<h2><SPAN name="page237"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>THE OCCASIONAL GARDEN</h2>
<p>“Don’t talk to me about town gardens,” said
Elinor Rapsley; “which means, of course, that I want you to
listen to me for an hour or so while I talk about nothing
else. ‘What a nice-sized garden you’ve
got,’ people said to us when we first moved here.
What I suppose they meant to say was what a nice-sized site for a
garden we’d got. As a matter of fact, the size is all
against it; it’s too large to be ignored altogether and
treated as a yard, and it’s too small to keep giraffes
in. You see, if we could keep giraffes or reindeer or some
other species of browsing animal there we could explain the
general absence of vegetation by a reference to the fauna of the
garden: ‘You can’t have wapiti <i>and</i> Darwin
tulips, you know, so we didn’t put down any bulbs last
year.’ As it is, we haven’t got the wapiti, and
the Darwin tulips haven’t survived the fact that most of
the cats of the neighbourhood hold a parliament in the centre of
the tulip bed; that rather forlorn looking strip that we intended
to be a border of alternating geranium and spiræa has been
utilised by the cat-parliament as a division lobby. Snap
divisions seem to have been rather frequent of late, far more
frequent than the geranium blooms are likely to be. I
shouldn’t object so much to ordinary cats, but I do
complain of having a congress of vegetarian cats in my garden;
they must be vegetarians, my dear, because, whatever ravages they
may commit among the sweet pea seedlings, they never seem to
touch the sparrows; there are always just as many adult sparrows
in the garden on Saturday as there were on Monday, not to mention
newly-fledged additions. There seems to have been an
irreconcilable difference of opinion between sparrows and
Providence since the beginning of time as to whether a crocus
looks best standing upright with its roots in the earth or in a
recumbent posture with its stem neatly severed; the sparrows
always have the last word in the matter, at least in our garden
they do. I fancy that Providence must have originally
intended to bring in an amending Act, or whatever it’s
called, providing either for a less destructive sparrow or a more
indestructible crocus. The one consoling point about our
garden is that it’s not visible from the drawing-room or
the smoking-room, so unless people are dinning or lunching with
us they can’t spy out the nakedness of the land. That
is why I am so furious with Gwenda Pottingdon, who has
practically forced herself on me for lunch on Wednesday next; she
heard me offer the Paulcote girl lunch if she was up shopping on
that day, and, of course, she asked if she might come too.
She is only coming to gloat over my bedraggled and flowerless
borders and to sing the praises of her own detestably
over-cultivated garden. I’m sick of being told that
it’s the envy of the neighbourhood; it’s like
everything else that belongs to her—her car, her
dinner-parties, even her headaches, they are all superlative; no
one else ever had anything like them. When her eldest child
was confirmed it was such a sensational event, according to her
account of it, that one almost expected questions to be asked
about it in the House of Commons, and now she’s coming on
purpose to stare at my few miserable pansies and the gaps in my
sweet-pea border, and to give me a glowing, full-length
description of the rare and sumptuous blooms in her
rose-garden.”</p>
<p>“My dear Elinor,” said the Baroness, “you
would save yourself all this heart-burning and a lot of
gardener’s bills, not to mention sparrow anxieties, simply
by paying an annual subscription to the O.O.S.A.”</p>
<p>“Never heard of it,” said Elinor; “what is
it?”</p>
<p>“The Occasional-Oasis Supply Association,” said
the Baroness; “it exists to meet cases exactly like yours,
cases of backyards that are of no practical use for gardening
purposes, but are required to blossom into decorative scenic
backgrounds at stated intervals, when a luncheon or dinner-party
is contemplated. Supposing, for instance, you have people
coming to lunch at one-thirty; you just ring up the Association
at about ten o’clock the same morning, and say ‘lunch
garden’. That is all the trouble you have to
take. By twelve forty-five your yard is carpeted with a
strip of velvety turf, with a hedge of lilac or red may, or
whatever happens to be in season, as a background, one or two
