Book of Gardens 
59 
It is often advisable 
to break the garden 
vista with the oc¬ 
casional relief of an 
arbor. This is done 
on the Newport place 
of Mrs. Hugh D. 
.4 uchincloss, where 
fluted columns sup¬ 
port the arbors in the 
rose garden and lat¬ 
tice affords a back¬ 
ground for climbing 
roses. The long grav¬ 
eled path ends in a 
rustic gate and a 
vista of sea and sky 
The garden vista is 
usually accented by 
a path which forms 
the major axis in the 
garden design. Where 
it crosses other axes 
the spot can be 
marked by a sundial 
or bird bath. In the 
gardens of Mrs. John 
S. Newberry at 
Grosse Pointe Farms, 
near Detroit, the path 
leads the eye to the 
pergola on one side 
and the tangled fields 
