japanese 
alpine species, with pale rosy flowers and pointed foliage matted 
with silvery felt beneath. 

I have also a few hybrids from R. catawbiense stock. This 
rhododendron, I learn, grows on the Alleghany Mountains, often 
in dense masses, through which the only way is by an old bear 


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AZALEODENDRON ‘‘BROUGHTONII AUREUM ” 


MY SHRUBS 103 


path. The time is still far distant when I go botanising on an 
old bear path ; but I am none the less filled with hearty admiration, 
untinctured by jealousy, for those spirited pioneers who pursue 
their floral quarries even in the face of such possible opposition. 
It is true that Mr. William Watson, one of the greatest of English 
botanists and our first authority on the rhododendron race, speaks 
of “old” bear paths. But you never know. Old bears—the real, 
conservative “ backwoodsmen”’ sort of bears—would be almost 
certain to prefer the old paths; and equally certain to resent an 
intruder upon them. 

Before reluctantly dragging myself away from Rhododendron, 
I may mention the “ azaleodendrons,” as they are called by some 
gardeners. They have resulted from the marriage of a yellow 
azalea and a seedling evergreen rhododendron, and the result, as 
it appears in R. Broughtoni and R. Smithii aureum, is exceedingly 
beautiful. They are hardy evergreens, with fine trusses of yellow 
blossoms of good size and beautiful shape. I hunger much for 
R. Loderi, but know not where to find it. This superb cross 


between R. Griffithianum and R. Fortunei was made by Sir E. 
Loder at his far-famed gardens of Leonardslee. The flowers are 


very large and very fragrant, and the plant is vigorous and hardy ; 
but I think it has not found its way to the public of Rhodo-lovers 
as yet. The Javanese rhododendrons, yellow, white, pink, and 
scarlet, are very beautiful pot-plants, but demand the heat of the 


stove and unlimited moisture. Few amateurs succeed with them. 


Of their hybrids, R. “Souvenir of Mr. Mangles” is a brilliant 
beauty—bright salmon pink. 

Rhodora canadensis is a deciduous rhododendron whose pale 
purple flowers appear before the leaves; while Rhodothamnus 


104 MY SHRUBS 


chamecistus, a dainty dwarf from the Eastern European Alps, is 
also a rhododendron. I have failed signally with this little shrub, 
and am trying again on a moraine, with lime in the soil. Here 
it appears to be hearty enough, and is making useful growth. 

Rhodotypos kerrioides is a hardy Japanese climber for a wall, 
and goes well with Kerria anywhere. The flowers are white and 
solitary, followed by black fruits. 

Only two Sumachs dwell here: the old Rhus Cotinus, which 
roams Europe, and is familiar from Spain to the Caucasus, and 
R. typhina lacinata, a fine, fern-leaved variety of the Stag’s Horn 
sumach with splendid autumn colour. | 

The rare R. vernicifera, the Japanese Lacquer or Varnish-Tree, 
is now in cultivation, and must be prevailed to augment my meagre 
list. But avoid R. toxicodendron. I have known those who 


suffered much after ignorantly handling this handsome Poison-Ivy. 


Rhynchospermum jasminoides is a fragrant, jasmine-flowered 
climbing evergreen from Shanghai, and appreciates a cool and 
sheltered wall in half shade with the Chilians. Full sun might 
suit it even better. It does not grow here as one may see it in 
Italy : at Florence great walls are covered with it; but this is a 
desirable shrub in Western gardens, and will stand severe cold. 
You may call it Trachelospermum jasminoides, and many people do 
so; but it is only a choice of evils, and can give you little relief. 
Indeed the whole nomenclature of the world’s flora is an infamy, 
and cries both to reason and heaven to be swept away. Could not 
an effort be made to change it all when simplified spelling falls 
upon us? But we of the old brigade will miss that coming devilry, 
and if Rhynchospermum is planted upon our stately tombs, doubt- 
less it must be under the present name. 


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MY SHRUBS Los 


I think no new Ribes is better than our old flowering currant, 
R. sanguineum, save R. speciosum, the fuchsia-flowered gooseberry, 
from California. This thrives on a wall in half shade, and its 
wands of little scarlet flowers in spring and sweet, red-golden fruits 
in autumn make it an attractive plant. Its bud breaks in winter, 
but takes no hurt, and soon after Christmas the young green begins 
to appear. R. Menziesii is another Californian species, which I 
discarded as lacking in interest of any sort. The blossom is very 
minute and without charm. The new R. Warsecewiczii, with 
maple-like foliage, sounds a good thing, and it has a dainty name 
to frighten the birds from its crimson fruit in autumn. Robinia 
needs only to be named with affection. Its fragrance haunts the 
mountain glens by Como. R. hispida and many varieties of R. 
pseudacacia are most desirable, especially R. p. decaisneana. 

I am no rosarian, and have merely a border of pleasant and 
familiar things ; but best I care for certain of the species. Rosa 
sinica, or levigata, from the Himalayas and China, is a noble plant 
naturalised in the Southern United States, and known there as the 
Cherokee Rose. This is an evergreen of tremendous activity. 
It has made a mighty tangle over my garden room in a sheltered 
corner facing west, and here during June it opens large single 
blossoms of exquisite whiteness and satin texture. Its fine pink 
hybrid, R. sinica “* anemone,” flourishes superbly on a south wall, 
and | cherish also R. Brunonit, another Himalayan, a white, gold- 
anthered gem, with immense corymbs of tiny blossoms. This 
splendid climber easily holds its own with the Ayrshires on a row 
of pillars. R. Moyseii, from China, is a single rose of surpassing 
tuby splendour. The colour is amazing, and it makes all other 


red roses look washed out and poor. ‘Then another Chinaman, 
O 


106 MY SHRUBS 


R. bracteata, Macartney’s Rose, flowers in autumn, when roses 
are growing scarce, while, to name two more from my little group 


of the species, there are R. nitida, a charming dwarf from North © 


America, decorative all the year round, and R. xanthina, from 
Afghanistan—a distinctive yellow species with glaucous foliage. 
Acquire these, and you will remember me in your wills. They 
are really more interesting than gardeners’ hybrids, and also more 
beautiful. Our taste for the plump monsters from the rose border 
is Mid-Victorian, and we must struggle back to the more refined 
and distinguished species. I mark a laudable improvement in 
the chrysanthemum already. The mop-headed giants are doomed, 
and we begin to cultivate a flower of greater distinction and 
intrinsic beauty. Compare a good group of single chrysanthemums 
with a stage of prize-taking giants, and you will instantly perceive 
which has the better excuse for existence. 

