GARDEN DECORATIONS. 
105 
or geometrically arranged groups of flower-beds may be introduced 
in the foreground of important window views ; but beware of fre- 
quently breaking open stretches of lawn for them. Imagine bits of 
lace or bows of ribbon stuck promiscuously over the body and skirt 
of a lady’s dress. “ How vulgar 1 ” you exclaim. Put them in their 
appropriate places and what charming points they make ! Let 
your lawn be your home’s velvet robe, and your flowers its not too 
promiscuous decorations. 
Of constructive garden decorations (in which are included pillars 
and trellises for vines, screens, arbors, summer-houses, seats, rock- 
work, terraces, vases, fountains, and statuary), and their compara- 
tive value, we will merely say that really tasteful and durable 
ornamentation of that kind is rather expensive, and therefore to 
be weighed well in the balance with expenditures of the same 
money for other modes of embellishment before ordering such 
work. 
The following remarks from Kemp’s admirable little work on 
Landscape Gardening* express our views so fully that we will 
give them entire : 
“ A garden may also be overloaded wdth a variety of things 
which, though ornamental in themselves, and not at all out of keep- 
ing with the house, or the principal elements of the landscape, 
may yet impart to it an affected or ostentatious character. An 
undue introduction of sculptured or other figures, vases, seats, and 
arbors, baskets for plants, and such like objects, will come within 
the limits of this description. And there is nothing of wLich peo- 
ple in general are so intolerant in others, as the attempt, when 
glaringly and injudiciously made, to crowd within a confined space 
the appropriate adornments of the most ample garden. It is in- 
variably taken as evidence of a desire to appear to be and to 
possess that which the reality of the case will not warrant, and is 
visited with the reprobation and contempt commonly awarded to 
* This is an English work entitled “How to lay out a Garden,” a work so complete and 
well condensed, that were it not for the difference in the climate, and in the style of living (and 
consequently of the plans of dwellings, and their outbuildings and garden connections), which 
English thoroughness and cheaper labor make practicable, there had been no need of this 
book 
