Example from the Globe Flower Order 31 



Indian Clemat is montana grandiflora, a native of 

 Nepaul, are as beautiful, and many others of the 

 family are worthy of a place, rambling over old 

 trees, bushes, hedgerows, or tangling over banks. 

 These single wild species of Clematis are more 

 graceful than the large hybrid kinds now common ; 

 they are very hardy and free. In genial sea-shore 

 districts a beautiful pale kind, common in Algeria, 

 and in the islands on, and the shores of, the Mediter- 

 ranean (Cle matis cirrh osa), will be found charming — 

 nearly ev'ergreen, and flowering very early in spring 

 — even in winter in some places and in mild years. 



Next in this order we come to the Windflowers, 

 -Qr- _Anemone s._ and more beautiful flowers do not 

 adorn this world of flowers. Have we a bit of 

 rich^__grass land not mown? If so, the beautiful 

 Alpine Anemones (A. alpina and A. sulphurea) may 

 be grown there, though they are rare and 'slow' to 

 establish. Any sunny bushy bank or slope to adorn 

 with charming early flowers? For this we have 

 Anemon e blanda, a lovely Greek kind; place it in 

 open bare spots, as it is dwarf, and it will perhaps 

 at Christmas, and onward through the spring, open 

 its large blue starry flowers. The common ^ppy 

 Anemone (A. coronaria) will be happiest in open, 

 bare, sandy or rocky places in loam; and the showy 

 scarlet Anemone will do best in rich but not heavy 

 soil. Of other Anemones, hardy, free, and beautiful 

 to run free in our shrubberies and pleasure grounds, 



