OCR Output

T me epAMES RIVER \ PLANTATION: BELT

locust and pecan trees, and is box hedged all of its length. Honey¬
suckle riots over the fence. Crepe myrtles and altheas grow on the
lawn, and lilac bushes, with age written upon them in moss, show
even now where the garden once was. And, gentle reminder of this
sweet plot, the lily of the valley has massed so densely and spread
so far afield that now it is securely naturalized.

Diagonally across from the church is the hospitable building
where Judge St. George Tucker lived about 1779, and this, for¬
tunately, is still in the possession of the same family. The old
house was also the childhood home of John Randolph of Roanoke,
and its charming old garden is still preserved much as it was when
the little descendant of Pocahontas played in it. The flagstone walk
and grassy falls are gay in spring with many violet blooms and a
wealth of old-fashioned bulbs. The lilac bushes are as sweet as
ever; the syringa or mock orange still bears gold-chaliced cups,
while the Rose of Sharon and spiraea speak eloquently of the garden
of yesterday. Roses in quantity and of many colors enliven the
garden in June, and pink and white crepe myrtles lend their crisp
freshness for a glory of midsummer bloom. When autumn comes,
quantities of yellow fall crocus—crocus speciosus—remind one of
jonquils next year. The following verses, “In a Garden of Dreams,”
by Elizabeth Eggleston, were inspired by what is now known as
the Coleman garden:

There’s a garden of dreams where the crepe myrtle swings,
And the roses are white in the gloaming;

Where the hush of old beauty lies heavy and sweet,
Scarce stirred by the winds that are roaming.

There a tiny swing hangs from a gnarled old tree,
There the larkspur’s a blue-petaled glory ;

There the grey flagstones lead through a way that is dim,
Like a thread to the heart of a story.

There time holds its breath, there shrubs grow to trees,
There beauty grows old in its questing;
And the garden dreams on in its fragrance-hung calm
Where even the shadows are resting. 23]
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