Pen- and brush-craft pale their ineffectual fires before the beauty of Alpine grass-lands, and flawful and halting has been the manner of presenting my subject; but I hope a sufficient glimpse of its fascination and importance will have been caught to raise enthusiasm to the point of making amends for a neglectful past. Whatever may be the verdict upon the question of introducing Swiss floral wealth to our meadows generally, perhaps enough has been said to make it plain that very many of the mountain field-flowers cry aloud to be treated as field-flowers in every Alpine garden where there is scope for, and pretensions to, completeness. And I believe that the cry will be answered. I believe that the value of the fields, in the economy of Alpine plant-life, has only to be placed earnestly before conscientious gardeners and lovers of flowers for it to meet with immediate and becoming diligence. I believe it will be seen that a rockwork is not the first, last, and only home we may make for Alpines in England, and that it is as unlovely as it is unjust to tar all of them with one and the same brush and think that, because they are called Alpines, they must necessarily be given a perch dominating the rest of the garden. I therefore believe that one more of our cherished conventionalities will soon be relegated to the “Valhalla of bad taste.”
We “are still looking through a kaleidoscope at ever-changing views,” and “the eternal verities” have as yet by no means been sounded to their bases. If “Badsworth” can find sufficient sanction to talk like this of auction bridge, with how much more reason may it not be said of gardening and the cult of Nature? It is doubtful if we have reached much that is final in anything; certainly not in gardening. Gardening—or flower-gardening, since that is the department with which we are here dealing—flower-gardening is something more than the mere growing of blossoms to please, something more than the mere forming of a living herbarium, something more than the mere creation or collecting of “novelties” for the sole sake of novelty; there is something deeper and more difficult to talk about than that—something none the less real because largely indefinable. As earnest, thinking gardeners, our views and sentiments are not limited to a mere toying with the soil and with attractive vegetation. We are not children—though we ought to be, and are. I mean, we do not garden—we do not build Alpine rockworks and plant them with gay flowers quite so irresponsibly as children build mud-castles and stick them over with coloured oddments. There is a significant profundity in the meanest of our efforts—even in the building of mud-castles; and in the maturer effort of gardening it is only natural that this should be of richer meaning.
Gardening is a saving grace in any nation. It would be invidious to name examples; enough to say that nations with marked propensities for gardening figure prominently in past and present history. Such nations, though “insurgent sons,” are necessarily less so than they would otherwise be; for they live nearer to the truth of things, nearer to Nature. Gardening touches well-springs of being, and helps materially towards the moral advancement of a race. It is affected by the same fundamental “psychic” influence as is painting, or, indeed, any other of our kindred enthusiasms. In it we are striving, not so much to express Nature, as to express ourselves through Nature; not so much to transcribe Nature line for line, as to translate—as creatures who consider ourselves so much apart from, so much above, Nature—what we think we feel, perhaps see, and almost certainly dream in her. And far be it from me to aver that we are not striving even to supplant Nature—seemingly a mad ambition, for in the end, do as we will, Nature, and nothing but Nature, has found expression. Yet it is not quite as mad an ambition as a first inspection would lead us to suppose. Indeed, it is good, if not actually great; for it is the biggest of the many bunches of carrots dangling in front of the human animal’s nose, inducing him to keep “pegging away.”
Independent and original as we may consider ourselves, we yet from time to time have to turn and take our cue from Nature. She, after all, is the source at which we must refresh our jaded imaginations; she is the storehouse from which we must draw new blood, new energy, new ideas; she instigates our ideals and holds the cause and means for inspiration; without her promptings, in fact, we should go bankrupt. In the Buddhist “Sankhya-Karika” we read how, “like a danseuse who retires from the dance after she has shown herself to the crowd, Nature retires after she has shown herself in all her splendour to the soul”—after she has shown herself to the soul. The aim of the best art is not slavishly to copy Nature, but to catch and translate the dreams she suggests.
We may paint as much as we like “from imagination” or “inner consciousness,” but if Nature were not all the time posing at our elbow, and if we did not from time to time cast covert glances at her as our model, our picture would never be “inspired”; it would either harp tediously upon ancient themes and methods, or else “advance” into sheer chaotic incoherence.
