PARK AND CEMETERY. 
46 
RUSTIC CROSS WITH NATURAL LANDSCAPE SETTING. 
JiOODLAWN CEMETERY, N. Y. 
The two pictures shown here emphasize the gentle 
landscape art of hiding things and setting off monuments 
with appropriate planting, an art which is nowhere prac- 
ticed with more skill and care than in Woodlawn. 
The Celtic cross shown on the left page, seemingly 
rising from a luxuriant growth of snowballs (Viburnum 
plicatum) and overhung by the heavy foliage of a neigh- 
boring tree, is the only monument in the landscape, 
though there are doubtless others within a few yards. 
This is the fine art of concealment. The monument is 
on the Wm. D, Dickey lot, and was erected from Barre 
granite by Ferdinand Prochazka, of New York city. 
The Paul L. Thebaud rustic cross shown in the other 
{Conthiu'd cn pa^e 4q) 
