m LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN 710 Sm5 cop. 2 CPLA MOTE STORACgE. The person charging this material is re- sponsible for its return on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Theft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reasons for disciplinary action and may result in dismissal from the University. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN L161— O-1096 D LANDSCAPE GARDENING OE, PARKS AND PLEASURE GROUNDS. PRACTICAL NOTES COUNTRY RESIDENCES, VILLAS, BY CHARLES H. J. SMITH, LANUSCATE GARDENER, GAKDEM ARCHITECT, ETC. NOTES AND ADDITIONS BY LEWIS F. ALLEN, Author of " Rural Architecture," &c. ) NEW YORK: C. M. SAXTON & COMPANY, Aqriccltubal Book Pcbushbrs, 140 Fcltos St. i 1856. Entered according to act of Congress, in the year 1853, by C. M. SAXTOX, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United Str.tcs, for the Southern District of New York. 2- T REMOTE STORA«e EDITOR'S PREFACE. It may appear superfluous to re-edit, in the United States, a work of the kind now presented to the reader : particularly if it be one of competent authority on the subjects of which it professes to treat. In ansvrer to this suggestion it may be remarked, that scarce any European treatise on the manage- ment of grounds, the vegetation belonging to them, or the structures to be erected on them, can, in every thing, be ap- phcable here. Our climates and soils; our trees, shrubs and plants; our habits and tastes, all differ in various degrees from those of Europe, and Europeans, to which and to whom we ha^'e hitherto chiefly looked for example and authority in matters of this kind. Parks and Pleasure-grounds are a part of the " Institu- tions " of Great Britain. Parks came into England with William the Conquerer. Among his first acts of oppression and injustice, he laid waste of its homes, its villages, cottages, and cultivated fields, one of the richest coimties, to form a vast forest and hunting-groimd, for the recreation of himself a, "i^ii^-^ IV editor'spkeface. "^ and his retainers. His noblemen followed the royal example, and a great part of England was parceled out into wide do- mains — the spoils of the conquered Saxons — and appropri- ated to themselves, in ranges of park and cultivated lands. Hunting was theh: pastime — war, agricidture and legislation their employment. Thi-ough succeeding centuries, becoming more refined and domestic in their pursuits, they studied the improvement and cultivation of their estates; and, retaining their attachment to the soil, which they held by hereditaiy title, the planting and preservation of their trees, and the decoration of their gardens, became with them a passion, as well as a duty. It is so with their descendants in the present day. It has become a national taste in England, and has spread into Scotland and Ireland, until no couTitry in the world can equal Great Britain in the luxuriance and beauty — the costliness and splendor — the extent and the wealth of her Parks and Pleasure-grounds. Few, indeed, can indxdge in such extent of luxury as the parks of the aristocracy dis- play; yet the taste for rural embellishment extends among all classes of the people, from the royal mistress of Windsor, Osborne, and Balmoral, to the humble cottager upon his mea- ger allotment by the hedge-row. It is not so in America. We have broad lands, and a pas- sion for lands; but not a passion to improve and embellish them for domestic occupation, as they have in England. Yet we are learning this, and we wish to learn more. Our taste. \ * f ^ J editor's preface. V is improving. "We are encouraging skillful and ingenious men, who are aiding us in forming our tastes, by their writings and their labors. We require practical treatises, adapted to our own country. Foreign books are not sufficient for us. Good, many of them are : suggestive in many things, and instruc- tive in others. The work here presented has appeared to the undersigned better suited to the American inquirer than any other which has issued from a foreign press. It is plainh-, unambitiously, sensibly written, and by a thoi-oughly practical man. It will do much to instruct us in the subjects on which it discourses, and with suitable notes appended, may, perhaps, be more useful to the American reader than without thenx Such notes have been attempted by the undersigned — whether acceptably, or not, is submitted to the reader. LEWIS F. ALLEN. Buffalo, August, 1853. AUTHOR'S PREFACE. The design of the following work is aUogether a practical cue. While engaged in his profession, during the last eigh- teen years, the author has often been requested to recom- mend a book, which might enable persons consulting him to acquire some general knowledge of the principles of Land- scape-gardening, and which might aid them in carrying his suggestions into effect. He has been in the habit of naming certain well-known works, such as Price " On the Pictur- esque," and Gilpin " On Landscape-gardening." He has often felt, however, that such advice was, in great measure, illusory ; and that if implicitly followed, it would tend rather to puzzle than to enlighten or direct those who might adopt it. He himself had experienced the difficulty of making practical ap- plication of the general reasonings, and of the diffuse, and, at times, irrelevant discussions to be found in some of these authors ; and it was only by means of light derived from his own practice that he was able to put them to profit. In the work of Price, for example, the leading precepts substantially author's preface. vii are: Study pictures — familiarize your taste with scenes ■whicli painters would delight to copy — become acquainted with the elements of the picturesque, and seek to realize the resulting-ideas in and about your residence. Most gentlemen of liberal education know something of pictures; but there are few who would not disclaim such a special culture in the fine arts, as would fit them to apply the principles of painting to the improvement of their grounds. To prescribe such a course is virtually to require a professional education, or to impose the amateur labor of half a lifetime. The ob- ject of the present work is to preserve a plain and direct method of statement, to be intelligible to all who have had an ordinary education, and to give directions which, it is hoped, will be found to be practical by those who have an adequate knowledge of country aflfairs. The author earnestly disclaims all intention of detracting from the acknowledged merit of his illustrious predecessors. He has been willing to sit at the feet of Wheatley, Price and Gilpin. He has learned much from their writings. His aim, in this volume, has been to popularize their principles, and to simplify and extend their processes in practice. He has, how- ever, sedulously avoided those redundant and often merely con- troversial discussions by which some of their literary works are encumbered. At the same time he is convinced that Land- scape-gardening, like the other fine arts, is of a progressive nature; and that its ascertained principles compose a fabric Viii A U T II O R ' S P R E F A C E . to which successive writers have added, or have yet » &. i, each his stick and his stone. He has endeavored to do his part. While, however, he has not been inattentive to the Uterature of his profession, he has looked even more intently at nature ; he has sought to draw directly from her inexhaust- ible stores; and in offering to the public the results of his observations, he humbly trusts that he has contributed to the progress of the art. In adding to his original plan two chapters on the Arbor- etum and the Pinetum, the author has sought to supply a want in regard to ornamental collections of trees, which is becoming daily more apparent. So ftir as his limited space has allowed, he has endeavored to treat these subjects on the principles both of science and taste; and he hopes that the botanical information, which he has drawn from the best sources, though it may be uninteresting to the general reader, will not be unacceptable to the lovers of these pleasing de- partments of Arboriculture. Edinburgh, August, 1852. 