List of Chapters. 



CHAPTER i. THE PRECEDENT OF GARDEN DESIGN. 



2. THE PRACTICE OF GARDEN DESIGN, t $' 



3. THE CHOICE OF A SITE AND ITS TREATMENT. 2. i 



4. ENTRANCES AND CARRIAGE COURTS. 



5. GATES AND FENCES FOR GARDEN AND PARK. 



6. DRIVES, AVENUES AND SERVICE ROADS. ^ 



7. TERRACES AND TERRACE GARDENS. 



8. FLOWER GARDENS, BEDS AND BORDERS. 10' 



9. LAWNS, GLADES AND GARDEN WALKS. \2- 



10. VERANDAHS, SUMMER-HOUSES, PERGOLAS AND BRIDGES. | 



11. STATUARY, TREILLAGE AND GARDEN FURNITURE. 



12. THE DECORATIVE TREATMENT OF WATER, p 



13. ROCK, WALL AND BOG GARDENS. 



14. CONSERVATORIES, GREENHOUSES, VINERIES AND FRUIT HOUSES. 



15. KITCHEN GARDENS AND ORCHARDS. 



16. THE FORMAL ARRANGEMENT OF TREES. ^ i 



17. PLANTING FOR LANDSCAPE EFFECT. 



18. TREES AND SHRUBS FOR GARDEN AND PARK. ^\ 



19. CLIMBERS FOR WALLS, PERGOLAS AND TRELLIS. ^ L 



20. HARDY PERENNIALS FOR BEDS, BORDERS, ETC. 



EXAMPLES OF GARDEN DESIGN. 



GARDENS OF VARIOUS SIZES. 



Gardens to semi-detached houses. 



Garden to small detached residence. ^ ' 



Garden for a larger detached residence. 



Garden for a good-sized suburban residence, j 3 If 



A large town garden. ^ $ 



Grounds to a new Country Seat. ^ V 5 



Grounds to an ancestral domain. 3 f j 



GARDENS OF EXCEPTIONAL KINDS. 

 A Lake District garden. 

 A Highland garden. i * ^ 

 A garden on a flat site. 3 6~^ 

 A garden in granite. J (> 3 



A garden to a classic renaissance mansion. 3^^ 

 A mountain home. ^ 7 

 A hillside garden. .? < 

 An old Tudor garden, restored, remodelled and enlarged IT? 



x. 



