The Natural Style in Landscape Gardening 



terest here is in the trees with occasional outcrop- 

 pings of interesting rocks partly covered with trail- 

 ing masses of sweet briers, and the striking outline 

 of the hill to the north of us which now faces us 

 since we turned. 



And so we pass from paragraph to paragraph. 

 Perhaps number three brings us to a hill top and 

 gives us a view of the woodland about us ; perhaps 

 number four descends into a wooded ravine, where 

 oak forest passes gradually into maple or beech; 

 perhaps number five skirts the bank of a lake, giv- 



85 