And so it is that we have now come, I think, to a time in the history and use of Alpine rockworks when we must turn again to Nature for fresh inspiration, for improved ideals. The time is passing when Alpine conditions were held to be sufficiently represented by the rock-fortresses of the Alps,
Of course, these garrisons are, and must always remain, the most prominent and unique of vegetation’s Alpine marvels, but they cannot properly be thought to speak for all; they are, as it were, the militant éclaireurs set upon the craggy heights and watching over the peaceful hosts of their fellows upon the fields. As is the way in all our activities, we hug a truth a long time before becoming aware that it is not the whole truth. Perception has small beginnings, advance is slow, and exaggeration, meantime, is the very breath of progress. We ill-use a truth by over-kindness; our ecstasy forces it to lie. We dwell extravagantly upon it until it becomes partially false; then we move on. And this, I find, is what has happened, and is happening, in the case of Alpine rockworks. We have for long dwelt alone with them as with the last word upon the housing of Alpine plants; we have been so absorbed in them as the whole truth, that we have seen no need, even no possibility, for further helpful inquiry of Nature. But the time has now arrived when our truth is revealing itself as only a half-truth, and, turning to glance again at our model for a fresh advance in inspiration, we notice in her a feature which had previously escaped us—the fields.
“Many people enter God’s Temple through the doorway of Beauty”; and upon this count, also, the fields of the Alps are of obvious import. I venture to think that an Alpine field, with all its concomitant “accident” and consequent variety, will have more to say to a larger number of men and women than will a rockwork alone; I venture to think that a person who would not stop longer than to patronise a rockwork, would stand arrested and absorbed before the grass-lands and their varied features. To the mass of mortals who are not bespoken specialists in higher Alpines, the meadows have no superiors in breadth, directness, and simplicity of appeal. They are places where the “man-in-the-street” is at once at home. They require no special enthusiasm to make them acceptable. Their beauty is as apparent to the “vulgar” as it is to the elect; their charm is interesting to all.
And this interest means more than mere pleasure, more than a superficial tickling of the senses. It entails a mint of meaning for the soul. Yes, the soul. No gardener, no Nature-lover, need be shy of admitting he has a soul; for it is precisely this which makes Nature-lovers of us all, precisely this which plays so big a part in our admiration of the fields. “Breathes there a man with soul so dead” who will not linger lovingly over mountain meadows tossed or rolling like a multi-coloured sea, with sunlight playing amid the blues, mauves, reds, and yellows, breaking these into endless intermediary tints; and with butterflies seemingly in such light-hearted flight, skipping and flitting blithely, airily, for all the world like flowers come suddenly to sentient life? Breathes there a man who will not find in these meadows and their teeming gaiety “a vitalising passion, calling to life the shrouded thoughts and unsuspected forces of the heart”?