'r. 9b CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. THE HOUSE AND OFFICES. Introduction — Climate of the site — Soil and Subsoil — Drainage — Supply of Water — Shelter — Position of the House in the Park — Elevation of the Site — Extent of the Site — Style of the House — Arrangement of the Interior of the House — Conservatory — Stable- court and Offices, , . . . . . .13 CHAPTER II. THE APPROACH. Definition — Direction of the Approach — Site of the Entrance-gate— Style of the Gate and Lodge — Line of Approach through the Park — Gates on the Line of Approach — Termination of the Approach — Roadway of Approach — Decoration of Approach — The Avenue — The Fine Approach, . . . .52 CHAPTER III. PLEASURE-GROUNDS AND FLOWER-GARDENS. Position of the Pleasure-grounds — Composition of the Landscape — Terraces — Walls — Grass Slopes — Shrubs on Terrace-banks — Stairs on Terraces — the Upper Surface of Terraces — The Flower- garden — Site of the Flower-garden — Ground Color — The Par- terre — The Rosary — The American Garden — The Mixed Flower- garden — Artistical Decorations — Rockworks — Shelter of the Flower-garden — Planting in the Pleasure-grounds — AValks i.a the Pleasure-grounds — Formation of Lawns, . . . .73 1* X CONTENTS. CHAPTER IV- THE PARK. Definition— The Unity of the Park— Natural Character of the Ground— Acquired Character of the Ground— Planting in the Park— Surfaces to be Planted— Arrangement of Woods in the Park— a Group— a Clump— a Mass— Carrying out the Arrange- ment of Woods — Grouping of Plantations in the Park — Outlines of Plantations— Belts and Circles— Artificial Style— Avenues, . 105 CHAPTER V. ORNAMENTAL CHARACTERS OF TREES, DETACHED AND IN COMBINATION. Introductory Remarks. Sect. I. The forms of Single Trees— Broad Round-headed Trees— The Spiry, Conical, or Pyramidal Configuration — The Upright or Oblongated — The Weeping or Pendulous. Sect. II. The Color of Trees— Table of the Colors of Foliage of Trees — General Remarks. Sect. III. The Ornamental Character of Trees in Combination — Conical or Pyramidal Trees— Round-headed Trees— Intermin- gling of the different Forms and Colors — Concluding Remarks, . 135 CHAPTER VI. PLANTING. Preparation of the Ground — Trenching — Draining — Roads through Plantations— Planting of Forest Trees— Pitting— Pruning — Thin- ning—Transplanting Forest Trees — Planting and Transplanting of Evergreens, . . . . • • .166 CHAPTER VII. FENCES OF THE PARK AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. General Remarks — Boundary Fence — Internal Fences — Fence of the Deer Park — Pleasure-ground Fences — Malleable-iron Fences — Sunk Fences — Stone Walls — Hedges, . . . .184 CONTENTS. XI CHAPTER VIII. WATER. Artificial Lakes — Islands — the Head or Artificial Embankment — Decorative Accompaniment — Artificial Rivers — Jet Fountains — Jets d'Eau — Propriety of Introducing Water, . . , 191 CHAPTER IX. THE KITCHEN, FRUIT. AND FORCING GARDENS. Introduction— The Site— Drainage— Soil— The Form— The Walls— The Fruit Garden— The Forcing Garden, .... 20.1 CHAPTER X. PUBLIC PARKS AND GARDENS. Sect. I. The Public Park — Site of the Public Park — Laying-out of Public Pai'ks — Educational Institutions. Sect. II. Street Gardens. Sect. III. Botanic Gardens — Special Purposes of Botanical Gai dens — Botanical Museums — Laying-out of the Botanic Gardens. Sect. IV. Gardens belonging to Horticultural and Zoological Socie- ties — Gardens of Horticultural Societies — Laying-out of Horti- cultural Gardens — Horticultural Museum — Zoological Gardens, . 215 CHAPTER XI. THE VILLA. Introductory Remarks. Sect. I. General Properties of the Villa — The Locality — The Site — Roads — Position of the House — Style and Arrangement of the House. Sect. II. Laying-out of the Grounds of a Villa — Seclusion — The Approach — Kitchen-garden — Trees and Shrubs — Water — Lead- ing Vai'ieties of Villa Scenery — The Pleasure-ground Villa — The Park Villa, ....... 255 Xil CONTENTS. CHAPTER XIL GENERAL OBSERVATIOJfS ON THE LAYING-OUT AND IMPROVEMENT OF GROUNDS, Landscape-gardening — Analogies to Landscape-painting — Com- parative Power over Materials — Simplicity and Multiplicity of Points of View — Processes -wholly and partly Tentative — Pro- priety of Revision — Utility of Plans— Hazard of Preparatory Operations, . . . • • ■ • • 287 CHAPTER Xm. THE ARBORETUM. Definition— Recent Introduction— General Idea of Arrangement— Sect. I. Scientific Treatment of the Arboretum — Introductory Re- marks— Dr. Lindley's Classification of the Natural Orders — Explanations— Synopsis of Orders and Genera— Apphcation of Principles— Transference of the System to the Ground. Sect. II. Decorative Treatment of the Arboretum— Object in View — Employment of Larger Trees— Lawns— Surfaces planted— Ever- greens— Arbore turns attached to Private Residences— Sites in Pleasure-grotmds. . . .... 3U3 CHAPTER XIV. THE PINETUM. Remarks on Special Collections of Trees— The Pinetum— Materials and Arrano-ement — Enumeration of Sijccics, with Observations on the Groups— Effects of Climate— Soil— Early Cultivation of the Plants— Planting of the Pinetum— Pruning of tlie Trees— Deco- rative Treatment of the Pinetum, . . . . .333 PAKKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS AMERICAN NOTES CHAPTER I. THE HOUSE AND OFFICES. Inti'oJuction — Climate of tbe Site — Soil and Subsoil — Drainage — Sup- ply of Water — Shelter — Position of the House in tlie Park — Elevation of the Site — Extent of the Site — Style of the House — Arrangement of the Interior of the House — Consers-atory — Stable Court and Offices. The liouse, being the head-quarters of the family — the capital, as it were, of the park or demesne — is by far the most important object within the grounds, and, as snch, the selection of the site must take precedence of all other matters, whether it be a castle or a cottage, and whatever be its form and construction. While tfiis ought to be the dominant principle in the forma- tion of a country residence, and while the house should be made the central point, to which all operations con- nected with the laying out of the park and pleasure- o-rounds should be referred ; tliere are certain require- ments belonging to a mansion-house, as a comfortable dwelling, which must be allowed to modify the final choice of site as the best upon the whole world. 14 PAKKS a>:d PLEASURE-GKOL'NDS Climate of the Site. — ^The general temperature and dryness of the air liave a material influence on the health and comfort of a farail j, and, therefore, must re- ceive due consideration. These qualities resolve them- selves very much into those of tlie park, and of the district in which it is situated. Along the eastern shores of the United Kingdom, and in the country ad- jacent to these, in some places to a considerable dis- tance inland, the climate is comparatively dry and good ; but in spring and in the beginning of summer, when cold withering winds from the sea are prevalent, the east coast is found to be very trying to the consti- tutions of some individuals. On the west coast, and in the districts bordering on it, there is a much greater degree of humidity, which, though in itself disagree- able, is accompanied with a softness and mildness that at certain seasons make the climate pleasant and ben- eficial to those whose health is affected by the rude severities of the center and the east. The interior hilly or mountainous regions of our island have a climate peculiar to tliemselves ; yet, with a varying amount of moisture and drjmess, and of cloudy or clear atmos- phere, they are generally healthy and bracing, and partake of the characters of the east and west, according as they approach to either coast. Some of the inland and slightly hilly districts toward the east have muqji of its dryness without its peculiar severity in spring, and may, therefore, be accounted tlie best. The gen- eral climate of the park, then, may be said to be the ruling one for the mansion-house ; but in large, and even in what may be considered small parks, there are often localities which have modifications peculiar to themselves. These variations, though inconsiderable CLIMATE OF THE SITE. 15 on flat surfaces, are sufficiently marked on undulating and hilly ones. Southern exposures are decidedly su- perior, in point of warmth, to nortljern slopes, or places lying toward the east or west. Good sites are found in the latter direction, but they are occasionally in- clement; when such positions are selected, they should occupy, if possible, a western declivity on the east, and an eastern declivity on the west side of the country. High and exposed situations are cold, but have a clear and bracing atmosphere. TVindy positions are to be avoided; as also those which are exposed to draughts of cold air, a peculiarity less apparent to slight inspec- tion than the other, but not less disagreeable and in- jurious in its effects. Aware of this, the inhabitants of hilly countries generally place the ends of their houses toward the length of the valleys, as the winds, for the most part, sweep up and down them, in what- ever direction they run ; and by