Rubus is a fine family for a cool and shady garden. I have 


but half a dozen, and also grow R. phenicolasius, the Japanese 


wine-berry, because one highly placed of the household loves its 
scarlet fruits. But best I like R. deliciosus, a beautiful shrubby 
bramble from the Rocky Mountains, with large, pure, white flowers in 


early spring. R. nutkanus, a North American, is a rapid grower with — : ‘, 


very large white flowers ; R. odoratus has red flowers, and R. spec- 
tabile approaches magenta. R. australis is a strange New Zealander, 


all thorns and no leaves—a wild tangled mass of ferocious vegeta- — ’ ; 
tion like nothing else in my garden. They call it the ‘‘ Wait-a-bit ” 
and the “‘ Bush Lawyer” in its home—good names, both. This” 


has not opened its little, pale pink, fragrant blossom with me, nor 


has another variety (with leaves) of the same species. R. arcticus 
is a herbaceous mite and vanishes in winter ; while of other good 


RUBUS DELICIOSUS 


MY SHRUBS 107 


flowering brambles I have R. innominatus, a very distinct and hand- 
some plant—one of the new comers from China, of which many 
others are now about to greet the public. 

Ruscus androgyna is the finest and most tender of this genus. 
It comes from the Canaries, and is a handsome climber for a southern 
wall, but it will need protection in weather. R. racemosus, the 
Alexandrian laurel from Portugal, is also desirable. It grows 
slowly, but nothing looks better than a prosperous specimen. I 
have also what I take to be R. Hypophyllum, a pretty species rather 
like R. racemosus, which I collected in the South of France. None 
of these have fruited with me, though the last makes flower readily. 
A good fruiting Butcher’s Box is also entirely to be commended. 
They thrive in Devon woods. 

Ruta graveolens, the common rue, grew here once, but I seek 
it now in vain: the Herb of Grace has vanished and must be 
sought again. 


CHAPTER XI 


but the dwarfs Salix reticulata and S. serpyllifolia are 

happy in a cool and damp corner of the rockwork. Much 
moisture is essential. The latter of those above named I collected 
among the foothills of the Matterhorn, and in wet peat it has made 
a beautiful little specimen extending its tiny branches among 
Gentiana verna and other small creatures. Salix myrsinites jac- 
quiniana dwells beside it—another very minute willow with neat 
catkins of purple. Of larger species I have a good weeping 
willow, S. ramulus aureus, whose golden rain of tresses in winter 
makes it beautiful. The catkins are also pure gold. S. sericea 
pendula, a pretty shrub with catkins of silver and pale gold, and 
the Japanese S. mutabilis, with wonderful catkins of lemon and 
scarlet, I also grow. This latter species is peculiarly impatient of 
drought, and, since his feet are not in water, dislikes a hot summer 
exceedingly. 

Salsola fruticosa lacks charm, but I am giving this new shrub 
rope enough to hang itself. It may surprise me yet. 

Salvia dichroa, from the Atlas Mountains, is almost a shrub 
and, when prosperous, attains to six feet high, and presents you 
with flower spikes of white and purple two feet in length. An 
established plant of this is a magnificent sight ; but you must give 
it a warm and sunny corner in well-drained loam. 

Sambucus, the Elder, has some good varieties, of which I possess 


108 


N OT many of the willows are very useful in a small garden, 


Ca on 


MY SHRUBS 109 


only the Siberian S. racemosa, a pleasant, scarlet-fruited shrub 
for a spare corner. 

Santolina chamecyparissus, the fragrant Cotton Lavender, 
makes a good silvery mass with rayless yellow daisies rising above 
it in summer time ; but the North American grease wood, Sarco- 
batus vermicutalus, has no obvious charm, and will soon be called 
upon to leave me in favour of something more entertaining. 
Sarcococca ruscifolia is a better thing. ‘This little evergreen from 
China decks itself with fragrant white flowers, which peep effectively 
from the dark foliage in January—a time when sweet white flowers 
are scarce. ‘The scarlet fruits are then ripe also. 

Satureia montana, the Winter Savory, is a neat little labiate, 
with spikes of pale purple flowers above the close evergreen foliage. 
There is no better small bush for a rockery than this excellent 
sub-shrub, but it seems rare in cultivation. Virgil praises it as 
a fragrant herb to plant beside the beehive. 

Schizandra chinensis is a handsome, climbing shrub of hardy 
constitution and deciduous habit. The leaf breaks early, and the 
plant grows steadily but slowly on a south wall. The flowers are 
small and white; the scarlet fruits I have not seen as yet. It 
affords an example of scientific nomenclature worth noting, for 
the word is composed of schizo—to cleave, and andros—a male, 
because the stamens are split. Comment is needless. This 
wretched “ schizo’’ does service again and again in botany, and 
one often in a garden longs to know what Adam called the 
things. He had no Greek or Latin at any rate. Perhaps, if we 
took children into a garden and invited them to invent names, 
we should get something more attractive than the atrocious words 
we are called upon to suffer at present. 


110 MY SHRUBS 


Schizophragma hydrangeoides—it has to be written—is a good 
shrub with trusses of flowers like white hydrangea, to which 
genus this monotype is related. A deciduous climber from Japan, 
it is handsome and hardy, and will hold to a rough wall or climb 
a tree-stem without support. 

