INDEX 



sun-dial planted in, 193 ; for elaborate 

 topiary work, 285. 



Boy with dolphin, statue of, for fountain, 

 234. 



Bradford-on-Avon, the Hall at, lion of 

 carved stone at, 129 ; the terrace of, 

 141 ; octagonal garden-house at, 190. 



Bramham, garden at, attributed to Le 

 Notre, 208 ; finest specimen of French 

 style in England, 210. 



Bramshill, doorway at, 140; the terrace 

 at, 141, 142 ; octagonal garden-house 

 at, 190, 191 ; bowling-green at, 288. 



Brickwall, pool for fish at, 119; raised 

 walk at, 139. 



Bridge, Palladian, at Wilton, 244. 



Bridgnorth, terrace walk at, 70-71. 



Britain, horticulture in, after conquest of 

 Claudius, 2-3 ; disappearance of Ro- 

 man culture from, 45. See England. 



" Britannia Illustrata," view of Hampton 

 Court in, 209 ; gardens in French style 

 shown in, 211-212. 



British Museum, Britanno-Roman relics 

 in, 3 ; Egyptian mural painting in, 

 8-9; marble slabs with representations 

 of paradeisoi in, 10-11 ; classic sun- 

 dial in, 17 ; Ms. of the " Roman de la 

 Rose " in, 69 ; fourteenth-century 

 Flemish Ms. in, 86. 



Brockenhurst, bowling-alley at, 167; arch- 

 way of yew at, 287 ; an example of 

 French influence, 289. 



Broek, account of, by De Amicis, 253-254. 



Brome Hall, grounds at, 212. 



Brown, "Capability," 122, 258; speci- 

 mens of work of, 268-269. 



Brympton, terrace at, 179, 197 ; sun-dial 

 at, 197; example of stone balustrade 

 at, 284. 



Buckingham, Stafford, Duke of, residence 

 of, Thornbury, 103. 



Burghley, Brown's work shown in gardens 

 at, 268. 



Burleigh, Lord, Queen Elizabeth enter- 

 tained at Theobalds by, 163. 



Bust, a Pompeiian, 25. 



Busts, leaden, at Elvaston, 228 ; at Ham 

 House, 299. 



Butcher, S. H., quotation from translation 

 of "Odyssey " by, 13-14. 



Buttress of clipped yew, Arley, 154. 

 Byron, Lord, and Newstead Abbey, 61, 

 62, 267. 



Cambridge, fountain at Trinity College, 

 155; doorway at, 236. 



Campo Santo, frescoes on walls of the, 54. 



Camprey Ash, reproduction of Elizabethan 

 style at, 289. 



Canons Ashby, garden doorway at, 104; 

 lead statue of a shepherd at, 182; a 

 garden-seat at, 189, 190. 



Canterbury, twelfth-century plan of, 51. 



Caprarola, the Villa Farnese at, 234, 238. 



Carlisle, Castle, 70. 



Carmontelle, theatric theory of, 274. 



Carthusians, order of the, 6o-6l. 



Caryatides at the Villa Farnese, 238. 



Casa Nuova, the, at Pompeii, 25-26. 



Casino, the, in classic villas, 29-30. 



Cassiobury, grounds at, 195, 212. 



Castle Ashby, gateway at, 240; archway 

 at, 245 ; vase at, 246 ; rosary with per- 

 gola at, 246; Italian influence shown 

 at, 246-247; rustic pergola at, 247; 

 Brown's treatment of water at, 269; 

 garden-house at, 292. 



Castle, portrayal of a Norman, in the 

 " Roman de la Rose," 69; Berkeley, 

 70; expansion of grounds of Anglo- 

 Norman, 77-78; superseded by private 

 dwellings, 101-102. 



Castlemain, Lady, 175. 



Cato, Marcus Porcius, 17, 19, 167; quota- 

 tions from, in early English works on 

 gardening, 129. 



Caux, Isaac de, work of, at Wilton, 240- 



243- 



Cavendish, description of Cardinal Wol- 

 sey's gardens by, 105. 



Cerceau, Androuet du, description of last 

 mediaeval gardens by, 98. 



Certosa, Florence, a well in the, 55. 



Chabas, Fran?ois, extract from translation 

 by, 9. 



Chambers, Sir William, " Dissertations on 

 Oriental Gardening " by, quoted, 261- 

 264; temples in Royal Botanical Gar- 

 dens at Kew designed by, 268. 



Chansons de Gestes, 83. 



