ing the harmony of arrangement — the proper 

 accentuations, carefully planned vistas, graceful 

 paths, natural objective points — a unity — all of 

 these well thought out will give us a simplicity in 

 our gardens, that precious reposefulness, we all 

 know is so desirable. 



Someone remarked in speaking of the gar- 

 dens created by Lady Warwick that "they were 

 gardens of detail." Detail? Will you not be 

 more comprehensive you ask? It is the "detail" 

 in all Lady Warwick's gardens that has made 

 them of world-wide interest. In The Friendship 

 Garden, The Shakespeare Garden, The Wilder- 

 ness Garden, The Secret Garden and The Gardens 

 of Warwick Castle, that even in the smallest 

 group of the smallest plants, one recognizes in- 

 stantly the same careful thought in selection and 

 placing as in the bold groups or great massings. 



The fountains, garden seats, rest houses, 

 bowers, gates, balustrades, statues, columns. 



36 