this arrangement the houses are assailed by fewer cross-draughts than when they are set down across the valley. In dry, well-shel- tered localities, near the sea-coast, these peculiarities of climate are less frequently experienced than in more inland regions. Note. — Although written for the humid climate of the British Isles, these remarks are worthy of consider- ation in the dryer atmosphere of America. In many localities of our new states, owing to causes of disease, which a more extensive improvement and clearing up of the countrv will abate, the best sites for dwellinjrs can not with safety be occupied. In the older states there are districts still subject to autumnal fevers, chills and agues, chiefly in the vicinity of sluggish water-courses, or undrained swamps, or marshes. la 16 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS piicb, the best positions for a dwelling cannot be occu- pied until a more rapid flow of the water be effected by clearing the streams of their obstructions, and the low grounds are drained of their standing water. In an open country, long settled, and its climate defined, every one desirous to build, will readily ascertain the advantages or defects of the site on which he prefers to erect his dwelling. A combination of objects usually control the selection of the site, and no rule can be laid down which will govern in all cases. To those who have a wide range of choice in this particular, and are not pressed for time, we would suggest the erection of a temporary cottage on one or more sites which please their taste, in which a family might be lodged, with a thermometer to note the ranges of heat and cold, and the currents of wind, as they affect the spot adversely, or otherwise. We have known instances where an apparently well-sheltered valley, by the pe- culiar conformation of the adjacent hills, was swept with stronger and harsher winds than an exposed prom- ontory in its immediate neighborhood. A hilly or a mountainous region requires closer examination to determine accurately the degrees of temperature, and the currents of air to which they are exposed, than an open, flat country, with nothing to break off or interrupt the winds but the occasional shelter of trees. As a general rule, too much importance cannot be given to climate in the selection of the grounds for a park, or the buildings within it. A mistake in this particular may be attended with the most calamitous results, not only afiecting the amount of capital invested, but ex- tending even to life it§elf — Ed. Soil and Subsoil of the Site. — The nature of the SOIL AND SUBSOIL OF THE SITE. 17 soil and subsoil of a place have a much greater influ- ence on its climate than at first sight might be sup- posed. In onr visits to country residences, we have often found remarkable differences of climate, which could be assigned to no other cause. Those on light dry soils and subsoils seemed cheerful and agreeable during winter, while others, in the same district, with wet soils and retentive subsoils, were damp, muddy, and uncomfortable. These diiierences could not fairly l>e attributed to diflerences in artificial drainage, for they were often visible on the same estate, and perhaps in the same park, one field being moist and slabby, and another being dry and airy. A little observation only is required to note these peculiarities in the various localities. Invalids are very sensible to their influ- ences. Those places to which slight frosts are most easily attracted will always be found, if not with wet surface soils, certainly with cold, retentive, humid sub- soils. These evils are best counteracted by thorougb drainage ; but this remedy is not always effectual, or, to be so, would need to be extended to a considerable range of country. Where perfect drainage cannot be secured, no residence should be formed. "We should even hesi- tate to recommend the erection of a house on a cold site, with a tilly subsoil ; for, however well drained the surface may be, the air in such situations is commonly raw and chill. Note. — The above is sound doctrine, which cannot be too closely studied by all who build a residence in the country. We have known spots, beautiful in loca- tion, but so irreclaimably unfit for a family residence, that after all the desired improvements had been made at a great expense to fit it for occupation, it had to be 18 PAKKS AND PLEASUKE-GKOUNDS. abandoned. There are other places, apparently as for- hidding when in a natnral state, which are susceptible of entire amelioration by draining. These can nsnally be determined by a geological survey of the grounds, and a thorough examination of the kinds of tree and shrubbery which most iiiclilie to grow upon them. In all cases of doubt of the practicability of a thorough drainage, and a cojisequent warmth and kindliness of the soil for the objects required, the proposed site for the residence sliould at once be abandoned. The selec- tion and improvement of a position which shall prove imfit for a perfectly wliolesome and satisfactory resi- dence, will remain a source of perpetual annoyance and regret. — Ed. Drainage of the Site. — It is important that the site should at least possess that moderate elevation which will facilitate the drainage, not only of the locality which it immediately occupies, but the whole of its environs. The lower apartments of the house should be made completely dry, and free from the effects of surface-water av neighboring springs. Easy and well-concealed sewerage from the house and offices is matter worthy of careful attention. Indeed, the thor- ough drainage, not merely of the house and grounds, but of the park, and of the whole estate commanded by the windows, should be deemed indispensable. Let the reader imagine a house set down on a bank over- hanging a fiat, marshy country of many liundred acres in extent : nothing would be more dismal than the prospect in the first instance, and nothing might be more difficult and laborious than the subsequent efforts to improve it. J^Tqi^^ — Any one within the limits of the Enited SUPPLY OF "WATER. 19 States who should seriously contemplate building in the borders of an undralnahle marsh, contemplating to use it for a park or pleasure-ground, would be con- sidered a i:)rominent candidate for a lunatic as3dum. Thanks to the free range we enjoy, no such acts of folly are likely to occur. Yet the necessit}'' of a thorough drainage to the site, and which, in many desirable local- ities, is not at first aj^parent, is indispensable to the proper occupation of the premises. A stiff and reten- tive subsoil, in our dry American climate, is not objec- •tionable to a building site, if it have sufiicient descent to pass oif the drains without hindrance. We should not make it an objection, if, on other accounts, the position were advantageous. — Ed. Supply of AVater. — Water, in sufficient quantity and of good qualitj^, is another requisite which must receive due attention in determining the site of a house. Sometimes an adequate su23ply of this necessary of life is by no means of easy attainment. Wells, tanks, res- ervoirs with pipes, and hydraulic rams, have all been resorted to, according as the natural sui'face of the es- tate has allowed or compelled the employment of one or other of these. A fountain or reservoir above the level of the mansion-house certainly deserves the pref- erence wherever it can be formed, though its original expense may be considerable. This plan affords the greatest facilities for the introduction of water into the various apartments of the house and offices, and for yielding a sufficient supply in case of fire, a matter of some importance in regard to the safety of the property. An abundant reservoir, placed as indicated above, will provide Math water the fountains on the terraces, and in the flower-gardens and pleasure-grounds. In some 20 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GKOUNDS. gravelly subsoils, even when the surface is compara- tively dry, a considerable quantity of water may some- times be found at no great depth, and may be obtained by means of wells and force-pumps; but the supply can hardly ever be so abundant as that yielded by the reservoir, and the labor required to raise it is very great. Tlie hydraulic ram is a very useful instrument where only a moderate quantity of water is needed. A small stream, with a few feet of fall, will keep it in operation, and will enable it to raise the water to a tank, say on the top of the mansion-house, whence it may be distributed as required. We have, however, seen it used, and, independently of the price of the machine, very considerable expense incurred, where, but for inattention or ignorance in some quarter, the much more efficient system described above might liave been successfully adopted, with little or no in- crease of cost. JVote. — A windmill may oftentimes be substituted for other machinery to raise water for the supply of a house and grounds when a suitable site can be ob- tained for its erection. It is a cheap and simple struc- ture, and a pleasing object in the landscape. In some parts of the country they are much used for various economical purposes connected with husbandry, and may be thus applied in connection with the raising of water to supply fountains or reservoirs in pleasure- grounds. — Ed. Shelter. — It has already been remarked that situ- ations exposed to high winds and cold draughts are ineligible for the site of a house. The proprietor, how- ever, has sometimes a difficult choice to make between' magnificent distant views, which add so much to the SHELTER. 