DITCHES AND NARROW SHADY LANES. 39 
tropical butterfly, to those with small flowers borne in showers 
like drops from a fountain jet, and often sweet as Hawthorn 
blossoms. 
This climbing’ of oa 
: K me | 
be trained and ae cy 
in gardens, but 
vegetation may 
tortured into forms 
will its beauty ~ 
until we entrust 
it to the garland- 
ing of shrub, and 
copse, or hedge- 
row, fringes of ¢ 
dwarf plantation, 
or groups of 
shrubs and _ trees. 
All to be done is to 
put in a few tufts of 
any desired kind, and leave them 
alone, adapting the kind to the 
position. The large, flesh-coloured 
Bindweed, for example, would be best in 
rough places, out of the pale of the pleasure- 
ground or garden, so that its roots would 
not spread where they could do harm, 
while a delicate Clematis might be placed a Panis 
beneath the choicest specimen Conifer, and ap ee ric 
allowed to paint its rich green with fair 24 *hebberies 
flowers. In nature we frequently see a Honeysuckle clamber- 
ing up through an old Hawthorn tree, and then struggling 
with it as to which should produce the greatest profusion 
