Opening Leaves 
VINES—Continued 
Trumpet-flower (Tecoma) Wistaria (W.) 
Common (radicans) * Chinese (sinensis) 
*Large - flowered (grandi- (fruticosa) 
flora) 
A botanical list of all the trees, shrubs, and vines in 
Central Park will be found at the end of the book, 
page 425. 
* 
From mountain-top to sea-shore the profusion of trees, 
shrubs, and vines—summarized as landscape vegetation 
—less difficult of identification than the minuter, 
more hidden forms of growth, affords more constant 
opportunities for entertaining research than any other 
department of natural history. The areas favorable for 
the other sciences are more or less local and restricted; 
but these three growths are everywhere, the universal 
garb and ornament of nature: they appeal to the most 
casual observer, are a constant incentive to observation, 
and their study yields its reward in the appreciation of a 
thousand details of scenery that escape the careless eye. 
The significance of Central Park, as the background 
of our proposed narrative-picture, is not in the wide 
repute of these spacious grounds, but in the fact that in 
this area, accessible, within an hour’s ride, to about one- 
twentieth of the population of the whole United States, 
is a remarkable epitome of these three types of vegeta- 
tion, showing the best representatives of hardy native and 
foreign trees, shrubs, and vines. Here we havea sort of 
arboretum, and the best sort, not with genera and species 
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