THE ART OF TRKI LL.ViE. 17: 



of &quot; I.e Midi &quot; and &quot; Le Gouter &quot; and Binet s &quot; La Nourrice Elegante &quot; all show treillage designs. 

 Debucourt s engraving, &quot; La Promenade de Paris,&quot; shows the circular pavilions that were erected at the 

 Palais Royal. 



In Holland, trellis, or &quot; latwerk,&quot; as it was called, was largely in demand tor all classes of garden. 

 It is generally very solid in construction, and though lacking the grace of the French examples, it has, 



193. AT BRIDGE HOUSE. 



nevertheless, a quaint charm of its own. A few examples are illustrated from &quot; Den Nederlandtsen 

 Hovenier,&quot; a curious garden book published in 1670. At Broek, in one of the small gardens, there 

 is an elaborate pyramid of trellis, formed of laths not more than half an inch in width. There 

 is a curious collection of drawings of Dutch trellis in the Bibliotheque Xationale, Paris. Examples 

 are also to be found in many of the old books of views of the smaller country seats, such as 