The shrubby Senecio Grayii is a white-foliaged plant, but 
tender. Mine perished, and was not renewed. S. rotundifolia 
has just been introduced from New Zealand, and is said to be 
reasonably hardy. 

Serissa feetida, a swamp plant common through the East, well 
figured in the old “ Botanical Magazine ’’ under the name of Lycium 
japonicum, has white axillary flowers and a neat habit. It grows 
with Japanese irises in a bog, and I put a big bell glass over it 
when unusual cold sets in. Kempfer regarded the smell of this 
plant as highly disgusting ; Professor Retzius disagreed with him ; 
Professor Thunberg sided with the immortal Kempfer; and so 
will you. Professor Retzius must have had a cold in his head when 
he smelled Serissa. The odour of this Japanese boxthorn is most 
afflicting. 

Shepherdia argentea is a deciduous North American, which in 
its home attains to the size of a small tree. The foliage is silver- 
bright and very beautiful; the scarlet fruit is edible; but the 
Shepherdia being dicecious I never shall taste it. The Americans 
call this plant the Beef-suet Tree, though the reason I cannot learn. 

Skimmia, from Skimmi,a Japanese word that means “ poisonous 
fruit,” is a neat evergreen shrub for a shady corner. My plants of 
S. japonica keep very dwarf, and their white flowers and scarlet 
fruits are regularly produced. S. Laureola, from Nepaul, has 
yellow flowers, and is a pretty citron-scented shrub four feet high. 


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MY SHRUBS III 


This would be a treasure, but I know not if it is in cultivation. 
There are other varieties of less note, the best perhaps being 
S. rosea, a pretty thing with dense, pale pink inflorescence. 

Smilax aspera, the Prickly Ivy of Southern Europe, I have 
collected about Mentone. It makes a mighty mass on a wall, 
and the little flower clusters are abundant; but the shrub has 
not set its beautiful bunches of berries here. The well-known 
Sarsaparilla is made from the roots of a Chinese Smilax. S. 
ornata must be a beautiful foliage plant, but I have only seen 
Nicholson’s figure of it. S. australis differs little from S. aspera, 
but has more showy spray of white blossoms. 

_ Of Solanum, the familiar S. crispum, from Chili, makes a large 
shrub on a wall, and will stand well in a shrubbery. The blue 
flowers are like those of a potato, the fruits red. S. jasminoides, 
another South American, will prosper best in half shade, and 
gladdens an east and west wall in autumn with racemes of pure 
white blossoms. S. Wendlandii, from Costa Rica, is the monarch 
of the species. A cold house is the right place for it ; but in very 
favoured corners, with winter protection, it may stand out of 
doors in the south. The flower is a beautiful mauve approaching 
blue, and is as large again as that of S. crispum. 

Sollya heterophylla is a treasure from Australia—a climbing 
evergreen for a warm wall—which covers itself with innumerable 
little blue bells in summer time. Far more dainty even than this 
is Sollya Drummondi, a plant from fairy-land direct. The wee 
blue flowers tremble among the lace-work of foliage. Give it a 
wall to climb on, and keep this gem in a cold house. 

Sophora, including Edwardsia, is beautiful in all its manifesta- 
tions. I have a good specimen of the deciduous Pagoda-tree, S. 


13% MY SHRUBS 


japonica pendula. The foliage and form are beautiful, but, though 
it has prospered here for ten years, I have never seen the creamy 
panicles of flowers. S. microphylla is evergreen, and has orange- 
coloured flowers of large size. 'This New Zealand laburnum needs 
a wall. ‘“* Kowhat,” they call it there, and I have raised a good 
batch from seed that a friend despatched to me. But the plant 
is of slow growth. S. viciifolia, now in cultivation, has blue 
flowers, and makes a good shrub in the open. 

Upon the huge subject of shrubby Spzreas I say nothing. It 
is a noble and a beautiful race, but they grow so large that, with a 
few quite unimportant exceptions, they are not here. My space 
is too precious and my half shade too full of plants I like better. 
Not a whisper against them ; I know not one that is not beautiful 
in prosperity; but they are not fairly represented here, and so 
enough. 

Sparmannia africana is a notable shrub for the greenhouse 
border. This South African only needs a temperature to open 
its bunches of pure white flowers with their tassels of purple- 
tipped filaments. The evergreen, pubescent foliage is also a 
feature of this familiar pot plant. It flowers in a small size, but 
is much more splendid when it reaches adult dimensions. 

Sphacele Lindleyi is an uncommon evergreen of brisk, up- 
right habit from Chili. This sage-like shrub bears lavender blue, 
bell-shaped flowers, and may be accounted quite hardy. ‘There are 
character and originality about Sphacele, and it should win many 
friends. 

Stachyurus precox is the Japanese variety of this excellent 
plant, the other being Himalayan. Stachyurus flowers with spikes 
of lemon-coloured inflorescence in March, somewhat after the 


or 


VSONXATA VAYANVNVHdaALS 


MY SHRUBS 113 


fashion of Corylopsis. It likes half shade, and is a very conspicuous 
object in springtime when successful. 

Staphylea is a widely scattered plant, and the familiar S. colchica 
comes from the Caucasus. There is a great delicacy and charm 
about its racemes of white flowers, for the petal texture is 
very beautiful. S. pinnata, known as John’s Tears, is a South 
European, and S. holocarpa comes from China. This last-named 
variety is a rare shrub that I have not seen. It is declared 
to have rosy flowers occasionally, and must then be a treasure 
indeed. 

Stauntonia latifolia is a vigorous and hardy climber from the 
Himalayas. It will reach your tallest chimney, and give you a 
most fragrant but inconspicuous inflorescence during Spring. 

_ Stephanandra flexuosa makes a good clump on the grass, and 
the wands of this graceful shrub are covered with creamy masses 
of flowers during June and July. It is an effective plant, though 
certain Spireas are finer in the same style. 

