Parks and Pleasure Grounds: Or, Practical Notes on Country Residences, Villas, Public Parks, and Gardens |
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Page 14
... , and its whole ap- pliances should be such as to permit a free exhibition of the plants without their admirers crushing upon them or ; being incommoded by them . The shelving and stages 14 PARKS AND PLEASURE - GROUNDS .
... , and its whole ap- pliances should be such as to permit a free exhibition of the plants without their admirers crushing upon them or ; being incommoded by them . The shelving and stages 14 PARKS AND PLEASURE - GROUNDS .
Page 26
... exhibition of fine views is a temptation to commit both of these faults ; but it is a temptation which should be resisted . While the approach may display the average beauties of the place , it is bad taste , as well as bad economy of ...
... exhibition of fine views is a temptation to commit both of these faults ; but it is a temptation which should be resisted . While the approach may display the average beauties of the place , it is bad taste , as well as bad economy of ...
Page 42
... exhibits at different periods of the day . Accordingly it is found that , when facing the north , and in an inferior degree when facing the east and west , these grass slopes are always more effective than when turned to the south , for ...
... exhibits at different periods of the day . Accordingly it is found that , when facing the north , and in an inferior degree when facing the east and west , these grass slopes are always more effective than when turned to the south , for ...
Page 44
... geometrical or otherwise , should be so arranged as not only to compose an effective whole , but also to exhibit such secondary and minor grouping as will produce good individual groups in 44 PARKS AND PLEASURE - GROUNDS .
... geometrical or otherwise , should be so arranged as not only to compose an effective whole , but also to exhibit such secondary and minor grouping as will produce good individual groups in 44 PARKS AND PLEASURE - GROUNDS .
Page 46
... exhibits scarcely aught that can in- terest or attract . On the other hand , a flower - garden formed on a ground - work of grass lawn , with walks and borders well arranged and attended to , has at all seasons a clothed effect ; and ...
... exhibits scarcely aught that can in- terest or attract . On the other hand , a flower - garden formed on a ground - work of grass lawn , with walks and borders well arranged and attended to , has at all seasons a clothed effect ; and ...
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Common terms and phrases
afford ALLIANCE approach arboretum arrangement artificial artist beauty botanic gardens branches breadth broad cedar character CISTALES climate clumps colour combination common yew considerable country residence Cunninghamia deciduous decoration desirable DICTYOGENS distance drawing-room dressed grounds effect entrance evergreen exhibit extent feet fence Fitzroya flower-garden flowers foliage GARRYALES genera glaucous Glyptostrobus grass gravel green groups growth hardy Horticultural importance inferior kitchen garden lake Landscape Gardening larch lawns light Lindl locality Loud mansion-house masses MENISPERMALES natural objects occupied ornamental outline parks and pleasure-grounds parterre perhaps pines Pinetum plantations plants position principal proper proprietor public park pyramidal racter remarks render require rhododendrons road scenery Scotch fir seldom shade shelter Silver Fir single trees slopes soil space species spruce style sufficient suitable surface taste Taxodium terraces tion trees and shrubs Tsuga Turnham Green varied variety vegetable villa walks walls whole woods
Popular passages
Page iv - The author, while engaged in his profession for the last eighteen years, has often been requested to recommend a book which might enable persons to acquire some general knowledge of the principles of Landscape Gardening. The object of the present work is to preserve a plain and direct method of statement, to be intelligible to all who have had an ordinary education, and to give directions which, it is hoped, will be found to be practical by those who have an adequate knowledge of country affairs....
Page 118 - ... or stunt them to an extent from which they may never recover. The thinning of fir plantations need not begin before the trees press so much on each other as not only to check the growth of the lower branches, but also to kill a portion of those next the ground. In hardwood plantations, the thinning commences when the nurses press so much on the permanent trees as really to injure them ; but only such trees should be removed as actually do so. When the pressure is slight, it may be relieved by...
Page 221 - ... landscape gardener has most of his objects laid down. He must accept of locality with its natural features and the contour of the ground, which often prescribes a particular treatment; he must conceal deformities, elicit existing but apparent beauties., and to adorn whatever is susceptible of improvement. A man may thrust his preconceived fancies on a place as fast as he can stake them out, but if the treatment is to be adjusted to the ground, harmony and effect preserved, as they always ought...
Page 218 - The Landscape Gardener has most of his objects laid down to him. He must accept of the locality with its natural features, and the contour of the ground, which often prescribes a particular treatment ; and he must make it his business to conceal deformities, to elicit existing but unapparent beauties, and to adorn whatever is susceptible of improvement. It is true that in these seeming disadvantages there is also some real compensation.
Page 221 - Hence, men of taste and genius are reduced to act at random ; hence an habitual disregard of the genius loci, and a proportional degree of confidence in a set of general rules, influencing their own practice, so that they do not receive from nature the impression of what the place ought to be, but impress on nature, at a venture, the stamp, manner, or character of their own practice, as a mechanic puts the same mark on all the goods which pass through his hands.
Page 97 - a noble-looking fir tree, about sixty feet high, with a stem as straight as the Norfolk Island Pine, and pendulous branches like the weeping willow. The branches grow at first horizontally with the main stem, then describe a graceful curve upwards, drooping again at the points. From these main branches others long and slender hang down towards the ground, and give the whole tree a weeping and graceful character.