wide, made of a double set of posts, are useful in the wild Single 
garden for breaking some straight path, or for leading the Roses and 
eye to some hidden beauty beyond. The two single Roses, some 
R. macrantha and R. brunonis, should be grown together. Perpetual 
The first has large single white flowers, blush buds, and Climbers 
heavy dark foliage; the second has delicate, pure white clusters, 
distinct gold stamens, and finely cut leaves of a soft blue green. 
Una, a large single white, is lovely for arches or pegging, and 
may be placed alternately with a full pink rambler like 
Leuchtstern or the noisette Papillon. A few of the larger 
flowering Roses, such as Captain Christy and Caroline Testout, 
in their climbing forms, look all the better when mixed with 
some of the small white clusters. 
Perpetual climbers of the Rambling type are much more 
difficult to find—old-fashioned kinds there are, but very often 
their names have been lost. A white, with a noisette-like 
growth and scent, flowering in September in Scotland, and the 
pink one illustrated on the opposite page, I have been quite 
unable to trace. This pink Rose, grown against an old fruit 
tree and almost overpowering it, is singularly attractive. It 
flowers early, produces wonderful heads of bloom in August 
on strong canes like a Crimson Rambler, and continues 
till Christmas. If planted against a wall, it will grow to a 
’ great height, but it is seen to greatest perfection perhaps when 
standing alone, with room to spread and tumble its great shoots 
around. At St Anne’s a pretty, semi-double white Rose, R. 
pissardii, was growing near by. ‘This makes a charming pillar 
and is also perpetual. The new Trier, a white cluster with a 
warm tint of coppery pink in the buds, is also said to be perpetual, 
but so far with us the young plants have only produced a 
Y 169 