‘(Stranvesia glaucescens comes from the Khasia Mountains, 
where it attains a height of twenty feet and must look very splendid. 
WM plant is not glaucescent, but dark green. The flower appears 
in white corymbs, and the fruits are orange yellow. Stranvesia 
is Latin for the Hon. W. Fox Strangeways, F.R.S., the plant being 
so-called in honour of that learned gentleman. 

With Stuartia pseudo-camellia 1 have failed, but this beautiful 
deciduous shrub from Japan is being attempted again. More able 
gardeners will show it to you successfully as a bush six feet high 
and covered with large white flowers with golden stamens. S. 
pentagyna is a North American and S. virginica, still rare in culti- 


vation, is declared to be the fairest of the family. A cool corner in 
P 


114 MY SHRUBS 


peat should satisfy the plant with us, though elsewhere a cold house 
might serve it better. 

Styrax is a handsome and fairly hardy deciduous shrub of 
many species. I have but two, both of flowering size. S. Obassia 
is a Japanese treasure, and grows to a small tree in Cornwall. Its 
fragrant flowers are like snowdrops, and hang with grace among 
the large leaves. S. japonicum has made a little bush on my sunny 
rockery. ‘T’he blossoms are like those of the larger plant in form, 
but of smaller size. This prospers well enough and flowers freely. 
S. Benzoin, from Sumatra, yields the gum resin of that name. 


Sutherlandia frutescens, the Cape Bladder Senna, is a splendid 


wall plant among us, but still rare in my experience. I only 
possess strong and promising seedlings from a friend. They have 
already flowered and fruited in their youthful state—my picture 
represents one not three years old—but an established plant 
familiar to me covers a wall with the fine grey-green foliage and 
splendid scarlet racemes of pea-shaped flowers. The inflated pods 
are like little Rugby footballs. Under the name of Colutea frutes- 
cens, this Bladder Senna is well figured in the ‘‘ Botanical Magazine ”’ 


(No. 181), where I find the shrub first came to England in 1683. i 


Worth is indeed but tardily recognised. 
Sycopsis sinensis is a very graceful dark evergreen with delightful 
habit—a most pleasing novelty. The rosy gold inflorescence adorns 


the shrub in April. Half shade would seem desirable, for I had 7 


a good specimen that perished in full sun. It may be a lime-hater, 
but I do not know as to that. : 

Symplocos crategoides, from Japan, is a deciduous climber for 
a south wall. The neat foliage and very beautiful white flower 
trusses—feathery and light as swansdown—make this a welcome 


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MY SHRUBS 115 


omer. S. tinctoria, the Sweet Leaf of the Southern United 
, has sugary foliage from which a yellow dye is manufac- 


phoricarpus racemosus, the Snow Berry, is a familiar shrub- 
d, of which the variety S. vulgaris has red berries and a 

atiful habit. : 

am need no more than mention. You doubtless have 

Sali Bits, and there is no more precious thing 


ig true, late-flowering S. japonica—creamy white 
thyrse of blossom—and I am fond, too, of the little 


CHAPTER XII 


me on a wall in a garden beside the estuary of Dart. 

But this most beautiful passion-flower from New Grenada, 
though a rampant thing under glass, cannot be counted upon out 
of doors even in the West Country. Mine used to flourish in a 
vinery, and hang out its pure, deep rosy blossoms with the utmost 
generosity ; but against a snug south wall it soon passed away. 
There are few more beautiful climbing shrubs than this. 

The Tamarix has many fine forms, and no garden reasonably 
near the sea should lack a specimen or two. If you have room for 
a drift of them, then so much the better for your garden’s beauty. 
The old T. gallica is only beaten by one species in my opinion, but 
the rosy pink panicles of T. odessana, a splendid Russian, are better. 
These deciduous shrubs yield to none in grace and charm. They 
enjoy full sunshine and chime harmoniously with other things. 
Combined with Ceonothus, for example, they area joy. T. chinensis, 
from Canton, should be here, but I do not find it offered to me by 
nurserymen. 

Taxodium distichum, in its youthful state, makes a neat little 
deciduous conifer. ‘To see this most beautiful tree in full splendour 
one must doubtless go to the United States ; but it would be hard 
to imagine more striking specimens than those in the public gardens 
at Milan. There they stand with their feet in water, their high tops 
a glory of young feathery green when the Spring comes. 


[mae VAN-VOLXEMII grows within ten miles of 


TAMARIX ODESSANA 


Se ee eo, Ee a 


ee ee ee os 


MY SHRUBS 117 


Taxus baccata nana is a good dwarf yew for the rockery, while 
I. baccata variegata makes a beautiful golden bush. TJ. canadensis, 
the ground hemlock, is a spreading shrub and keeps low. 

Templetonia retrusa, the Coral Bush, is a handsome Australian, 
which I lack. The pea-like blossoms are scarlet, the leaves scanty, 
or wholly missing. They have a fine specimen of this rare and 
beautiful shrub at Kew. 

Tetranthera californica is a hardy shrub known as the Oreodaphne 
and also by its Japanese name of Litsea. There are many varieties, 
of which my Californian is evergreen with leaves of an overpowering 
aromatic pungency. TJ. glauca is probably a handsomer species. 
My plant has never flowered. 

Teucrium latifolium, the 'Tree Germander, is a silver-grey bush 
with pale lavender flowers. This grows tremendously, but the spikes 
last well in water, and may be cut by the dozen in summer time 
should you want to reduce your plant. 

Teucrium is a native of Spain, and though hardy and cultivated 
in this country for two hundred years, has never won the popularity 
that it deserves. I understand that Teucer, King of Troy, first 
used this species medicinally. Let us hope it did him good. 

Thea viridis grows with me in a snug half shady corner, but I 
have not had it long, and this little camellia has yet to open its white 
blossoms here. 

