138 
HERBACEOUS GARDEN 
when better established, and Clematis Viticella , 
the small purple-flowered sort, is very rampant 
over a trellis. The only note of colour other 
than mauve or grey is the pink of a climbing 
rose, Papillon. 
Endless are the flowers that could be used 
to fill the beds. Heavy-scented stocks, purple 
asters, mauve scabious, salpiglossis, pansies 
of every shade, galega, both dwarf and tall, 
lupins and campanulas. 
A small square garden 24 feet by 24 feet 
could be arranged in four large rings, with 
grass paths and diamond-shaped beds to fill the 
corners of the squares, and devoted to some 
such scheme as rose reds and pinks (p. 139). 
The diamond beds in the corners may be 
filled with hollyhocks, and the large round 
beds carpeted with godetia in all shades of rose 
red and pinks (for none of them are of 
the wrong shade), with pink and rose and 
crimson phloxes permanently planted at 
intervals all over the bed. If in a favourable 
climate, the large square bed in centre of all 
may be planted with pink hydrangeas, other- 
wise with monthly roses rising from a bed 
of mignonette, or pale-blue nemophila for 
contrast, or even a groundwork of silvery 
stachys (Mouse Ear). Other diamond beds 
