Rotherjield Hall 
Tumi n g 
to the gar¬ 
den proper 
— the natu¬ 
ral slope of 
the ground, 
which is con- 
si d e r a b 1 e, 
had been 
utilized be¬ 
fore for ter¬ 
raced work 
in the small 
and simple 
old garden 
which frag- 
m entary 
banks and 
walls gave 
evidence of. 
None of this 
old work was 
of sufficient interest or size to warrant any 
assimilation to its lines in the new scheme, 
the succession of small slopes causing a loss 
THE ROSE GARDEN AND 
Showing the 'vines full grown 
of extent 
when viewed 
from the 
house, which 
made an am¬ 
plification 
indispens¬ 
able. Close 
under the 
house is a 
broad paved 
terrace sup¬ 
ported by a 
b u ttressed 
and b a 1 u s - 
traded wall 
with a double 
flightofsteps 
placed cen¬ 
trally and 
leading to 
the flower 
garden below. This terrace extends the 
full breadth of the plan and is bordered on 
the east side where it passes beyond the 
THE CONSERVATORY 
A CORNER OF THE FLOWER GARDEN Showing.a completed pavilion 
ROTHERFIEI.D HAI.I, 
260 
