REFERENC ES sjl 



producing it : with examples. London, Printed by T. Bensley, for C. J. Kennion, 

 1815. 48 pages, and plates. 



Of value for its discussion of the natural character of trees as expressed in their method of growth 

 as well as for the drawing of trees. 



Loudon, John Claudius. 



Observations on the Formation and Management of Useful and Ornamental 

 Plantations; on the Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening. . . . Edin- 

 burgh, A. Constable & Co., 1804. 342 pages, illus. 



Note especially : — 



Section II. Of the Characteristic Distinction and Particular Properties of Trees and Shrubs. 



Section III. On the Arrangement of Trees and Shrubs. (Especially remarks on color.) 



Section IV. Of the Disposition of Wood, with respect to the surface of the grounds about a place, 



and the general surface of the country. 



Miller, Wilhelm. 



What England can teach us about Gardening. Garden City, N. Y., Doubleday, 

 Page & Co., 1911. 359 pages, illus. 

 Enlarged and revised from articles in Country Life in Jmrrica and Garden Magazine. 



Olmsted, John Charles. 



Hints about Lawns. In Garden and Forest, Jan. 23, 1889, v. 2, p. 38. 



Lawns considered as design units. 



Parsons, Samuel. 



Plantations. In his jirt of Landscape Architecture, Ch. XII, p. 200-225. illus. 



Contains several quotations from sources referred to in this section of the bibliography. 



Robinson, William. 



The English Flower Garden. . . . London, J. Murray, originally published 1883. 

 Many subsequent editions, revised and enlarged, with varying titles, illus. 



Design and arrangement, with descriptions of trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants. The source of 

 inspiration of much of the modern appreciation of naturalistic garden planting in England and this 

 country. 



Salisch, Heinrich von. 



Forstasthetik. Dritte, vermehrte Auflage. Berlin, J. Springer, 1911. 434 



pages, illus. 

 Sedgwick, Mrs. Mabel Cabot. Assisted by Robert Cameron. 



The Garden Month by Month ; describing the appearance, color, dates of bloom 



and cultivation of all desirable, hardy plants for the formal or wild garden, with 



additional lists of aquatics, vines, etc. . . . New York, F. A. Stokes Co. 



[1907] 516 pages, illus. (Also later reprints.) 

 Whately, Thomas. 



Of Wood. In his Observations on Modern Gardening, Sections XII-XXV. 