21 cheerfulness of a residence, and that warmth which results from sufficient protection, and tends so much to promote its comfort. Most likely he will endeavor to compound the matter between the two rival claims, and, wliile he risks some degree of exposure, will seek to miti- gate it by means of shelter. It is commonly found that natural shelter is the most effectual. A hill, or knoll, or low ridge, j^articularly if covered with trees, is more efficacious than a plantation on a slope ascending to the house. A slight change of position will sometimes be found to have, in this respect, a noticeable influence. In an extensive park or district of country, the aerial currents generally affect a particular track, determined, perhaps, by a gap in a line of hills, the terminating of a ridge, or the contracting of the sides of a valley ; and a small remove from that tract, which may be ascer- tained by observation, may afford the protection re- quired, without much sacrifice of beauty. The site should be open, and, if natural shelter is not to be obtained, recourse must be had to planting. There are few places, indeed, except in some marine resi- dences, in which this expedient is not of considerable value ; still, in exposed localities, the progress of wood is slow, and one generation may pass away before the result desired can be effectually secured. Meanwhile, the builder of the house may have derived little benefit from the trees which he has planted and reared with great expense. Even for a marine residence the shel- ter of a large rock or knoll is of much consequence. For the sake of a dry and warm site, I should be much disposed to forego some other more showy qualities. Note. — The question of shelter depends somewhat on the length of time, and the season of the year, in 22 PAEKS AXD PLEASUKE-GKOUNi)S. which the house is to be occupied. For a summer residence solely, the view or scenery which the site emhnices — other things contributing to the conven- iences of access and living — has usually a controlling influence in determining the question. Shelter, there- fore, as the term is understood by our author, is not of the first importance. If the house be built in proper style, with verandas, and suitable yard and garden walls, aided by the quickly growing trees and shrubs, with which our country abounds, the question of shel- ter will be readily accommodated. — Ed. Position of the House in the Park. — The rela- tion of the mansion-house to the various points of the surrounding domain, requires attentive consideration, and yet it is a subject on which it is difhcult to give specific directions. The whole circumstances con- nected with the locality, the surface of the ground, and the facilities of access, must be taken into account. We believe that a site near the center of the park, other things being equal, is generally preferred. Some- times necessity obliges the choice of one much nearer the boundary; and such a position, when well pro- tected from external annoyances, either by the form of the ground, or by the intervention of a lake or arm of the sea, or by a considerable breadth of plantation, instead of being a disadvantage is the reverse, espe- cially when the views from the jDublic rooms, park- ward, are by that means extended both in length and breadth. This observation, however, relates chiefly to places of moderate size. In smaller parks, on account of the limitation of space, it is more difficult to form a fine piece of lawn or park scenery when the house assumes a central position ; and there is generally a POSITION OF THE HOUSE IN THE PAKK. 23 want of that depth which is attainable when it is set down near one side or end of the place. Excellent sites may often be selc^cted near the shore of an arm of the sea, on the bank of a lake, or in the vicinity of a river, as at these points, besides the land scener}', we have that life and variety which water can alone atibrd. Tliere are, however, few rivers forming the boundaries of estates of sufficient breadth to allow the house to be erected close to their banks. Besides the risk of inun- dation and of damp vapor, which is incident to low situations, there is always the possibility of discordant or offensive objects being erected on the opposite side. Note. — The objection to the narrowness of the rivers in Great ^Britain is vrell made ; but not so in America. The St. Lawrence, Niagara, Detroit, St. Clair, the Ohio, Mississippi, the Connecticut, Hudson, Delaware, Susquehannah, Potomac, and an hundred others of our broad rivers, afford the finest possible sites for dwellings, in many instances on their immediate banks, where they are of sufficient width to render " discordant or offensive objects on the opposite side " so indistinct or innocuous, as to form no serious objection to improving them for park or villa residences. A site on the ira- mediate bank of a broad stream, or bay, or lake, will seldom be chosen, excepting in a level country, where the house would, if placed at a distance back, not command it, and where the banks are of sufficient elevation to be out of the reach of floods. Water, in connection with landscape scenery generally, is more effective when seen from a moderate distance, than when it makes the immediate foreground of the pic- ture. This, however, will depend much on the breadth of surface which the water occupies, and whether it 24: PARKS AND rLKASURP>GKOUNDS. forms 11 part of the icliole landscape, or a part only of onC' of the views from the dwelling, when such dwelling commands a separate view from its different fronts. The snhject of the landscape which is to be embraced in the single, or in the several views of a residence, cannot be too closely nor too intimately studied, before determining the site for the buildings. It may be remarked in this coimection, that as no landscape view can be complete without water, it should, when it can be embraced in the view, always find a place, far or near, as circumstances may con- trol. Minor objects in wood, buildings, or extent of country, may be discarded for the advantage of a grand view of the water. Indeed, we know of no sensation suddenly breaking on the mind like that of a fine water view wdien we have been long pent up among woods and grass alone, however picturesque and beau- tiful they may be. It expands the heart, exhilarates the spirits, and stirs the soul as no other natural object can do ; and — although from being long accustomed to it we may be over-partial — we would not forego the daily spectacle of a broad sheet of moving, living water, for all the petty artificial gettings-up of all the ai'tistio gardeners in the universe. — Ed. A more elevated position, even though it may be near some public road, will probably command equally fine views of the river, and at the same time be more free from intrusion, than any of those lower down. We may add, that certain baronial residences, and some of them of no small splendor, are occasionally seen Btanding on the side of street or road, having been erected there because they w^ere places of strength in ancient times. Such remains of the old feudal glories ELEVATION OF THE SITE. 25 ^vc should be sorry to see removed from wliere they are; but simihir situations are now seldom or never adopted for new residences. Note. — At the risk of being prolix on this subject, we must be permitted to enter a protest on the charac- teristic tendency of Americans to place their country establishments in close proximity to tlie highway or public road. A prominent object in the enjoyment of a country residence, is retirement — shutting ourselves from the gaze and remark of the passing world, and