42 



MANUAL OF GARDENING 



sired, nothing is better to plant than these trees; but better trees, 

 as maples, oaks, or elms, should be planted with them, and the 

 poplars and willows should be removed as rapidly as the other 

 species begin to afford protection. When the plantation finally 

 assumes its permanent characters, a few of the remaining 



33. A spring expression worth securing. Catkins of the small poplar. 



poplars and willows, judiciously left, may afford very excel- 

 lent effects; but no one who has an artist's feeling would be 

 content to construct the framework of his place of these rapid- 

 growing and soft- wooded trees. 



I have said that the legitimate use of poplars in ornamental 

 grounds is in the production of minor or secondary effects. 

 As a rule, they are less adapted to isolated planting as sped- 



