346 



IFnOei 



Park, roads and paths, 142; sana- 

 tive efiEect of, 272; scenery of, 

 286; accessory elements of, 289; 

 treatmentof, Washington, D.C., 

 301 

 Park, Babelsberg, 60 

 Park, Central, New York City, 70, 



94, 142, 183; rockwork, 180 

 Park, English, character of enclos- 

 ure, 95 

 Park, Muskau, character of en- 

 closure, 94; development one 

 hundred years ago, 70 

 Pekin, gardens of, 69 

 Pepperidge (Nyssa muUiflora), 325 

 Philadelphus coronarius, 321 

 Philadelphus grandiflora, 321 

 Picea alcockiana, 332 

 Picea (blue) engelmani, 331 

 Picea (blue) pungens, 331 

 Picea (Norway) excelsa, 331 

 Picea omorica, 332 

 Picea orientalis, 331 

 Picea (tigertail) polita, 332 

 Picea (white) alha, 331 

 Pine, umbrella (Sciadopitys verti- 



cillata), 333 

 Pinus austriaca, 333 

 Pinus (Bhotan) excelsa, 332 

 Pinus (Mugho) Mughus, 333 

 Pinus paniiflora, 333 

 Pinus (pitch) rigida, 332 

 Pinus (red) resinosa, 332 

 Pinus (Swiss stone) cembra, 333 

 Pinus (white) strobus, 332 

 Plato, causes of things, iii 

 Pliny the Younger describing his 



villa, 7 

 Polo, Marco, residence in Cathay, 



67 

 Pope, Alexander, genius of place, 



IS 

 Poplar, Lombardy, use m connex- 

 ion with bridges, 291; proper 

 use of, 317 

 Pordenone, Oderic of, Franciscan 



friar and traveller, 68 

 P otentilla fruticosa (shrubby 



cinquefoil), 321 

 Price, principles of Claude, 35 

 Prickly pear (wild cactus), 92 

 Privet {Ligustrum ova,lifolium), 



327 

 Privet (Ligustrum regeUanum), 327 

 Puckler, Prince, von Muskau, 120; 



treatment of the Bois de Bou- 

 logne, 29; architecture in the 

 landscape, 29; importance of 

 prompt correction of mistakes, 

 47; estate of, 60; garden art 

 compared with music, 81; size 

 of estate, 84; Claude, 87; Eng- 

 lish, French, Italian, and 

 Roman gardens, 87; grading, 

 184; definition of the term 

 "garden," 241 ; Chiswick flower 

 gardens, 262 

 Purchas, Marco Polo's travels, 67 



Racine, free nature, 55 



Rapin, formal style of landscape 

 gardening, 11 



Rep ton, Humphry, v, 21, 22, 

 23; requisites for landscape 

 gardening, 52; landscape treat- 

 ment around the house, 102; 

 design of house, 107; treatment 

 of distant views, 113; water, 



147 

 Retinospora fiUfera, 334 

 Retinospora obtusa, 334 

 Retinospora plumosa, 334 

 Retinospora psifera, 334 

 Retinospora sguarrosa, 334 

 Rhamnus catharticus, 322 

 Rhamnus frangula, 322 

 Rhododendrons, best hardy sorts, 



309; best soil for, 312 

 Robinson, William, need of sound 



views on landscape gardening, 



23; use of rocks, 174 

 Rock plants, proper place for, 92 

 Rosa rugosa, 309 

 Rose, scarlet rambler, 314 

 Rose, setigera or prairie rose, 314 

 Roses, climbing, 173; Wichuriana 



hybrids, 308 ; prairie, 309, hybrid 



tea or ever blooming, 309 

 Rousseau, J. J., 17, 245, 246 

 Royce, Josiah, 299 

 Rubus odoratus, 322 



Sargent, Prof. C. S., artificial 



lake, 158 

 Saxifrage, 173 

 Scale, San Jos6, 308 

 Schopenhauer, iv 

 Shairp, John Campbell, effects 



of nature on the spirit, 273 

 Sheep for lawns, 131 