enabling us to take our own pleasure in our own way. A familiar connection with the public road, therefore, should alwa^^s be avoided ; while the park, ,and the buildings within it, should still be at a reasonably con- venient distance for the necessary purposes of living. A suburban villa, simply, may look out npon the pub- lic street in front, and at a few rods distance from it; but a proper country-house, with extensive grounds around it, appropriated for the use and convenience of its occupants, should shun all such familiar contact. In fact, no family, not possessing within themselves resources of mind, and books, sufHcient to keep them from yearning after the idle gossip of a village neigh- borhood, should ever think of living in a "park," or away from the daily intercourse of a pedlers cart, or the interesting spectacle of a passing drove of cattle, sheep, or turkeys. — Ed. Elevation of the Site. — The house should be placed on ground moderately elevated, of easy access, and commanding some of the best vicM-s of the park and the surrounding scenery. The expression, "ground moderately elevated," applies more to an undulating country, than to a level tract, or to a hillv 26 PARKS AND rLEASUnE-GROrNDS. or liiountainous region. In a low, level, and well- wooded country, the effect of the mansion from with- out, and more particularly the views from it, would be entirely lost were it not built in the highest position to be found within the park. In a hill country, again, a comparatively ''moderate elevation"' would probably place the house among the mists and clouds, whereas it might be secured from these, or at least have the most favorable station in the district, by occupying the iirst or second of the lowest platforms of the valley in which it stands. jS^oie. — Happily, in the United States, we possess all possible varieties of elevation which the foncy of those seeking park residences may demand, on which to indulge their preference. Our Atlantic states, from Maine to Florida, abound with those embracing beauty, picturesqueness and grandeur, of themselves alone, or in varied combination in their most pleasing forms. And in the broad agricultural states of the west, there are natural parks, of an extent and beauty rarely equaled, and nowhere surpassed, clothed with the noblest trees, in dense forest or in open glades, mean- dered by pleasant streams. These, to the eye of taste, present the finest features for the indulgence of an incli- nation to appropriate them to the most luxuriant parks and pleasure-grounds that can be imagined. — Ed. Extent of the Site. — On undulating or hilly surfaces the site selected for the house should always be of suf- ficient extent, not only to contain the v/hole of its buildings, but also to afford ample space for the roads, and room for carriages turning at the etitrance, to- gether with a broad walk and terrace on the drawing- room front. Inattention to these requisites will often EXTENT OF THE SITE. 27 lead to great subsequent expense and inconvenience. We have seen a line mansion so j^ut down between two steep banks that at its entrance there was scarcely room to turn a donkey-cart, if we may be permitted to employ a familiar but undignified comparison. At the same time, the garden front was such that it required a thick wall, reared up from a considerable depth be- low, to form a walk a few yards wide, in front of a pile of buildings which would grace a terrace of mag- nificent dimensions. Such an error, if we may pre- sume to call it one, was rendered excusable, or at least was accounted for, by the circumstance that it was the site of an ancient ancestral castle that was thus oc- cupied. AVe cannot wonder that old feudal associations and family recollections should lead " afar descended" proprietors to cleave to some particular spot as their time-hallowed homestead. Still, we sometimes think that there is bad. economy of cherished memories in thus enveloping and concealing the old with the new. If an eligible site were to be found in the vicinity, we should rather have chosen that for the house, and have left the ruin in its own inherent dignity : — so would there have been two objects of interest instead of one; and the fragment of departed grandeur would have "spoken directly to the eye, and not have been beholden to the imperfect medium of words for the occasional telling of its history Of course, the same excuse can- not be made for error committed in the erection of a new mansion, or in the rebuilding of one of little his- torical or family importance: and yet a picturesque view will sometimes seduce a man to set down a house on a narrow pinnacle, where there is scarcely room for a dovecot. Want of judgment like this is not 28 PARKS AND rLEASURE-GROUNDS. unwortliilj repaid by subsequent expense and incon- venience. Note. — More truth could scarcely be condensed into the same number of lines than our author has here written. Fortunately, for the exercise of a correct taste in such Americans as have the inclination and means to indulge in the recreation of park building, they have no '* feudal associations ;" and, perhaps less fortunately — for we individually confess to no incon- siderable degree of respect for family antecedents of the right kind — as a people, not a superabundance of '' family recollections" to lead us into the absurdities against which he warns us. We are, therefore, left with few prejudices or partialities to warp our judg- ment in the situation of proper sites for our country homes. The want of proper education on the subject, and a lack of natural taste, are more frequent obstacles in the way of a choice of the best ground to appro- priate to objects of luxury. Koom enough in a country of cheap land, like ours, should be the first item of consideration with those who set about selecting a site for a house out of town ; and for the lack of that, to one who has the means to build at all, there can be no apology. — Ed. Style of the House. — This is a matter which, in all its bearings, does not come within our province. The rank, the fortune, and the taste of the proprietor, are all entitled to be consulted, and to have their weight in its determination. Still, it is universally conceded that the style of the house should have some adapta- tion to its site, and to the character of the scenery by which it is surrounded. Much has been written on the subject, and much has been said about one style for STYLE OF THE HOUSE. 29 the beautiful, another for the picturesque, and yet another for the romantic. We confess ourselves un- romautic enough to think that a comfortably arranged interior is of greater moment to the proprietor than the finest exterior can possibly be. At the same time, a good external appearance is not a matter of trifling importance, nor is it incompatible with a good internal arrangement. A proprietor of refined taste will natu- rally wish that his house should unite both of these desirable qualities, and at the same time that it should be properly adapted to its site and position in the park. Before beginning to build, it is well to consider what style is best suited to the locality. Undoubtedly, the style should be selected for that site which on general grounds is considered the best, rather than that a site inconvenient in itself should be inconsiderately chosen, on account of some fancied adaptation to a particular style of house. It appears incongruous, we might almost say absurd, to place a street-looking house in a highland glen, or a castellated mansion on a plain as flat as a bowling-green. Such mistakes are not unfrequent. We may add, that the external ap- pearance should have such a relation to the internal arrangements that the spectator on the outside should have no room for mistake as to which is the entrance front, which the drawing-room side, and what portion of it is occupied by the ofiices and inferior apartments. The public rooms should have some external indica- tion, if not of their individual use, at least of their general purpose. To the improver of the park and pleasure-grounds, the external appearance of the house is always a matter of great interest, as the house is the central point to which all his operations are referred, 50 PARKS AXD PLEASURE-GKOr;;DS. and from which they take, as it were, their color. A beautiful and well arranged group of buildings con- stituting the mansion-house, create an interest in his mind suggesting felicitous ideas, and stimulate him to overcome difiSculties, M'hile a bald and shapeless mass of brick or stone contains few^ or no elements of inspi- ration. In regard to the former, his delight