9 8 



The Garden Magazine, October, 1919 



and white of the flowers form a charm- 

 ing combination with the many- 

 colored rocks. Just beyond is the 

 tea house, an adjunct that is com- 

 ing to be found more and more 

 often in American gardens. This 

 one is a simple wooden structure 

 with a red shingled roof. It is 

 furnished with inviting tea tables 

 and chairs, and from it one over- 

 looks the different levels that make 

 up the gardens most delightfully, 

 while taking tea. Through a break 



THE WALL FOUNTAIN 



Into a basin hewn from a great stone 

 dives a tiny arrow of silver with such 

 accuracy that not a ripple breaks the 

 reflection on the shadowed water's surface 

 of the blue and white and greens of the 

 flowers that are clinging to the rocks 

 above and all around 



"THIS WAY OUT" 



And down stone steps that lead from the spot where Pompey gardened through a 

 woodland bit to the stretch of turf that borders the beach that borders the sea! 



