The Italian Formal Garden 
lie either on the hillsides— e. g., the Villa Pia and Ithe Vatican 
Gardens, the Villa Barberini—now greatly alterecd, I under¬ 
stand, from its pristine state and used as an insame asylum— 
close to St Peter’s; the Villas Lante and Corsini, contiguous 
to the public parkway of the Passeggiata Margherrita; or out¬ 
side the walls, like the immense Villa Pamfili Doiria, outside 
the Porta S. Pancrazio ; the Villa Borghese, also of vast extent, 
and, like the Pamfili Doria, comprising both pictureesque parks 
with winding drives and the formal gardening I hawe been de¬ 
scribing ; and the magnificent Villa Albani, the rmost formal 
and monumental of all the Roman gardens, neair the Porta 
Salaria. 
Pan of 
“ THE ONE AT TIVOLI ” 
the Villa d’Este 
5 + 
