North lawn where in June the Locust trees seem fairly to crown the place with their shining white¬ 
ness, their sweetness, and the music of a million bees; enclosed bv an ingenious fence of stained 
shingle against which Globethistle, Babysbreath, and other flowering things rise comfortably 
Seated among Rhododendrons and fragrant wood¬ 
land leafage summer hours pass all too swiftly 
Autumn Crocus (Colchicum autumnale) and 
Myrtle happily clothe the base of this old tree 
which otherwise might go bare of grace beneath 
An Eighty Tear Old Gard en 
at the home of 
Mrs. Elizabeth Eddy Norris 
Eddy Place, Brookfield, Mass. 
Photographs by 
E. E. Norris and James K. Mills 
38 
