224 



HAEDY PLANTS POK, THE 



in the autumnal gusts — the burial plumes as it were of our 

 summer too early dead ? What tender plant so effective as 

 this in giving a new aspect of vegetation to our gardens^ if 

 it be tastefully placed and well-grown ? Long before it 

 flowers it possesses more merit for its foliage and habit than 

 scores of things cultivated indoors for their effect — Dasyli- 



FiG. 82. 



Gynerium argenteum. 



rions, &c.^ for example, and it would be well worthy of 

 being extensively used if one of its silken-crested wands 

 never put forth in autumn. It is not enough to place it 

 in out-of-the-way spots — the general scene of every garden 

 and pleasure ground should be influenced by it ; it should 

 be planted even far more extensively than it is at present, 



