36 The Young Gardener . 
benas, Heliotropes and Fuchsias, follow closely 
after. 
For the walls and fences too, the Honeysuckle 
is charming, and it puts out its leaves early and 
wears late its coral berries when the sweet yellow 
flowers are gone or have not yet come on ; the 
Clematis, too, makes a bright green mantle with 
blossoms of white or blue ; and perennial flowers 
of the Convolvolus kind make wreaths of dark 
green leaves with white or purple bells, or with 
bright pink flowers. Cobea Scandens, again, is a 
nice sort of creeper, which goes on year after year, 
dying down in winter and springing up again, as 
if self-sown, in spring. 
Jasmine is very sweet and extremely green; — 
and amongst the annuals that we sow, there are 
many things that rapidly tell on fences and make 
them gay with flowers. There are Sweet Peas, 
for instance, and Convolvolus Major, Canary-bird 
Flower or Canariensis, Nasturtiums, of the dark 
kinds especially, Maurandyas and Lophosphernums, 
all of which are suitable and all of which, except 
the last two, will grow if sown in autumn or early 
spring without any heat at all. The Maurandya 
Barclayana, Lophosphernum, and Ipamea Quomoclit 
and Rubra Cerulea, (which are like different- 
