BOOK I. 



GARDENING IN THE BRITISH ISLES. 



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yards of the house :" this his brother " succeeded in doing, by digging down the mountain, and flinging it 

 into a rapid stream, which carried away the sand, filled up the moat, and levelled that noble area where 

 now the garden and fountain is." 



Grown? s-bridge near Tunbridge, " a pretty melancholy place." 



1654. Lady Brook's garden at Hackney, " one of the neatest and most celebrated in England." 



Caver sham, Lord Craven's, Berkshire. " Goodly woods felling by rebels." 



Cashiobury (fig. 29. ), Lord Essex, Hertfordshire. " No man has been more industrious than this noble 



29 



F 4 