Thunbergia coccinea, from India, is a great climber for the stove, 
where given space it makes a fine spectacle with scarlet or orange 
coloured blossoms in Spring. 7. mysorensis is another strong 
climber, and a rampant grower when prosperous. ‘There are many 
more restrained shrubby varieties of Thunbergia, but I think all 
need the stove. 


118 MY SHRUBS 


A dwarf Thuya or two may be added to your miniature forest. 
Of these tiny Arbor Vite, T. occidentalis globosa is good; also 
I’. japonica pygmea and a nurseryman’s plant, 7. “‘ Rheingold,” a 
little golden bush. 

Thymus striatus is a neat little upright shrub from Greece—a 
good and fragrant hardy thyme for the sunny rockery. 


I should like Triphasia trifoliata, a handsome monotype from 


Manilla. ‘This Lime-berry Tree is largely cultivated for its fruits, 
but I know not if it exists in this country. Nicholson’s de- 
scription, which I borrow with due acknowledgment, is very 
attractive. 

Trochodendron aralioides is a Japanese evergreen of the mag- 
nolia race, though much more like an ivy. The starry inflorescence 
is pale green and very beautiful. This fine shrub is worthy of a 
sheltered corner. The new Tetracentron sinensis belongs to this 
race. | 

For Ulex I have no affection under cultivation, though, seen in 
its home, a gorse brake, or a waste of the dwarf autumn furze, is 
worthy of all praise and affection. One shares the enthusiasm of 
Linnzus when first he saw the splendid shrub. 

Ulmus pumila, the Siberian Elm, is the only dwarf species, but 
I know not if it be in cultivation. 

Ungnadia speciosa is a showy, monotypic, half-hardy shrub from 
Texas, resembling Pavia. It should be grown in a pot, plunged in 
summer, and withdrawn to the cold house when October returns. 
The flower is pink in corymbs, and appears about June. 

Vaccinium—the Bilberry, the Cranberry, the Huckle-berry, 
the Bearberry, and the rest—is a large genus of which I have but 
few representatives. They do not succeed. V. vitis idea, the Mount 


ve Stee soe P oa * ay as ; ? 
ees, Cee Sit hen a ict D2 ay Bete, EPID See T |e Ie Rae 


a ee et tr Se S ee ee ee 


ee ll ltl de i 


Gl eh Gt DER 


MY SHRUBS 119 


Ida Whortle, I collected in the Peak, and there is no daintier little 
gem where prosperous. It flourished for a few years, then passed 
away. IV. leucobotrys, from Bengal, must be a grand shrub for the 
stove, with white flowers and white berries curiously marked with 
black, but I know it not. V. corymbosum—rose pink flowers and 
blue-black berries—is a choice North American species, which 
makes a very big bush. 

Veronica is not a favourite genus with me, though many of the 
shrubby species make excellent hardy plants, and some of the new 
hybrids, of salmon and scarlet and purple, are handsome enough. 
V. Hulkeana, from New Zealand, is a very beautiful but tender plant 
that must be protected if frost is about. This shrub has exquisite 
sprays of lilac flowers. V. lycopodioides is another New Zealander, 
with the appearance of an erect clubmoss, hardy and handsome on 
a well-drained rockery. Mine puts forth its neat white flowers every 
June, and is prosperous enough. V. Traversi—again from New 
Zealand—makes a splendid bush, and V. Andersoni variegata is a 
beautiful foliage plant, a garden hybrid, hardy in the West. V. glauco 
cerulea is a pretty, decumbent species with blue flowers, while for 
a wall the variety V. salicifolia, with long racemes of cold white 
blossoms, makes a fine shrub in July. This New Zealander is very 
desirable. The Speedwell family is vast, but I lack space, or a mind, 
to more than these. 

With the hosts of the Viburnum I am forced to a severe dis- 
crimination also. New Viburnums are pouring in from China, but 
few fairly beat the old ones. I cleave to V. dilatatum, from Japan, 
an excellent shrub; V. Carlesii, a lovely and hardy species from 
Korea, pink in the bud with pure white clusters of fragrant flowers, 
and V. Rhytidophyllum—what a rollicking name! The felted ever- 


120 MY SHRUBS 


green foliage of this Chinese plant is very striking, while V. macro- 
cephalum, also from China, with large trusses of snowy flowers, is 
a treasure I have yet to acquire. I know not if V. odoratissimum, from 
the Khasia Mountains in China, is cultivated to-day. The species 
must be beautiful, though half-hardy. The blossom is said to have 
the scent of Olea fragrans. _ 


Vinca, or Pervinca, which changes into Periwinkle quite easily, 


is a good and familiar hardy trailer for spare corners in sun and 
shade. There is a pretty variety of V. minor, with gold and green 
leaves and white flowers. I have a great mass of V. media from the 
Mediterranean region which grew wild round about Hyéres, and 
was collected there by me. It is a very pale blue—almost white— 
with dark bright foliage. V. rosea, from South Florida, belongs to 
the stove, and I have not seen it, but it must be a beautiful subject. 
Out of Madagascar the seed of this plant first went to France and 
then came to England—from Mr. Richard, gardener to the King 
at Versailles and Trianon. So Curtis tells usin 1793 ; anda hundred 
years earlier, Mr. Miller, who first cultivated Vinca rosea in England, 
wrote how, “‘ during the summer they should be kept in an airy 
glass case, and in winter must be removed into the stove.” Is this 
good thing still in cultivation? If not let us send to Madagascar 
and regain it. The only Vitex that prospers in England out of doors 
is the deciduous V. Agnus castus, the Chaste Tree, or Monk’s 
Pepper ‘Tree, and even this South European is disappointing. With 
us the shrub is hardy enough on a wall, but its late flowering habit 
usually means that October finds the panicles still in bud, and after 
the first fall of temperature, they make no further effort to open, 
Bignonia grandiflora has the same unfortunate habit. I grow both 
plants in full sun on a snug south wall, but have seldom been repaid 


si eR I i te Nb Se 


MY SHRUBS 121 


by the pale lilac blossoms of the former. The other varieties of the 
genus Vitex belong to the greenhouse or stove. 