will be to bring out and heighten the features of beauty ; in the latter case, lie will make it his duty, so far as it is in his power, to diminish or relieve the actual inferiority which unhappily exists. Is'ote. — For a more systematic understanding of the subject, we regret that our author had not postponed the discussion of the "Style of the House" until after he had disposed of the " Pleasure Grounds" and " Parks, " which comprise the next two chapters. These being discussed and understood in their several aspects, the " House" would more naturally follow, in its appropriate style and arrangement, in keeping with the grounds w^hich are to embrace it. In other words, a house can be much better fitted to the park, than the various features of the park can be moulded to fit the house, let its style, in itself considered, be ever so in- viting. Parks, in America, have, practically, a some- what different signification than they have in England. In England, almost every landed proprietor who in- dulges in the luxury of a park, has a large agricul- tural estate adjoining, usually farmed by tenants, together with a home farm of more or less extent, for the accommodation of his household, and to which the park is an object of Qonvenience, in grazing his herds, at the same time that it ministers to the gratification of his tastes and his luxury. Such appropriations STYLE OF TnE HOUSE. 31 of large tracts of ground are not common in a waste region, and the finest parks are found in the most highh'- cultivated counties. The buildings which decorate these ground-s are usually of great extent, in elaborate styles of architecture, and cost sums in the construction at which even our richest Americans would shrink in the contemplation. But the park-building Englishman builds for himself and his posterity to inhabit. The American, although he may fancy, or flatter himself, that he builds for the same purpose, in a great majority of cases, after a few years of possession, either willingly alienates it into the hands of a stranger, or, eiijoying it for the term of his own life, his heirs usually expedite that transaction in as brief a space of time after his de- mise as the forms of law will admit. In his design, the laws of entail fortify the Englishman. He is already in possession of a hereditary estate, which has been for generations or centuries in the family, and he builds and improves with a knowledge that, in the usual cur- rent of events, it will continue so to descend. Or, if he buy a j)ark and build his mansion, he intends to found an estate which is to remain in his posterity, or in the collateral branches of his family, with a reasonable ex- pectation that they will occupy it for generations suc- ceeding him. In our country, the laws, contemplating the subdivision of any estate belonging to the head of a family, perpetually admonish him to a limited ex- penditure in so costlj^ a luxury, which, if he be a sen- sible and a prudent man, he will continually bear in mind. Under such considerations, therefore, England, the country from which our fancies and tastes are mostly copied in subjects of this kind, although wortliy of consideration in manv features of imitation, is not, in 32 PARKS AND PLEASURE-CaiOUNDS. the extent and costliness of her parks and houses, a safe example for the American to follow. The style of the house for the American park, may be considered with us in two different lights : the first as appertaining to the agricultural proprietor, the second as devoted to country leisure and luxury alone. In the agricultural states, comprising tiiose lying south, west, and norin-west of Pennsylvania, the extent of land cultivated and occupied by many individuals, will permit them to appropriate a sufficient space to park purposes to gratify a very considerable ambition, while it may remain devoted to economical uses, and at the same time afford the finest scope for a display of good taste in landscajDe gardening and building. Such pro- prietors are usually the managers of their own estates, and reside upon them, if not permanently, at least for several months of the year. These are their homes — their places of business. Their habitations are for their business convenience as well as for domestic life, and should be made altogether for everyday purposes. Choosing, therefore, to reside in a park — and which they may do with equal convenience to the manage- ment of their estates as if huddled into close proximity to their cattle-yards or their laborers' cpiarters — they should consult a due propriety and style of building, within the limits which prudence in the outlay will admit, as much as the richer man of the city who en- joys his park and pleasure-grounds for the purpose of luxury, and lavishes upon them a much larger sum for the gratification of his taste or the display of his wealth. In considering the first part of the subject, although it may be a fancy, there is a fitness in the structure STYLE OE TUE HOUSE. 33 of a house, somewhat comporting with the gromid fea- tures of the country by which it is surrounded, A mountainous evergreen, or a hilly region in a northern climate, would naturally suggest a strong-walled house, with a steep and sheltering roof to protect it from heavy snows, and give it warmth, as in the Swiss or Anglo-Italian styles, if placed on an eminence over- loohing a wide tract of country ; or in the old English cottage style with high gables, in a valley protected by high hills, and sheltered by woods. If in a plain, or an undulating country, a wider choice of style may be indulged, as the more open Italian, or the modern pointed Gothic ; or inclining to the A^ene- tian, and low Italian, with broad verandas in both, as their localities extend further south. For the ISTor- man, Tudor, and Elizabethan styles, as they are severally termed, we have less attachment, being too suo-orestive of fortification, and defense, for which people of the present day have no use. The indul- gence of these styles with the architects of our own time, frequently run into all sorts of absurdities in the accumulation of buttresses, gables, turrets, and end- less conceits that lower the true dignity of the house, and make them more to resemble a costly toy than a sensible, comfortable dwelling. Aside from such draw- backs, we cannot with propriety copy the proportions and parts of the foreign structures vv'hich are presented to us in those elaborate styles. In adapting them to our use, they should be Americanized., if such a word may be permitted, into a fitness to our circumstances, as being different from the people of any country abroad. They should be plain in the exterior, and simple in their composition, with every convenience that is 34 TARKS AND I'LEASUEE-GROUNDS. required where the inmates of a family, save in the southern states, have to rely much more on them- selves, than in countries where society is divided into such castes as compel one portion of the population to serve the other, of necessity, and where such service can be readily commanded. In regard to the material of which the house should be constructed, there is a manifest propriety in using that which most abounds in the vicinity, if it be of a proper kind. In a region affording good stone, being convenient, durable and cheap, nothing can be more appropriate. In the absence of stone, and good clay in abundance, bricks stand next in durability and cheap- ness — a fitting material always ; while in lumber dis- tricts, abounding in a choice of woods, they may be applied to the construction of houses for all purposes, and in desirable varieties of style. Situated in a park, or elsewhere, a house should ex- press in its external appearance its chief purpose of occupation. For summer resort only, it may be open, light, showy, and shadowy. It may be relieved of some appendances which are indispensable in a winter dwelling. It may indulge in more outward ornament, and wear a less substantial look ; for its exterior ex- pression should show that it is a dwelling solely, and not to be mistaken for a temple, or a pagoda. A house for permanent occupation should have its one or more fronts — scarce ever more than two — and such front or fronts furnished in a style of superiority, or otherwise corresponding with the uses for which they are de- signed. It is to be supposed that its site commands the finest view which the park embraces, and the best front of the dwelling should look out upon it. The STYLE OF THE HOUSE. 