From Crocus to “Crocus”; from the first pale, dainty flush of spring to the last full flush of autumn; from the shy and hesitating youth of the year to the time when all at length “is rounded with a sleep,” these meadows are an intimate joy and refreshment. Nature herself sets so much store by them that when they become, as they must become, recognised components of our Alpine gardens, it shall be said she
INDEX
- A
- Achillea nana, 80
- Aconitum Lycoctonum, 173
- ” napellus, 121, 173
- ” paniculatum, 173
- Adenostyles albifrons, 122, 173
- Adonis aestivalis, 69
- Ajuga pyramidalis, 31, 77, 83
- Alchemilla, 74
- ” alpina, 83
- ” vulgaris, 83
- Alpine Auricula, 76
- ” Brier, 85, 105
- ” Bugle, 83
- ” Clover, 54, 170, 171
- ” Crocus, 44
- ” Crowfoot, 31, 44
- ” Eglantine, 67, 85, 105, 121
- ” Flax, 84
- ” Forget-me-not, 84
- ” Knotweed, 85
- ” Lettuce, 122
- ” London Pride, 176
- ” Plantain, 76
- ” Polygala, 31
- Anemone alpina, 17, 32
- ” narcissiflora, 63, 83
- ” sulphurea, 83, 128
- Antennaria dioica, 84
- Anthericum Liliago, 84, 164
- ” ramosum, 84
- Anthyllis vulneraria, 77, 84, 116, 170
- Antirrhinum, 78
- Arabis alpina, 174
- Arnica, 72, 116, 129, 177
- Artemisia, 77
- Asparagus, 137
- Aspidium Lonchitis, 175
- Aster alpinus, 89, 124
- Astrantia major, 120, 129, 154, 161, 176
- ” minor, 120
- Atriplex deltoidea, 81
- Autumn Crocus, 130, 134-146
- Azalea, 103
- B
- Bartsia alpina, 30, 57, 117
- Bastard Toadflax, 116
- Bearded Campanula, 54
- ” Harebell, 81
- Bell-Gentian, 57, 70, 114
- Berberis, 144, 172
- Bilberry, 129, 144
- Bindweed, 157, 166
- Bird Cherry, 173
- Bird’s-eye Primula, 46, 135
- Bird’s-foot Trefoil, 84
- Biscutella lævigata, 31, 57, 84, 115, 164, 177
- Bistort, 63, 74, 85, 115, 120, 164, 176
- Bladder Campion, 85, 165, 167
- Bluebell, 152
- Blue Bottle, 74, 84
- Box-leaved Polygala, 24
- Bramo-Vaco, 139
- Brown Gentian, 120
- Bugle, 31, 77
- Bulbocodium vernum, 146, 163
- Butcher’s Broom, 137
- Buttercup, 115, 120, 149, 152, 165, 166
- Butterfly Orchis, 72, 85, 104
- C
- Calamintha alpina, 31, 116, 174, 177
- Caltha palustris, 30, 166
- Campanula barbata, 72, 81, 115, 170
- ” persicifolia, 122, 170
- ” boidalis, 84, 115, 158, 160, 165, 176
- ” rotundifolia, 84, 165
- ” Scheuchzeri, 115, 127
- ” spicata, 121, 170
- ” thyrsoides, 121
- Campion, 84, 85
- Cardamine resedifolia, 80
- Carduus defloratus, 170
- Carlina acaulis, 122
- ” vulgaris, 122
- Carthusian Pink, 84
- Catchfly, 84
- Cat’s-ear, 84
- Centaurea montana, 84, 164
- Centaurea nigra, 165
- ” scabiosa, 120
- ” uniflora, 120, 165
- Cephalanthera ensifolia, 85, 173
- ” pallens, 173
- ” rubra, 85, 173
- Cerastium arvense, 84
- Char de Venus, 121
- Cherry-tree, 17
- Chrysanthemum leucanthemum, 165
- Cinquefoil, 77, 85
- Clary, 85, 154
- Clover, 72
- Cœloglossum viridis, 85
- Colchicum alpinum, 140-146
- ” autumnalis, 130, 134-143, 160, 165
- Colchique, 139
- Coltsfoot, 45
- Columbine, 164
- Corn, 118
- Cornflower, 69, 99
- Coronilla varia, 122
- Cowslip, 23, 149, 164
- Crepis aurea, 115
- Crocus, 23, 24, 71
- ” nudiflorus, 137
- ” sativus, 139
- ” vernus, 163
- Cudweed, 84
- Currant, 17
- D
- Daffodil, 17, 32, 152, 163
- Daisy, 149, 166
- Dandelion, 19, 150, 166
- Daphne, 109
- Dendrobium, 75
- Dianthus Carthusianorum, 84, 122
- ” neglectus, 80
- Dianthus superbus, 121, 173
- ” sylvestris, 121, 122
- Digitalis ambigua, 121
- ” lutea, 122
- Dog Rose, 108, 129
- Dyer’s Weed, 85
- E
- Echium vulgare, 84
- Edelweiss, 35-39, 124
- Eglantine, 17, 144
- Epilobium, 80
- Epipactis atrorubens, 173
