The Book of Town & Window Gardening. Frances A. Bardswell

The Book of Town & Window Gardening - Frances A. Bardswell


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       Frances A. Bardswell

      The Book of Town & Window Gardening

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066247096

       CHAPTER I TOWN-GARDENING

       CHAPTER II THE EARLY WINDOW-BOX

       CHAPTER III “THE SEASON” WINDOW-BOX

       CHAPTER IV BALCONY-GARDENING

       CHAPTER V ROOF AND BACK-YARD GARDENS IN THE CITY

       CHAPTER VI PLANTS FOR THE CITY POOR

       CHAPTER VII THE BEGINNER

       CHAPTER VIII FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR TOWNS

       CHAPTER IX FOG, FLOWERS, AND FOLIAGE

       CHAPTER X THE LADY DECORATOR AND THE FLOWER-GIRL

       CHAPTER XI THE SMALL SUBURBAN GARDEN

       CHAPTER XII “NEXT DOOR”—A PARENTHETICAL CHAPTER

       CHAPTER XIII GRASS, GROUND, OR GRAVEL

       CHAPTER XIV FERNS AND WILD FLOWERS

       CHAPTER XV CREEPERS AND CLIMBERS

       CHAPTER XVI EASY ROCK AND WALL GARDENING

       INDEX

       Handbooks of Practical Gardening

       The Country Handbooks

       The Crown Library

       BOOKS ABOUT GARDENS

       TOWN-GARDENING

       Table of Contents

      “I’ll take the showers as they fall,

      I will not vex my bosom;

      Enough if at the end of all

      A little garden blossom.”

      Courage is wanted to write a book about Town-gardening. Is there such a thing? Some would say “No; cats, fogs, and smuts forbid.” Yet how inseparable from London is the thought of flowers! Can we picture the West End on a summer’s day without them? The dust-laid, freshly sprinkled squares and streets, where behind half-drawn blinds there is the fragrance of many blossoms; the bright harness of horses jangling as they champ the bit, a knot of flowers at every bridle; flower-sellers with baskets at all convenient corners, and along the roadway carts of Palms and growing plants bending and waving in the wind; every man one meets has got his button-hole, and every maiden wears her posy; even the butcher-boy holds a bud between his thumb and finger, twirling it and smelling at it as he goes.

      The love of flowers and an almost passionate delight in cultivating them has ever been a feature of English life, and of late years the old taste has been renewed and strengthened: no mere whim of fashion’s fancy is it, but the outcome of a nation’s feeling, deep and true; and what the English people love and long for, that they will have, despite all difficulties. Thus it comes about that London’s heart is gay with flowers. They strew our parks and open spaces, they fill the cheerful window-box and seed-sown area, and make the cold grey balcony to blossom as the rose; even where London’s traffic roars the loudest, one lights upon the pathetic back-yard garden, hemmed in by church and factory walls, the high-hung garden of the roof and parapet, the little beau-pot of the window-sill, the poetic window-plant, that shares its owner’s only living-room—everywhere flowers, flowers, for rich and poor, especially for the rich.

      “There’s never a delicate nursling of the year,

      But our huge London hails it, and delights

      To wear it on her heart or at her ear,

      Her days to colour and make sweet her nights.”

      Buying flowers is easy enough, it is the growing of them in big towns that is so difficult; but the struggle is not a hopeless one, there is much that may encourage. When we hear of what others have done, still more, when we have seen their successes for ourselves, despair gives way to animation and activity.

      No one will deny for a moment that there is more real joy to be felt over one plant that we have grown for ourselves than over ninety and nine bought ones; and this is not only because attending to its needs has made us love the flower as we love children and other pets and dear dependents—there is another reason. In shop-flowers the method of growth (one of a plant’s greatest beauties) is a charm left out. Sweet Peas, for instance; we buy them squeezed up in tight bunches, all pink ones massed together, or all white or purple. Where is the grace of the clinging tendril, the tender poising of the dainty blooms?

      DOUBLE AND SINGLE PYRETHRUMS

      I have seen these beauties where Sweet Peas were blowing and growing in the depths of a London area along with white Pinks, Candy-tuft, and the gold-flowered Canary Creeper, but never have I beheld them in the shop: bunches of Cornflowers and even Roses, will be laid against a trail of Smilax, or something else that does not belong to either of them, such as the ever-present “French Fern” or New Zealand grass. Flower-artists of Japan, who willingly spend hours in coaxing each separate twig and flower to show its natural grace and habit, would not much care to arrange the cut flowers we buy in towns, that have been divorced completely from the stems and branches where they grow; and to say this is not to grumble at the florists, who cannot do impossibilities, but to accentuate the fact that cut flowers cannot take the place of growing ones.

      Happily for the town gardener, many plants and flowers do well among the chimney-pots. Annuals less so than some, perhaps, but many of these flower satisfactorily if thinly sowed. Nasturtiums, Virginia Stock, Coreopsis, Marigold, Scabious, Sunflower, Lupin, Love-in-a-mist, Candy-tuft


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