168 GARDENS: THEIR FORM AND DESIGN 



in such positions. For instance, nothing looks better 

 near grey than a pale pink campion. Wood-sorrel, too, 

 is good in little crevices of stone. But most delicate and 

 delightful of all is a tiny daisy called " Dresden China.'' 



If a small pool of water or (Fig. 98) tank can be arranged 

 in the centre of such a paved garden, in place of the 



FIG. 98. 



Tudor rose, or other shaped flower-bed, we gain further 

 colour through the reflections of flowers in the water. 

 Four children's baths, converging from four quarters 

 towards a circular tank, would form a shape out of the 

 ordinary. A narrow flower-bed comes next the water, 

 in which would be bright yellow allyssum, pansies, white 

 pinks, and other flowers, their faces reflected in the little 