- ” latifolia, 173
- Eritrichium nanum, 42
- Eryngium alpinum, 170
- Euphrasia alpina, 84
- ” minima, 84
- ” officinalis, 72, 73, 84
- Everlasting Pea, 67, 169
- Exobasidium rhododendri, 108
- Eyebright, 73, 84
- F
- Fair Maid of France, 85, 115
- False Lily-of-the-Valley, 176
- Felwort, 41
- Field Mouse-ear, 84
- Field Gentian, 120
- ” Poppy, 68, 99
- Flax, 122
- Foxglove, 152
- French Willow, 80
- Frog Orchis, 85
- G
- Gagea, 163
- Garlic, 137
- Gentiana amarella, 41
- Gentiana asclepiadea, 90
- ” brachyphylla, 141
- ” campestris, 115, 120
- ” excisa, 24, 89, 157
- ” nivalis, 117, 157
- ” punctata, 120
- ” purpurea, 120
- ” verna, 24, 30, 35-47, 57, 141, 157, 175
- Geranium, sylvaticum, 84, 115, 154, 160, 164, 177
- Geum montanum, 24, 31
- ” rivale, 84
- Globe-Flower, 23, 56, 85, 164, 176
- Globularia cordifolia, 84
- Goat’s Beard, 173
- Golden Thistle, 122
- Grass-of-Parnassus, 127
- Greater Astrantia, 82
- Grimm the Collier, 120
- Groundsel, 80
- Gymnadenia albida, 104, 116
- ” conopsea, 85, 164
- ” odoratissima, 85
- Gypsophila repens, 174
- H
- Habenaria bifolia, 85
- ” chlorantha, 173
- ” viridis, 85
- Hard-heads, 120, 165
- Hawkweed, 82, 120
- Hawthorn, 152
- Heather, 102, 128, 129
- Helianthemum alpestre, 116
- ” vulgare, 174
- Helleborine, 85
- Hepatica, 23
- Herb Paris, 137
- Herbst-Zeitlose, 140
- Hieracium alpinum, 115
- ” aurantiacum, 120
- Hippocrepis comosa, 84
- Holly-fern, 175
- Honeysuckle, 109, 121, 173
- Horseshoe Vetch, 84
- Hypochœris maculata, 115
- ” uniflora, 115, 165
- Hyssop, 122
- J
- Jacob’s Ladder, 128, 154
- Jasione montana, 122, 170
- Juniperus nana, 172
- Jupiter’s Distaff, 121
- K
- Kidney Vetch, 77, 84
- King of the Alps, 42
- Knapweed, 84
- Knee Holly, 137
- Knobweed, 120
- Knotweed, 85
- L
- Laburnum, 17
- Ladies’ Fingers, 84
- Lady’s Mantle, 83
- ” Smock, 80
- Laitue des Alpes, 122
- Larkspur, 69
- Laserpitium latifolium, 173
- Lathyrus heterophyllus, 84, 170
- ” luteus, 173
- ” sylvestris, 84
- Le Bas du Bon Dieu, 41
- Leontopodium alpinum, 35-39
- Leopard’s Bane, 122
- Lesser Foxglove, 122
- Lilium croceum, 17, 173
- ” Martagon, 173
- Lily-of-the-Valley, 137
- Linaria alpina, 77
- Linum alpinum, 84, 164, 170
- ” tenuifolium, 122, 170
- Lœlia, 75
- Lonicera alpigena, 173
- ” nigra, 173
- Lotus corniculatus, 84
- Lousewort, 85
- Lychnis dioica, 84, 161, 164, 176
- ” Flos-cuculi, 84, 164
- ” viscaria, 84, 161
- M
- Marguerite, 75
- Marsh-Marigold, 30, 46, 57, 71, 166, 167
- Martagon Lily, 116, 120, 165, 173
- Masterwort, 120, 154
- May Lily, 176
- Meadow Clary, 85, 154, 165
- ” Rue, 121
- ” Saffron, 139
- ” Sage, 85, 154
- Mealy Primrose, 46, 56, 71, 135
- Mespilus oxyacantha, 79
- Meum athamanticum, 173
- Micheli’s Daisy, 30, 57, 72
- Milkwort, 85
- Monkshood, 121, 169
- Mountain Cornflower, 84
- ” Everlasting Pea, 84
- ” Geum, 71
- Mulgedium alpinum, 122, 173
- Mullein, 122
- Muscari comosum, 84, 164
- Myosotis, 24, 177
- ” alpestris, 84, 164
- ” palustris, 116
- N
- Naked Boy, 139
- ” Lucy, 139
- Narcissus poeticus, 17, 32, 158, 164
- ” Pseudo-narcissus, 163
- Nettle, 166
- Nigritella nigra, 85
- Nottingham Catchfly, 167
- O
- Oak-apple, 108
- Œil-de-chat, 41
- Onion, 137
- Onobrychis viciæfolia, 84, 170
- Ononis, 93
- ” natrix, 122, 170
- ” rotundifolia, 122
- Orache, 81
- Orchids, 23, 72, 85, 116, 120, 149, 158, 166, 177
- Orchis conopsea, 164
- ” latifolia, 85
- ” maculata, 85, 164
- ” mascula, 164
- ” Morio, 164
- ” ustulata, 85
- Ornithogalum nutans, 164
