A-/.V/S/MJI // ///. 



. 



tli<- lowi-r area, w ith .1 



enclosure, and 



|s.f .1 in the 



mulst an oin.iim-nt.il st"ne 



: old 



I-' -lie greet us .is we go 

 tor\\ard through tile 

 garden, amid the flow 



W.ivs. ..;:.! Ill- (.Itlis 



del on tile 



hillside. 



\\ t know ivt whether to 

 like most the MM. Is i.f the 

 ant wiNidland or the more 

 ordered chaiins of the broad 

 terrace garden. The hand of 

 good judgment rules every- 

 where in the disposition of 

 floral charm, and the gr.iss 

 walks b.tweeii the Ivds are 

 both pleas nit to walk upon 

 and sat- :i the artistic 



harmony. An extra< rdin try 

 wealth of hards flowers is m 

 these b- Ivds and in 



the terra*. e borders. Mark 

 how along the embanked slope 

 under the great row of tree-, 



by trellis and buttress, multitudes of blooms are co.i.x. d to gi 

 There is a subtle art in discovering the suitable placi 

 every tl'vver, those that love the full sunl.ght and those 

 whose charms are discovered most beneath the partial shade. 

 Larkspurs and lupines, columbines and foxgloves. Cyclamens 

 M-apJragons, and a prodigal host of others, are liere. 





THE TEkWACR WAlK AM> H )i n LIMES. 





t,, .. ,,f main- kinds llourish < l> , and i\ y 



and many climbers U-nJ the.i charm t.> the h -usi- and tlu 

 terrace w.ills. 



It is, |H-rl).ip^. unnecess.irv In attempt t idra\\ It ss.iiis from 

 such a garden as that .it Hem^haw Mall. Much is \v m^ tin 

 the work of the old planters, and \se C-iniv-t Is ate sti. it 







A GARDEN VISTA WITH LEADEN IK. IKES. 



