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t colour is absolutely required, it is easy to make a place here and there where some patch of Lily or other flower of bold form may be well seen. These narrow borders are undesirable, not only for their poor effect--we think not of one, but of many a fine place where there are furlongs of such futility--but because the plan is destructive to both shrubs and flowers. If the ground is not dug for a year the roots of the shrubs invade it; if it is dug and enriched for the flowers, the feeding roots of the shrubs are mutilated. In the case of a place where lawn comes up to shrub plantation, which, again, is backed by woodland, the better way is to have, in just the right places, a bold planting of something fairly large, whose flower shall endure for a good while, to let the large group of it come right through to the lawn, and also stretch away back into the woodland. In our southern counties, in sheltered places, where the ground is cool and moist, and at the same time well drained, nothing can be better than Hydrangeas. Other softer plants for the same treatment would be the fine _Nicotiana sylvestris_, and for earlier in the year White Foxglove, and even before that _Verbascum olympicum_. _Lilium auratum_ is also superb in such places, and _Polygonum Sieboldi_ and others of this fine race of autumn-blooming plants. If some of the shrubs at the edge of the grass, such as Azaleas, have beautiful colour at more than one time of the year, both at the flowering time and in autumn blaze of foliage, two seasons of beauty are secured. Hardy Ferns are undeservedly neglected as plants to group about the feet of shrubs; some of the bolder kinds, as the Male Fern and the Lady Fern, are charming as a setting to the Lilies that love cool, shady wood edges. [Illustration: _TALL EVERGREEN SHRUBS IN A FLOWER BORDER._] If shrubbery edges were planned with a view to good effect both far and near, what capital companies of plants could be put together. As one such example, let us suppose a cool spot, with peaty or light vegetable soil, planted in the front with _Skimmia_ and hardy Ferns, _Funkia grandiflora_, and _Lilium rubellum_. A little farther back would come _Lilium Brownii_, then a group of _Kalmias_ and _Lilium auratum_. One carefully-planted scheme such as this would lead to others of the same class, so that the quantities of grand shrubs and plants that are only waiting to be well used would be made into lovely picture
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