35 rooms on that front should be the liighest finished and furnished, and devoted to the leisure hours of the family, to purposes of hospitality and social inter- course. Such may, under fitting circumstances, be made the entrance front, ^vhen another does not render the approach more convenient. All the show and luxury of the exterior finish should here be displayed ; as, commanding the best and most extended view over other objects, it is the most prominent and pleasing subject of contemplation from the same objects in turn. The house should show, from any point of view at which it is seen, that it has a principal front, or another front, if it really be so ; yet that this other be subordi- nate to the main one, for it is scarcely to be supposed that any one house can command two opposite fronts, or even a side one, in addition, of equal interest or beauty. It should indicate, also, that it has one or more sides shut oft' from the general view, which aro appropriated to family rooms, where the inmates may be retired ; and, as a matter of course, domestic con- venience demands that there be servants' rooms, kitchen, scullery, laundry, wood-house, and other appen- dages, forming a continuous range of building in the rear, which should be quite shut oiF from familiar con- tact, with the better and more finished, and protected by shrubbery, trees, fences, and perhaps additional buildings, accommodating the stable and other re- quirements. These, in contiguity with the kitchen and fruit-gardens, placed in appropriate position and con- nection with the main dwelling, compose a picture of completeness on which the eye can rest with entire satisfaction. There being a sufficiency of ground, the house 36 I'AKKS AND PLKASUKE-GROUNDS. should spread over it. There is no necessity, nor con- venience, in underground rooms for living purposes, in the country house. For height, full two stories above the surface is all that it requires ; more than that gives it an ambitious look, and suggests the idea of a city house in a wrong place. A broad veranda on the principal front we would not omit ; it may be extended around one or more of the sides, or even, in a southern climate, to the opposite front, if such front there be, (but not a continuous veranda around the whole,) provided the style of its architecture will allow it without a violation of its rules. A flanking and rear of wood, composed of either fruit or forest trees, makes tlie richest background, as seen from a distance; and where nature has not already fui-- nished the forest, a plantation of one or the other should at once be commenced. By this, the liouse and its ap- pendages become, as they should be, the eye of the picture, other irrelevant and less interesting objects being shut out of sight. Such, and all such advantages may be comprised in the dwelling of the wealtliy farmer or planter of the United States, without trench- ing on an economical arrangement of his family resi- dence. Let such a composition of tlie park mansion be con- trasted with many a modern one, designed for ex- pressly the same objects, which are so often obtruded upon our sight : a tall, square, castellated structure, standing on a high basement, having at least two, sometimes three, and, worse still, four fronts, all equally approached by a carriage-wa^^ or foot-walk entirely around it. The windows of each room staring out upon its front, and every apartment exposed to the STYLE OK THE HOUSK. 37 noise and intrusion of every ^^asser-by ; every door a public door, and no private ingress or egress whatever. A cellar-kitchen, with underground offices attached, sending their steam, smoke, and effluvia into every room and area above, and concentrating within the four, six or a dozen lines of outer wall, as the various angles and zig-zag lines of said wall may govern, all the seemly and unseemly kinds of occupation to which the appurtenances of a dwelling-house are devoted ! Of the style of its outer or inner architecture, no matter now — of its interior arrangement we are at this moment speaking, and it must be apparent to all who under- stand either the requirements or necessities of house- keeping, that it has no true fitness for such purpose. All and every part is public, and public alike — all lawn, all approach, all open, all show. There is no re- tirement, no privacy about the establishment whatever. Yet many such houses, mansions, country seats, or villas, by whatever name, are thought by some, pro- fessing to have taste and judgment in such matters, fine houses to live in ! "We have seen such, built at an expense often, twenty — even thirty thousand dollars, and upward, that were eclipsed in all convenient family accommodation, at a cost of half the money in each corresponding degree of pretension. Now, to any one who will enter into the details of such an establishment, it will prove a difficult labor to trace out the sinks, drains, areas, and what not, lead- ing into and out of it, their cost in construction, the labor and vexation of living in and keeping it in re- pair. The stables and carriage-houses — for there are no out-houses, in the common acceptation of the term — are at a distance, either in open view, or behind 38 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. trees or shrubbery, as cliance may govern, and all con- nection with gardens, retired walks, the woods and fields — a full half of the charm of country life — is as effectually cut off as though one lived on the opposite side of a public street. The house may be shaded on one, two, or on every side by a veranda ; but what matters it? It is still cut off from immediate inter- course with the grounds which should in all propriety closely connect with and adjoin one or more sides of it, and through which should be no public passage, and only approachable through a door of the house, or a gate belonging to it. It is a show-house, in fact, erected to gratify the builder's ostentation, instead of a dwelling in which to enjoy doniestic peace and seclusion. The exterior architecture of such a house, as appli- cable to a dwelling, cannot be good, because there is a want of fitness in its appearance for the purposes for which it is built. To apply architectural propor- tions and beauty to an object like this, it should be largely extended to embrace an open court, around which its several parts should extend, like a European palace, a thing we have no use for in America as a private country residence. A moderate sized house of forty, fifty, or sixty feet square, as large as is usually required here, with a strictly architectural finish, must look like a public structure, and then it becomes an absurdity as a dwelling. Its interior fitness is no nearer the mark, for its convenience must yield to the demands of the exterior — a show dwelling altogether. In the second light in which the style of the house may be regarded, as the permanent residence of the man of leisure, the scholar, the retired man of business, STYLE OF TUE HOUSE.- 39 or of him who resorts to the country for a sojourn of a few months in the year, and unconnected with agricultural pursuits, other considerations move him in its construction than those which control the agri- cultural proprietor alone. If he retire at the distance of some miles from the city, and out of the immediate neighborhood of a village, the man who intends build- ing a park residence will appropriate a suiEcient area of ground to accommodate his wants in the way of pasturage for his horses, cattle, sheep, and poultry, (for without them his establishment must be incom- plete,) and combine within his own possessions a suf- ficiency of wood — and water, if possible — to give a completeness to the domain within his own apparent boundaries. These accomplished, the house becomes the attractive and paramount object of his attention. Although not perhaps exactly within the province of these notes to give a homily on the financial policy of house-building in the country, yet for the edification of such as look to country residence as a recreation, or a temporary retirement only, it may not be inappro- priate to suggest some reflections when about to invest a portion of their capital in an object so fruitful of pleasurable anticipations. There is probably no de- scription of real estate which is so fitful in its occupation, and so temporary in the tenure, as the country places belons-ins to residents in our cities. The reasons lead- ing to this might be given at length, but they will readily occur to any one who chooses to give the sub- ject a deliberate thought. Some people buy a place and retire into the country without the knowledge of what country life really is — without any true apprecia- tion of its pleasures or its sacrifices — without reflection 40 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. upon its iucouveniences or its expense. They adoj^t it, in short, because it is the fa.