cherry trees in blossom, and clumps of heavily-flowered
rhododendrons filling in the odd corners; in the foreground you
have a blaze of carnations or Shirley poppies, or tiger lilies in
full bloom. As soon as the lunch is over and your guests
have departed the garden departs also, and all the cats in
Christendom can sit in council in your yard without causing you a
moment’s anxiety. If you have a bishop or an
antiquary or something of that sort coming to lunch you just
mention the fact when you are ordering the garden, and you get an
old-world pleasaunce, with clipped yew hedges and a sun-dial and
hollyhocks, and perhaps a mulberry tree, and borders of
sweet-williams and Canterbury bells, and an old-fashioned beehive
or two tucked away in a corner. Those are the ordinary
lines of supply that the Oasis Association undertakes, but by
paying a few guineas a year extra you are entitled to its
emergency E.O.N. service.”</p>
<p>“What on earth is an E.O.N. service?”</p>
<p>“It’s just a conventional signal to indicate
special cases like the incursion of Gwenda Pottingdon. It
means you’ve got some one coming to lunch or dinner whose
garden is alleged to be ‘the envy of the
neighbourhood.’”</p>
<p>“Yes,” exclaimed Elinor, with some excitement,
“and what happens then?”</p>
<p>“Something that sounds like a miracle out of the Arabian
Nights. Your backyard becomes voluptuous with pomegranate
and almond trees, lemon groves, and hedges of flowering cactus,
dazzling banks of azaleas, marble-basined fountains, in which
chestnut-and-white pond-herons step daintily amid exotic
water-lilies, while golden pheasants strut about on alabaster
terraces. The whole effect rather suggests the idea that
Providence and Norman Wilkinson have dropped mutual jealousies
and collaborated to produce a background for an open-air Russian
Ballet; in point of fact, it is merely the background to your
luncheon party. If there is any kick left in Gwenda
Pottingdon, or whoever your E.O.N. guest of the moment may be,
just mention carelessly that your climbing putella is the only
one in England, since the one at Chatsworth died last
winter. There isn’t such a thing as a climbing
putella, but Gwenda Pottingdon and her kind don’t usually
know one flower from another without prompting.”</p>
<p>“Quick,” said Elinor, “the address of the
Association.”</p>
<p>Gwenda Pottingdon did not enjoy her lunch. It was a
simple yet elegant meal, excellently cooked and daintily served,
but the piquant sauce of her own conversation was notably
lacking. She had prepared a long succession of eulogistic
comments on the wonders of her town garden, with its unrivalled
effects of horticultural magnificence, and, behold, her theme was
shut in on every side by the luxuriant hedge of Siberian berberis
that formed a glowing background to Elinor’s bewildering
fragment of fairyland. The pomegranate and lemon trees, the
terraced fountain, where golden carp slithered and wriggled amid
the roots of gorgeous-hued irises, the banked masses of exotic
blooms, the pagoda-like enclosure, where Japanese sand-badgers
disported themselves, all these contributed to take away
Gwenda’s appetite and moderate her desire to talk about
gardening matters.</p>
<p>“I can’t say I admire the climbing putella,”
she observed shortly, “and anyway it’s not the only
one of its kind in England; I happen to know of one in
Hampshire. How gardening is going out of fashion; I suppose
people haven’t the time for it nowadays.”</p>
<p>Altogether it was quite one of Elinor’s most successful
luncheon parties.</p>
<p>It was distinctly an unforeseen catastrophe that Gwenda should
have burst in on the household four days later at lunch-time and
made her way unbidden into the dining-room.</p>
<p>“I thought I must tell you that my Elaine has had a
water-colour sketch accepted by the Latent Talent Art Guild;
it’s to be exhibited at their summer exhibition at the
Hackney Gallery. It will be the sensation of the moment in
the art world—Hullo, what on earth has happened to your
garden? It’s not there!”</p>
<p>“Suffragettes,” said Elinor promptly;
“didn’t you hear about it? They broke in and
made hay of the whole thing in about ten minutes. I was so
heart-broken at the havoc that I had the whole place cleared out;
I shall have it laid out again on rather more elaborate
lines.”</p>
<p>“That,” she said to the Baroness afterwards
“is what I call having an emergency brain.”</p>
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