The great race of Vitis, if even reasonably presented, would fill 
my garden, for every year sees a few new beautiful ornamental vines 
from China or Japan added to our cultivation. I have the familiar 
V. Coignetia, Madame Coignet’s superb monster from Japan, 
whose autumnal colours are resplendent, and V. labrusca, the 
American Fox Grape, which does not fruit with me. Vitis armata, 
V. megalophylla, with huge bi-pinnate foliage, V. Henryana—a 
beautiful thing of Ampelopsis character—velvety and white veined, 
and V. Titanea from Japan, which should fruit, but only flowers 
abundantly, are also climbing here. V. heterophylla variegata is a 
pretty little creeper, or climber, with foliage spattered cream and 
pink, while V. purpurea, the Claret Vine, is a strong grower with 
wine-coloured foliage and occasional clusters of purple berries. V. 
Brandt, a hybrid, promises good grapes on a wall, though as yet I 
have not seen them ; but my favourite vine is V. heterophylla humuli- 
folia, the Turquoise-berried Vine from North China and Japan. 
This hardy climber, given a south wall, or the roof of a garden 
house, performs wonders. In autumn the foliage is a fine yellow, 
and after a hot summer the plant, now grown huge, is covered with 
clusters of dainty berries every shade of amethyst, purple, and sky 
blue. This is a most precious climber, and none with a place to grow 
it should deny himself the shrub. ‘The fruits often germinate and 
seedlings spring up round about, but cuttings strike readily and 
soon make respectable pieces. 

The Weigela (which should be Dievilla by the way) is too familiar 
to demand more than passing admiration. It has been a favourite 


shrubbery plant since the time of our great grandfathers, and its 
Q 


ip MY SHRUBS 


graceful habit has charmed and cheered generations of gardeners. 
Japan and China, Siberia and North America produce the genus, 
and the hybridizer is still busy with them. I possess a few scattered 


about the garden, and best I like W. argentea variegata, a beautiful © 


shrub with white and green foliage and pale rose-pink flowers. 


The Canadian, W. trifida, has yellow blossoms, but I know not if - 


it is cultivated. The honey-yellow W. sessilifolia, from Eastern 
United States, is also a handsome plant. 

Westringia is an extra-tropical Australian, but W. rosmarini- 
formis, the Victorian Rosemary, will succeed in a sunny, well- 
drained corner with winter care. It is not a very showy shrub, but 
has a neat, crisp habit, and the little, labiate, white flowers are freely 
produced. : 

Whipplea modesta is a tiny shrub—a high alpine from California. 
I have it in half shade in a moraine looking very unwell. 

Wistaria, named after Professor Caspar Wistar of Pennsylvania 
University, is a small genus, of which W. chinensis is the splendid 
and familiar climber. The Japanese variety is white, while W. multi- 
juga, also from Japan, has lavender racemes, much longer and 
thinner than the Chinese plant. An adult and prosperous W. multi- 
juga will give you tresses of two feet in length. There is no lovelier 
thing than this on a standard, or grown espalier fashion. A pink 
variety is now in cultivation. Of W. frutescens, the shrubby North 
American species, there are some fair hybrids, and I should dearly 
like to learn where Wistaria f. magnifica may be secured. 

Xanthoceras sorbifolia is an excellent monotypic species from 
China. Its delicate mountain-ash-like foliage is deciduous, and the 
flowers are white touched with crimson at the base and borne in 
simple racemes during April. This good and beautiful shrub will 


ER ely Ort Sere Loe ee ae eee }: were b sk Sete 
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Wen ses 


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MY SHRUBS 123 


stand anywhere provided the soil be fairly moist. My plant thrives 
in peat, though peat is not essential. It sets three-celled seed-pots, 
but does not bring them to full size and ripeness here. 

Xanthorhiza apifolia is another hardy monotype from North 
America. This little deciduous shrub has light pinnate foliage 
and racemes of very minute dark florets which appear in early 
spring. It is worth a corner in a rockery, for the growth is modest 
and it will always remain a dwarf. 

Of Xylomelum, the Wood Apple, I have had the wooden, 
pear-shaped fruits brought to me from Australia, and striven to 
germinate the seeds, but failed to do so. This is a bush shrub, or 


tree, of the Protea order, probably not in cultivation. 


Xylosteum Philomile is an evergreen fly honeysuckle, with pink 
flowers in early Spring. 

With Zanthoxylum we approach an end. This genus, known 
as the Prickly Ash, or Toothache Tree, is a large one represented 
over most of the world. Whether the evergreen prickly and aromatic 
leaves of my plant—Z. planispermum—or its little clusters of red 
carpels in winter, or the bark of the shrub, are good against 
toothache, I cannot find. It flags under frost, but soon pulls itself 
together again when the cold has passed. This most handsome 
foliage plant prospers in half shade. 

Zauschneria californica, the Californian Hummingbird’s Trumpet, 
may be called a sub-shrub, though its habit is herbaceous. The 
downy, grey foliage and scarlet tubular flowers make a fine mass 
on the sunny rockery. I cut my plants back hard in autumn, and 
they break again, travel underground, and rapidly increase. 

Zenobia, so called after the great Empress—a noble name really 
worth keeping—is now lost, and the shrub, so well worthy to bear 


124 MY SHRUBS 


it, referred to Pieris or Andromeda. 1 mean Z. speciosa, from the 
United States, praised elsewhere as Pieris cassinefolia. 'This is 
among the most beautiful treasures in the garden. Give it half shade 
and peat, or good loam free of lime, and you should succeed, and 
rejoice at the splendid thing when June returns. 

Zizyphus 1 do not see in the catalogues, though Z. lotus, a 
South European, should be very nearly hardy. This, according 
to legend, yielded the sweet fare of the Lotophagi. Z. vulgaris, 
whose fruits are still appreciated, is counted hardy by Nicholson. 
These good shrubs should be introduced. Z. jujuba is the Jujube 
Tree, a species much cultivated, but only to be grown in the green- 
house at home. The last-named grows under glass at Kew, and they 
have Z. vulgaris in the open ; but neither fruits there. 


