302 



GARDEN CRAFT IN EUROPE 



scenes devised for particular seasons, so as to draw the attention of visitors 

 to them at the proper time. The Marquise and her daughter w^ore dresses 

 of common brown stuif " en amaz,one " with black hats, while the boys 

 wore " hahillements les 'plus simples et les plus propres a les faire confondre 

 avec les enfants des campagnardsy 



In 1774 C. H. Watelet published an Essai sur les Jardins, wherein he 

 professed to take utility for the basis of his art. With this end he laid out 



\UI LNai.ULflKK IJUN J.UiniN ANCrl.OIS, 



U//L&! /^ Jfjui/iy^/y a </at.r /ma- Je J'^u if>/>arMl4mt uJl' Jfii-/ft Jir^ataa- jaicral diirym,l/lcej- 



ENGLISH GARDEN AT " LE MOULIN-JOLI," NEAR PARIS. 



the Moulin-joli on the Seine near Paris, of which the Prince de Eigne 

 wrote : — 



" Here is a place more after my own heart than Ermenonville, and 

 nearer to Paris. Having turned my back on the gaieties of Paris, I was wander- 

 ing aimlessly along the banks of the Seine and at last, losing sight of the City 

 at Moulin-Joli found myself, for it is only alone with Nature that one 

 finds oneself. Whoever you may be, if your heart be not hardened, perch 

 yourself in the branches of a willow at Moulin-Joli on the banks of the river. 



