42 



THE WILD GARDEN. 



mens in carefully chosen spots, Crocuses in places under 

 branches and trees not bearing leaves in Spring, the yellow 

 and pink Coronilla (C. montana and C. varia), the larger 

 forms of Bindweed, many of the taller and finer Harebells, 

 Star worts (Aster), for hedgerows, and among the taller plants 

 the Italian Cuckoo Pint (Arum), and also the Dragons, for 

 warm sandy soils, the Monkshoods which people fear in gar- 

 dens and which do admirably in many positions ; the different 

 species of Onion, also unwelcome in gardens, some of which 

 are very beautiful, as, for example, the White Provence 

 kind and the old yellow garden Allium (Moly). With the 

 above almost exclusively exotic things and our own wild 

 flowers and ferns Ijeautiful colonies may be made. 





'I'he Yellow Allium (A. Moly) naturalised. 



