INDEX 



313 



Dodoens, 135. 



Dodona, oak grove of, 14. 



Dog, grave of Byron's, at Newstead Ab- 

 bey, 62, 267. 



Dominicans, order of the, 61. 



Doorway, a battlemented, 103; garden, at 

 Canons Ashby, 104; garden, at Risley, 

 111; at Bramshill, 140; at Oundle, 

 141; at Highlow Hall, 168; at Villa 

 Madama, 235; at Cambridge, 236; 

 at Shrublands, 277. 



Dove-cotes, in Tudor gardens, 110 ; 

 Elizabethan, 136. 



Drayton House, pool for fish at, 119; 

 sun-dial at, 170; wrought-iron gates 

 at, 1 88, 195, 196; garden-house at, 

 191; stone steps at, 196; perfect speci- 

 men of seventeenth-century garden at, 

 196-197. 



Du Perac, 199. 



Durand, Guillaume, quoted concerning 

 cloisters, 53. 



Dutch, arbours in style of the, 188, 250, 

 251; gardens of the, 168, 252-254. 



Dwelling, the castle superseded by the 

 private, 101-102; relation of, to the 

 garden in Tudor period, 109-111, 123; 

 relation of Elizabethan flower-gardens 

 to, 137-138; relation of, to garden in 

 Stuart times, 182-183; relation of, to 

 garden, according to Le Blond, 216- 

 217. 



E 



Eagle Pond at Newstead Abbey, 6l, 62. 



Edward I of England, idea of bath-houses 

 imported from the East by, 75 ; cul- 

 mination of mediaeval prosperity under, 

 78-80. 



Egypt, gardens in ancient, 69; idea of 

 labyrinths may have come from, 42. 



" Elie de St. Giles," chanson of, 89. 



Elizabeth, Queen, at Hampton Court, 142- 

 143, 161-162; general influence of, on 

 gardens, 162163. 



Elizabethan figures, two, 128. 



Elvaston, topiary work at, 116, 154; ar- 

 millary sphere at, 119; leaden busts at, 

 228; a classic vase at, 252. 



Enclosure, rustic, classic picture of a, 28; 

 of trelliswork, 90. 



Enclosures in Elizabethan gardens, 147. 



England, effect of advent of Normans on, 

 49-51, 57-58, 66; close connection of 

 France and, in thirteenth and four- 

 teenth centuries, 76; effect of dis- 

 covery of America in, 132-133; 

 evidences of Dutch taste in, 168, 

 254; influence of French in seven- 

 teenth-century gardens of, 207208; 

 modern Italian influence on gardens 

 of, 240-248; romanticism in, 249; 

 ideas imported from China into, 250, 

 259-266; popularity of landscape gar- 

 den of, throughout Europe, 269270, 

 275-277; modern gardens of, 278-293. 



"England in the Fifteenth Century," 

 Denton's, quoted, 79. 



English Dialect Society, Tusser's " Hun- 

 dreth Good Pointes" edited under 

 auspices of, 109. 



" English Flower Garden," Robinson's, 

 280. 



Entrances, to Elizabethan gardens, 140 

 141; Inigo Jones's, 170; iron gateways 

 at, 1 88. See Gateways. 



Epicurus, garden of, at Athens, 15. 



Ermenonville, the Marquis de Girardin's 

 gardens at, 270-273. 



Evans, Arthur, on birds in ancient times, 34. 



Evelyn, John, an authority on English 

 seventeenth-century gardens, 167, 171, 

 194-196; translation of French works 

 on gardening by, 212; grotto at Al- 

 bury designed by, 254. 



Evergreens, clipped, use of, in classic gar- 

 dens, 39-40; Bacon's opinion of, 154. 



Exedra, sketch plan of a Greek, 15; Greek 

 derivation of the word, 18; from street 

 of the Tombs, Pompeii, 32 ; in mediae- 

 val gardens, 91-92; at Wilton, 242, 

 245. See Seats. 



Exercise, provision for, in classic gardens, 

 34-36; Chinese provision for, 264. 

 See Games. 



" Exeter Book," quoted, 295. 



Exotics, imported into England by Crusad- 

 ers, 75-76; from America, 132-133; 

 from Holland, 168-169; a t the Oxford 

 Botanical Garden, 170; in Stuart gar- 

 dens, 192-193; in wild gardens, 279, 

 280. 



Eyam Hall, Derbyshire, 102. 