- ” pyrenaicum, 137
- ” umbellatum, 138, 163
- Orobus luteus, 121
- Ox-eye Marguerite, 116, 165, 166, 176
- Oxlip, 164
- P
- Pansy, 69
- Paradise Lily, 63, 72, 85, 158, 164, 177
- Paradisia Liliastrum, 85, 158, 164
- Parsley-fern, 175
- Parsnip, 152
- Pedicularis tuberosa, 31, 85
- Pheasant-eye Narcissus, 32, 164
- Phyteutma betonicifolium, 54, 85, 115, 158, 165, 167
- ” hemisphæricum, 116
- ” Micheli, 116
- ” orbiculare, 85, 115, 165
- ” spicata, 154
- Pimpinella magna rosea, 85
- Pinguicula, 30
- Pink, 169
- Pinkwort, 80
- Plantago alpina, 54
- Plantain, 157, 166
- Plantanthera bifolia, 85
- ” chlorantha, 173
- Poa alpina, 171
- Polemonium cœruleum, 127, 154, 165
- Polygala alpestris, 85
- ” vulgaris, 85
- Polygonatum verticillatum, 173
- Polygonum Bistorta, 85, 164
- Polystichum Filix-mas, 175
- Poppy, 68, 99
- Potentilla rupestris, 31, 77, 85, 115, 164, 177
- Primrose, 23, 37, 46, 93, 152
- Primula farinosa, 30, 62, 167
- Prunus avium, 173
- Q
- Queen of the Fields, 121
- R
- Radish, 118
- Ragged Robin, 84, 164
- Rampion, 54, 85, 115, 120, 154, 165, 167
- Ranunculus aconitifolius, 85, 115, 164, 167
- ” acris, 165, 166
- ” bulbosus, 165, 166
- Raspberry, 17
- Red Catchfly, 84, 164
- Reseda luteola, 85
- Rest-Harrow, 93
- Rhinanthus angustifolius, 85
- Rhododendron ferrugineum, 41, 89, 102-113, 117, 129, 144, 172
- ” hirsutum, 102-113
- ” ponticum, 102
- Robin’s Pincushion, 108
- Rosa alpina, 85, 105, 172
- ” pomifera, 172
- Rosage, 106
- Rose des Alpes, 106
- Rue des Alpes, 106
- S
- Saffron, 139
- Safra dès prats, 139
- Sage, 77, 85
- Sainfoin, 84, 170
- St. Bruno’s Lily, 85, 114
- Salvia glutinosa, 121, 173
- ” pratensis, 69, 74, 77, 85, 115, 154, 158, 160, 164, 176
- Sambucus racemosa, 172
- Saponaria ocymoides, 31, 77, 116, 174
- Saxifraga cuneifolia, 176
- Saxifrage, 169
- Scabiosa lucida, 85, 115
- Scilla, 23
- ” bifolia, 163
- Sedum, 77, 129, 169, 170
- Sempervivum, 169, 170
- Senecio Doronicum, 80, 122
- Sibbaldia procumbens, 54
- Silene Cucubalus, 165, 167
- ” inflata, 85
- ” nutans, 167
- ” rupestris, 116, 174
- Smilacina bifolia, 176
- Snake-root, 85
- Snakeweed, 164
- Snapdragon, 78
- Soapwort, 77
- Soldanella, 23, 24, 71, 89, 175
- Solomon’s Seal, 173
- Sorrel, 151, 166
- Speedwell, 9, 73
- Spirœa Aruncua, 121, 173
- Star of Bethlehem, 137, 163
- Strawberry, 17
- Stonecrop, 77
- Sulphur Anemone, 31, 34, 46, 53, 54
- Sylvan Geranium, 63
- T
- Thalictrum aquilegifolium, 121, 169, 173
- Thesium alpinum, 72, 74, 116
- Thyme, 118
- Toadflax, 77
- Trefoil Valerian, 85
- Trifolium alpinum, 54, 170, 171
- Trollius europæus, 85, 164
- Tue-chien, 139
- Turk’s-cap Lily, 121
- U
- Umbelliferæ, 116, 165
- Umbilicaria virginis, 46
- V
- Vache, 139
- Valeriana montana, 122
- ” tripteris, 85
- Vanilla Orchis, 85
- Veilleuse, 139
- Veillotte, 139
- Veratrum album, 116, 158
- Verbascum phlomoides, 122, 170
- Vernal Gentian, 35-47, 58, 72, 104, 127
- Veronica Chamædrys, 73
- ” saxatilis, 116, 171
- ” spicata, 158
- ” urticæfolia, 170
- Vicia onobrychioides, 121, 170
- Viola alpina, 175
- ” calcarata, 32, 41, 53, 89, 157
- ” tricolor, 69
- Violet, 23, 164
- Violon, 139
- Viper’s Bugloss, 84
- W
- Water Avens, 84
- Weld, 85
- Willow Gentian, 90
- ” Herb, 129
- Wood Anemone, 23
- ” Campion, 84
- ” Crane’s-bill, 84, 154, 165
- ” Everlasting Pea, 84
- ” Sorrel, 175
- Wormwood, 77
- Y
- Yarrow, 80
- Yellow Eyebright, 84
- ” Foxglove, 121
- ” Gentian, 116
- ” Lousewort, 85
- ” Rattle, 85, 116
- ” Violet, 45, 176