And now, before you escape, let me say a few words. It must 
not be suspected from this list of names, for the most part ugly, 
that I am one of those hopeless subjects, a gardener who only collects 
plants as other people collect postage stamps—for their rarity. I 
spurn the suggestion. No plant is here for its rarity, and few are rare. 
I could not be a competitive gardener, and would deprecate the least 
effort at competition even if it were possible. A shrub that has 
nothing else to commend it but its rarity possesses no charm for 
me. One’s concern is to collect beautiful things for delight and not 
for pride. My garden is too trifling even to make a rite of showing 
it. You may complete an ambit in two minutes. The spot is 
merely an extension of study and workroom—a private sanctity in 
whose adornment I take my pleasure. There is no question of 
fashion here, for it violates all the latest theories of what a small 
garden should be; rather is it a manifestation of individual taste 


MY SHRUBS 125 


struggling under increasing difficulties. For the Devon County 
Council has lifted up a huge Secondary School within ten yards of 


my garden. I begged them to respect old covenants under which I 


purchased my home, but they would not. The peace of a Devonian 
man of letters is nothing weighed against a cheap site for a public 
building ; so my plea was swept aside, compensation refused, and 
my garden and dwelling rendered valueless. In some countries 
they would have respected a serious artist—not in England. Even 
in some counties they might have thought twice before inflicting 
this grave wrong upon me; but not in my own county. Still, until 
the Devon County Councillors commandeer my scanty acre for 
their own purposes, and bid me go hence, I shall continue to cultivate 
shrubs and contentment therein. These unexpected tribulations 
must leave no scar, for men are like wolves: they will do things 
when hunting in a pack that their cowardice would make them 
shrink from single-handed. Combined, these worthy but unsports- 
manlike souls possessed a giant’s power; and they used it like a 
giant. 

Last winter in The Times there appeared an article on how a 
gardener should enjoy his garden. I may quote from this pro- 
nouncement, and declare that even thus do I take pleasure in my 
modest garth. Only so may the full flavour and blessed anodyne 
of the garden be properly appreciated : 

“The successful gardener is he who can enjoy his garden when 
he is alone in it, as simply as though it were a spring meadow round 
his house. He may have done what he will with nature ; but all 
his labours will seem like nature to him, when he rests from them, 
and he will forget that his flowers owe their well-being to his skill. 
As for other gardens, there may be many more beautiful, and he 


126 MY SHRUBS 


is glad of it, as a poet is glad of all the poetry in the world. But 
his own garden is not to be compared with them, any more than 
his own wife with other women. It is there to be enjoyed for itself, 
without any pride of possession, and as a place to rest from all 
labours, even from those that have made it beautiful.” 

That is a sound summary of what your garden should be to 
you, and what mine has always been to me. Keep the instinct 
for competition out of your garden, grudge no better man his 
triumphs, learn from all who will be good enough to teach, and 
if you find your plants becoming an anxiety rather than a rest or 
joy, then look to yourself and change your hobby. Beyond all things 
a garden is a place to forget your cares, not to breed them. I have 
known gardens where the owner did the worrying and the gardeners 
took their ease ; but this is to reverse the proper order. For their 
credit and honour let the professionals be as careful and troubled 
as possible: it is their duty ; but the amateur, if he be satisfied that 
the paid worker is justifying his existence, must preserve a peaceful 


mind. Above all, never call yourself ‘a great gardener,” because, — 


since Adam, the great gardeners have been far fewer even than most 
other great people, and not one man in a generation is worthy of 
such praise. For my part, when kind women tell me that their 
husbands or brothers are “ great gardeners,” I find myself a thought 
prejudiced against those husbands and brothers, well knowing that 
were such praise even approximately deserved, the objects of it 
would possess a knowledge and have acquired a sense of perspective 
to set their circle of admirers right in this matter. For gardening 
is like all creative art: the more a workman knows of his subject and 
the better, after life-long struggle, he has come to master his medium 
and learn its capabilities, the less inclined will he be to take any 


MY SHRUBS 127 


- valuation of his performances than his own. There have been 
still exist vain Masters in every branch of human achievement ; 


INDEX 


“ PAGE PAGE ' PAGE 
Rieee Pee a ee Choe 4 a 
eee lt 0 t ereieee gee Chovrizema 2 a 2 38 
< - 10] Boronia. ; ~ 'a2 1 Cistus. ; 3 ae | 
‘ - 10 | Bouvardia . ‘ . 21 | Citharexylum . ee 
‘ . 10 | Bowkeria . ‘ «ge + Citres. , ; PB ig: 
3) 38) Deechnygiote 5. ok | Clematio wl ge 
+ « «1 | Brachysema ‘ - 21} Clerodendron. as 
eet TER OR ee ae Re ge 
i ae Lee gt ee ae | Chaptins 6 gg 
ce a) ae Pepa. eg | Cereoram:. gg 
ey ee te a ee  Colete i a ae 
rane Colquhounia . . 33 
. «42 | CSALPINIA - + 24 | Convolvulus ME seattle 
‘ - 12 | Calceolaria . : - 24 | Coprosma . : cs ae 
. . 13 | Callicarpa . é . 25 | Cornus 5 : 4 ae 
- .«. 13 | Callistemon «ie: RIOR: bea ae 
et Bg 1 Calophaca”. sg | Coronilla PLS se ae 
y . 14 | Calothamnus 3 . 26 | Correa , : ie att, FY 
: - 14] Calycanthus ; . 26 Corylopsis . : Rey 2 
oe a4) Camellia sa | Corynocarpus.. . .. 33 
: - 14 | Cantua Bae” . 27 | Cotoneaster ‘ ye: 
cpt) S§| Caragina  . . «27 |Crinodendron . . 2 a0 
; - 45 | Carmichaelia . . 27 | Cryptomeria : Bnei. 
ree. 8 4 Carpenteria, eB Cydonia. a gy 
: - 15 | Castanopsis. : . 28 | Cyrilla , : < ee 
f - 15 | Ceanothus . ‘ . 28 | Cytisus ‘ ‘ Pg 
‘ . 16 Celastrus  . . Pater 
. - 17 | Cephalotaxus . - 28 | DAMNACANTHUS . wate 
Reet oe ee eg epee eS i a 
: - 18 | Ceratonia . F . 30} Daphniphyllum . ~<a 
»\,* 38°] Cercidiphyllum .... 30| Darwinia . .  .* 38 
ag BO) COMA sh) elo og BO Pp DRCMIRMIER ee a 
' + Ig | Cercocarpus : . .30| Decumaria . : pe 
va = 9°) Cestrom,. . - >. g0|Dendromecon . . 39 
; - Ig | Chameecyparis . . 28) Desfontainea . oo a 
- . 19 | Chimonanthus . . 29 | Desmodium hea ae 
‘ . 20 | Chiogenes . j : Sh 1) Dentaa: ‘ ee 


