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ees are Laurels, both common and Portugal, Yews, Box, Osmanthus, Aucubas, Phillyraeas, common and oval-leaved Privet, _Ligustrum sinense_, and _Rhododendron ponticum_. Of these Yews, Box, and Osmanthus are perhaps as successful as any. The Osmanthus is not usually considered suitable for this purpose, but it succeeds well in the shade, and keeps a good dark-green colour. Hollies are sometimes recommended, but, though they may occasionally thrive under trees, it is not advisable to use many of them, as they are more often a failure, becoming thin and straggling in the course of a year or two. Of dwarf-growing evergreens _Berberis Aquifolium_, Butcher's Broom (_Ruscus aculeatus_ and _R. Hypoglossum_), _Cotoneaster microphylla_, _Euonymus japonicus_, and _E. radicans_, with their respective varieties, Skimmias, _Gaultheria Shallon_, Ivies, especially the common English, Irish Ivy, and Emerald green, _Pernettya mucronata_, St. John's Wort (_Hypericum calycinum_), and Vincas can all be recommended, as they all do well in the shade, and most of them will flower freely. For a very dry spot where nothing else will grow the Butcher's Broom and St. John's Wort should be planted, as both will grow and thrive where other plants die. With deciduous shrubs under trees the difficulty is not so much in getting them to live as in coaxing them to flower, but a few of them will do well in the shade, and, as a rule, bloom freely. Of these the best are the common and White Brooms, _Azalea pontica_, _Genista virgata_, _Philadelphus_, Forsythias, and _Daphne Mezereum_. The shrubby Spiraeas may also be used sparingly in a fairly light and open place, though plenty of sun is required as a rule to enable them to flower properly. In addition, though their flowers are insignificant, _Cornus alba_ with its red stems in winter, the Snowberry (_Symphoricarpus racemosus_), which is laden every year with white berries long after the leaves have fallen. The question about shrubs growing under trees is so frequently asked that the names of those most successful are given, but generally the beauty of the tree is lost when smothered up with evergreens and other shrubs beneath its spreading branches. A tree is a picture in itself, and it is pleasant to see the grass creep to the branch edge and then cease, leaving a brown earth patch under the canopy of foliage. Shepherdi Holly, Tree Ivies, and _Berberis stenophylla_, it may be mentioned, are a succes
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