6 THE BOOK OF THE WILD GARDEN 



The following lists, though not professing to be 

 exhaustive, give a fair selection of plants suitable for 

 wild gardens of various descriptions. The majority of 

 those named possess a sufficiently robust constitution 

 to thrive, if afforded the different conditions of soil and 

 site recommended, while in the case of the less accom- 

 modating subjects successes should far out-number 

 failures, provided that due care is taken to study their 

 individual preferences. 



