AMERICx'YN ESTATES AND GARDENS 



shell in lironze, forming the chariot, in which stands the driver of a pair of white marble sea 

 horses. White marble sea nymjihs are pla^'ing in the water. On the front of the shell is an 

 octopus, and in the top of this is set a sheet of glass. The inner and outer walls of the shell 

 are sufihciently wide to allow for an electrical attachment and lamps, which, when lighted with 

 the colored lights, throw the color through a circle of manv small jets. The effect is enhanced 

 bv six jets of water falling on the central group. 



Mrs. John L. Gardner's Garden, Brookline, Massachusetts. 



Mrs. John L. Gardner's garden, in Brookline, Massachusetts, is the result of twenty 

 years of continuous growth and cultivation under one owner. This fact is of special interest, 

 for most of the fine gardens of our time have been created in a few months or in a year or 

 two, and represent a definite idea carried to realization within a very brief period. Gardening 

 art, as it is now understood, was scarcely known in America when Mrs. Gardner began the 

 arrangement of her beautiful grounds, and her garden, therefore, has been slowly evolved, 

 although long ago brought to its present high state of culti^'ation. 



The estate is a considerable one, comprising about forty acres. The intelligent care 

 that has been lavished on it for so many vears has long since made it one of the "show" places 



THE GARDEN OF MRS. JOHN L. GARDNER. 



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