IX
WATER IN THE GARDEN
THERE
is no question as to the charm which is added to
a garden by a little water--an eye of blue with brows of rush or trouic
grasses
if you please, though it is better for a small pool to be rimmed
plainly
with cement or stone and to show all of itself it can. If only a couple
of
yards in diameter there is an impression of crowding when vegetation is
placed
in it; at least, anything more than a single plant, and for that plant
I
would choose our common pond-lily, white and fragrant, an ivory star
with
central rays of gold. If we are able to widen the basin, however, we
can
add the water-poppy or the water-hyacinth, which flowers in summer in
our
northern climate, and which, in southern rivers spreads in such weedy
luxuriance
that government has to spend large sums yearly to clear the channels
for
navigation. It has no root in the ground, but lives on the water, as
orchids
do on air. If our little lake is a dozen feet or more across, we can
have
a tinted variety of pond-lily, the pale yellow, or the pink, to live
with
the white. If it is shallow and has turfy banks, we may have a growth
of
bamboo, or canebrake, or papyrus, at one side. The latter, which in its
form
is like a miniature palm, is doubtless the most tractable of the
grasses
for a small pool, as it does not often exceed four feet in our
latitude.
This is the grass that gave to the world the earliest material for the
impressions of pen and ink, and from the word papyrus we keep the name
of
paper, to this day. There is something foreign in its aspect and it
brings
into our home ground a vision, howsoever faint, of the land of the
Pyramids,
the sunrise land of mystery.
Other
possibilities for the boggy shore or shallow water
are the pickerel-weed, arrowhead, snakehead, marsh-marigold,
pitcher-plant,
showy orchis, and, near by, where their roots will be well moistened,
the
daffodil, iris, cardinal-flower and forget-me-not. There is a tendency
to
put too much into the water itself, and quite obscure its surface,
which
has a sky-reflecting value and beauty of its own. We must crowd our
water-garden
no more than we crowd our garden of earth, or our air-garden in the
orchid
house. And the tendency is not only to put in plants which are too
large
for their setting, but too many varieties. For pools of any size,
however,
we are always safe in the use of the pond-lily, and it will reach up to
the
surface from a depth of five or six feet, holding to the bottom by its
long,
ropy stalk. The Zanzibar lily in blue, purple and a particularly lovely
red
is an introduction from the East which is much used in large grounds
and
parks. The Egyptian lotus and yellow lotus are large for yards, and to
reach
their best estate they require not only room but artificial heat,
except
in our southern belt.
If the
pond is natural it has its own basin, which can
be widened or lessened by digging or filling, but if artificial, a bog
must
be prepared for it, and this can be of sods and pebbles, if it is a
large
and informal sheet of water, or if it is a mere bowl it can be cemented
or
bricked and provided with an overflow-pipe, which needs a wire net at
the
orifice to keep the goldfish from going through, and the vegetable
refuse
from choking it at the traps or bends. If cement, mortar, asphalt,
paint,
stains or other artificial substances are used in the lining of the
basin,
the water should stand for a week, with frequent changes, before fish
or
plants are introduced. And while a fountain adds to the appearance of
life
and certainly to the beauty of a water-garden, it will imperil the
vegetation
if it is fed from a very cold spring, like many that we find among the
mountains.
Pond life is partial to warm, quiet water. For this reason, too, it is
best
to delay planting under water till summer has fairly set in, and the
nympheas,
or pond-lilies, may then be placed in the bottom soil, or packed into a
sunken
box filled with old manure, old turf and earth. The advantage of using
a
box, which should be a yard square and a foot deep, is that it can be
removed
when cold weather begins, for so soon as the green is gone and the
supply-pipe
is plugged for the winter, the box becomes unsightly. After planting,
the
water is to be gently admitted, the surface rising by slow advances,
about
a foot in a week, so as to disturb the plants as little as possible,
but
if this involves so much roiling of the water as to distress the fish,
or
if, in the absence of fish, mosquitoes threaten to breed in the
stagnant
pool before it rises to the level of the overflow-pipe, it is better to
let
in the water at once. Useless to consider the victorias, with their
immense
leaves, on which an adult may stand in safety, for those giants require
either
a tropical climate or a greenhouse. Many of the floating plants, too,
the
water-hyacinth, water-poppy, water-snowflake and parrot's-feather,
spread
so fast as to threaten the lives of the lilies.
If one
lived in a town like Amsterdam, or Syracuse, or
Chicago, he could have a water-garden that should be more than a stone
basin,
and if he lived in no town at all, but near the bank of a river that
was
clear and not subject to spring freshets, he might more easily have the
like.
It could be grown to lilies and lotus, or it could be kept clear for
bathing.
In the ruins of St. Pierre, the fated town of Martinique, I found
several
marble-lined pools, one of them about twenty feet long, and I asked
myself
why in our equally superheated coast towns we could not have their
duplicates,
for summer use, at least; for we have to admit that in winter a water
garden
is a dreary place, for usually it is necessary to draw off the contents
of
the pool in order to prevent the swelling volume of the ice from
cracking
the cement. So here is the shadowing forth of a dream, but you are to
pretend
that it is midsummer when you study it:
Fig. 27.
TO use
an inconsistency, this is a lazy man's resting-place,
(lazy men having no occasion to rest, merely idle,) and you are to
imagine
that it is surrounded by vine-covered walls; that as you sit on one of
the
benches at the near end, you see reflected in the water mirror the
marble
god, athlete, or what not who occupies the pedestal among the shrubbery
at
the farther; that the basin with its goldfish is bordered by cypresses,
yews
or bays in tubs; that above the benches extends a trellis covered with
vines-grapes, if you want them, for everything is free in fancy-land;
that
from the nearer bed rise the color and perfume of such plants as will
live
in partial shade--godetia, lily-of-the-valley, musk plant, pansy,
anemone,
bluebells, phlox divaricata, shooting-star, St. Johnswort and such
ferns
as the maidenhair, lady-fern, oak-fern, cinnamon-fern and the noble
sword-fern,
which in many a darkened valley in New England grows head-high; for in
the
country one may take ferns from the fields for his lighted garden, and
there
are ferns by the million in the woods which he can abstract for his
shady
corners. You are also to see that roses, lilies and iris gleam among
the
foliage along the farther wall; that noble oaks and elms, or a group of
solemn
pines overlook the ground and checker it with transparent shadows; that
birds
nest in those trees and make a morning and evening melody; and apart
from
the sough of wind and the voices of birds and insects there are no
sounds
but the harping of water-drops, as they fall from the central fountain.
Here,
remote, alone, forgetful of the rudeness of the world, living with his
books,
his science, his art, his music, his flowers, will sit the recluse and
keep
his mind warm and serene with loveliness.
Some
such a yard as this could also be contrived for
seashore cottagers whose premises go down to the border of the deep. If
they
dwelt on Cape Ann, or the Maine islands, it would not be difficult or
costly
to blast out a hollow in the native rock, fill it with salt water, by
means
of a ditch, or pipes, and in this sheltered lagoon to introduce,
besides
the usual finned swimmers, starfish, jellyfish, squids, octopods,
anemones,
lobsters, crabs, shrimps, sand-worms and mollusks, as well as the
sea-mosses
that sway so softly when the water moves. The pool would be a veritable
place
of wonders, and you would lie in a boat or on a board above it,
studying
its strange forms by the hour. Have you sailed across the sunken
gardens
in the glass-bottomed boats at Santa Catalina? If so, you need no
urging
to add an ocean pool to your estate. Though your flower-garden were a
tropic
blaze of color, you would much neglect it to watch the mysteries of the
deep.
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