. 20 | Chionanthus j ~ #9} Diosma . é il ae 
129 R 


130 


Diospyrus 
Disanthus 
Distylum 
Dorycnium . 
Drimys 


EDGWORTHIA 
Ehretia 
Eleagnus 
Elzeocarpus . 


Eleutherococcus . 


Elsholtzia 
Embothrium 
Enkianthus . 
Entelea 
Epacris 
Ephedra 
Epigzea 
Erica . 
Erinacea 
Eriobotrya . 
Eriostemon . 
Escallonia 
Eucalyptus . 
Eucryphia . 
Euonymus . 
Eupatorium 
Eurya . 
Exochorda . 


FABIANA 
Fagus . 
Fallugia 
Feijoa . 
Fendlera 
Ficus . 
Fitzroya 
Fluggea 
Fontanesia . 
Forsythia 
Fothergilla . 
Fraxinus 
Fremontia . 
Fuchsia 


MY SHRUBS 


GAULTHERIA 
Gaylussacia . 
Genista 
Ginkgo 
Gleditschia . 
Globularia . 
Gonocalyx . 
Gordonia 
Grabowskya 
Grevillea 
Guevina 
Gymnocladus 


HAKEA 
Halesia 


Halimodendron . 


Hamamelis . 
Hedera 
Heimia 
Helianthemum 
Helichrysum 
Hermannia . 
Hibbertia 
Hibiscus 
Hippophez . 
Hoherea 
Hovenia 
Hydrangea . 
Hymenanthera 
Hypericum . 


ILEX 
Tllicium 
Indigofera . 
Inga 

Ixora . 


JACARANDA . 
Jacobinia 
Jamesia 
Jasminum 
Juniperus 
Justicia 


KADSURA 
Kalanchoe . 


PAGE 


51 
51 
51 
52 
52 
52 
52 
53 
53 
53 
53 
54 


56 
57 
57 
57 


Kalmia 
Kennedya . 
Kerria 
Koelreuteria 


LABURNUM . 
Lagerstroemia 
Lapageria 
Lardizabala . 
Larix . 


-Lasiandra 


Laurus 
Lavatera 
Lavendula . 
Ledum 
Leonotis 
Leptospermum 
Leschenaultia 
Leucadendron 
Leucocylus . 
Leycesteria . 
Libonia 
Ligustrum . 
Limoniastrum 
Liquidambar 
Liriodendron 
Lomatia . 
Lonicera 
Loropetalum 
Lotus . 
Luculia 
Lupinus 
Lycium 


MACKAYA 
Maclura 
Magnolia 
Malpighia 
Mandevilla . 
Manettia 
Margyricarpus 
Melaleuca 
Melia . 
Melianthus . 
Meliosma 


_ Menispermum 


_ Menziesia_ 
Mesembryanthemum . 


Perowskia . 
Persoonia . : 
Petrophila . 
Pettaria . : 
Peumus F 
Philadelphus 
Philesia 
Phillyrea 
Phlomis 
Photinia. 
Phylica 
Physianthus 
Picea . 

Pieris . 

Pinus . 
Piptanthus . 
Pistacia ‘ 
Pittosporum 
Plagianthus . 
Plagiospermum 
Platycarya . 
Podocarpus . 
Polygala 
Polygonum . 
Pomaderris . 
Protea : ‘ 
Prunus 
Pterocarya . 
Punica 

Purshia 

Pyrus . 
Pyxidanthera 


QUILLAJA 


RHABDOTHAMNUS 
Rhaphiolepis 
Rhaphithamnus . 
Rhododendron 
Rhodora 
Rhodothamnus 
Rhodotypos 
Rhus . : 
Rhynchospermum 
Ribes . ‘ : 


MY SHRUBS 


PAGE 
go 
go 
go 
go 


go. 


go 
go 
QI 
gI 
gI 
gl 
gt 
94 
92 
92 
92 
92 
93 
93 
94 
94 
94 
94 
95 
95 


Robinia 
Rosa . “ 
Rubus 
Ruscus 
Ruta . 


SALIX . 
Salsola 
Salvia . 
Sambucus 
Santolina 
Sarcococca . 
Satureia 
Schizandra . 
Schizophragma 
Senecio 
Serissa i 
Shepherdia . 
Skimmia 
Smilax 
Solanum 
Sollya . 
Sophora 
Sparmannia 
Sphacele 
Spirzea 
Stachyurus . 
Staphylea 
Stauntonia . 
Stephanandra 
Stranvesia . 
Stuartia 
Styrax . 
Sutherlandia 
Sycopsis 


Symphoricarpus . 


Symplocos . 
Syringa 


TACSONIA 
Tamarix 
Taxodium . 
Taxus. 
Templetonia 
Tetranthera 


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