Project Gutenberg's Hardy Perennials and Old Fashioned Flowers, by John Wood
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Title: Hardy Perennials and Old Fashioned Flowers
Describing the Most Desirable Plants, for Borders,
Rockeries, and Shrubberies.
Author: John Wood
Release Date: July 26, 2006 [EBook #18913]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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[Illustration: A CORNER OF THE AUTHOR'S GARDEN AT KIRKSTALL.]
HARDY PERENNIALS
AND
Old-Fashioned Garden Flowers:
DESCRIBING
THE MOST DESIRABLE PLANTS FOR BORDERS, ROCKERIES, AND SHRUBBERIES,
INCLUDING
FOLIAGE AS WELL AS FLOWERING PLANTS.
* * * * *
BY JOHN WOOD.
* * * * *
ILLUSTRATED.
* * * * *
LONDON: L. UPCOTT GILL, 170, STRAND, W. C.
1884.
LONDON: PRINTED BY A. BRADLEY, 170, STRAND, W. C.
PREFACE.
At the present time there is a growing desire to patronise perennial
plants, more especially the many and beautiful varieties known as
"old-fashioned flowers." Not only do they deserve to be cultivated on
their individual merits, but for other very important reasons; they
afford great variety of form, foliage, and flower, and compared with
annual and tender plants, they are found to give much less trouble. If a
right selection is made and properly planted, the plants may be relied
upon to appear with perennial vigour and produce flowers more or less
throughout the year. I would not say bouquets may be gathered in the
depth of winter, but what will be equally cheering may be had in blow,
such as the Bluet, Violet, Primrose, Christmas Rose, Crocus, Hepatica,
Squills, Snowdrops, and other less known winter bloomers. It does not
seem to be generally understood that warm nooks and corners, under trees
or walls, serve to produce in winter flowers which usually appear in
spring when otherwise placed.
There are many subjects which, from fine habit and foliage, even when
flowerless, claim notic
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