-hion. One buys a piece of ground -without knowiug its capabilities fur the ob- ject to winch it is designed, and throws himself into the hands of his professional landscape undertaker, and •his architect, heedless of then- skill or fitness to execute their work. They squander his money, and put up a place — after the fashion — and perhaps before it is ready for his occupation, he becomes disgusted with the expense and place together, gets over his passion for retirement, and sells it on the first good ofi^er, at a heavy sacrifice. Another may retain his, and try country life for a year or two, and then, finding it un- satisfactory, disposes of it at perhaps a better price than the last, and pockets the loss with the best grace be can. Another, still wiser, buys a place already built, at a considerable discount, and occupies it, intending to make it a j)ermanent residence; but his circum- stances changing, in business or family, it is again sold, most usually at a loss, for, coming into his hands ever so complete, his own propensity for improvement has involved an outlay of some thousands for its far- ther embellishment, for v.^hich the new purchaser is not inclined to pay. And so goes almost the entire chapter, until there is rarely to be found a " country place" within striking distance of our principal cities, which has been occupied for twenty years by the same family, or name, and but very few for half that period. They have proved the most expensive luxuries in which their proprietors have indulged, and are thrown off their hands like any other bauble which amused their fancy for the time, and with quite as little regret. These are facts which it is well to weigh before STYLE OF THE HOUSE, . 41 involving one's self in a large expenditure in building a country residence. An investment in land is not so liazardous a matter. If well situated and well pur chased, the loss in it cannot be much when one wishes to dispose of it, even if not valuable for agricultural purposes. It is usually the house and the other erec- tions built upon it which sink the capital, and in the event of the sale of the premises, tastes in such pro- perty usually differing^ the purchaser is fastidious un- less he can drive a decided bargain. Many familiar places can be named which half ruined the owners in building them, and never gave them a moment's en- joyment in their occupation. The splendor of his dwelling can add nothing to the consequence of the proprietor in the community in which he lives, further than to identify him with the notoriety of his temporary castle ; and to the man of true fame, an ambitious and costly house counts but little with those whose appro- bation he is most solicitous to preserve. We would not be misunderstood as suggesting a mean and parsimonious spirit in the country dwelling. Far from it. Every thing relating to it should be on a liberal plan — large enough, rooms enough for family and relatives, and complete in every luxury and com- fort; but all for use, and not for show. Ostentation should have no abiding place in the country. Health, leisure, amusement, quiet, rural beauty, are the objects for which the country is sought by the jaded citizen, or the lover of country life. These attained, the pur- poses of the park and its country house are accom- plished; and what these cannot provide within the limits of a reasonable expenditure in a dwelling, no amount of money can bestow. On the contrary, an 42 TAKKS AND PLEASrKE-GEOrXDS. opposite course — tlie squandering of a large sum on an object which in its nature and purpose is designed as a retreat from the throng and bustle of the town, has often defeated the very design intended, and driven many an honest seeker of the true pleasures of rural life again into the labor and turmoil of business, from the mistakes they had made in the outset. — Ed. AREAXGEilEXT OF THE IxTERIOR OF THE lIorSE. It may be supposed that the improver of a park and pleasure-grounds has nothing to do with the interior of a mansion, and it may be admitted that he is only indirectly concerned with it ; still, both its external and internal arrangements are to him matters of con- siderable importance, and come in fur a share of his attention, as they give a character, or at least impart a coloring, to the scenery which he may endeavor to create in the vicinity. AVe therefore deem it proper to offer a few hints on this subject. Every well-arranged mansion-liouse, whether large or small, should liave two principal fronts, the eutraiice front, and the draw- ing-room front. Of the first, the main door and hall form the principal features, as the drawing-room and other public rooms should do of the second. These fronts should be on opposite sides of the house, or if this arrangement cannot be adopted, they should be at right angles to each other, with an end window or two belonging to one of the public rooms opening on the entrance front. The former arrangement is calculated to impart to these rooms a proper degree of seclusion, and to keep them, as it were, within the best portion of the dressed grounds, whicli should be on the draw- ing-room side of the honse. Another portion of tlie interior not unfrequently interferes with the pri^ acy of IXTEKIOR OF THE HOUSE. 43 the dressed grounds, — viz., tlie servants' apartments. These, -when on the ground-floor and under the public rooms, overlook the pleasure-grounds in a most un- desirable manner. To obviate this inconvenience, the clumsy expedient of sinking them, in whole or in part, below the external level of the ground, is often resorted to ; but such apartments, even when famished with an open area in front of them, have always a damp, un- healtliy look, and not opl}^ give to the edifice a mean appearance, but also seem to indicate that from some defect in its construction, it had been necessary to stick it into the ground, instead of allowing it to stand on the surface. In either position, they interrupt that feeling of retirement which is requisite to the full enjoyment of dressed grounds. Servants' apartments may be formed, with excellent effect, into a sort of wing or minor group of buildings attached to the main body of the house. Besides these relations to objects immediately contig- uous, the arrangement of the interior of the house should have a reference to the park and the more dis- tant country. The drawing-room should always com- mand the finest views which are to be seen from the windows, whether these occur in the adjacent or in the external scenerj^. The views from the hall door are of minor importance, but they ought not to be overlooked or neglected. The house, when felicitously arranged in these respects, may be said to preside over the beauties of the place. Other considerations, indeed, may be, and often are, taken into account. If warmth rather than beauty is the object aimed at, the drawing-room front should look toward the south, whatever inay be the scenery in that quarter, and the entrance should be on any of the other sides which may be most sheltered or 44 PAEKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. most convenient. Both the elements of warmth and beauty, however, may sometimes be secured by placing the family rooms toward the south, and the public rooms toward the east or west, with end windows to the south or north, if the finest views happen to be in these directions. Note. — It will be readily seen that our author writes for an English, Scotch, or Irish climate, in remarking that " the views from the hall door are of minor im- portance." Our American cliinates in summer, when fine views are most to be enjoyed, are decidedly dry, as well as warm ; and the hall door, or one of them, at least, if there be two, shoidd lead on to the veranda overlooking the best view from the house. The ve- randa, even in the northern states, is the most pleasant place of resort in fine weatlier, and in the southern states it is indispensable for the enjoyment of the open air. Thus, \\\q hall door, in that connection, becomes a prominent feature of tlie house with us ; while in England, even in midsummer, it is but little used for such an object. For the same reason — the compara- tive coolness and moisture of the summer climate — we see few verandas on the English houses. They court the sun ; we seek the shade. Contrary to the text, there- fore, a hall door and veranda should be on the best front of the house, whenever the main conveniences of the dwelling will permit them. "With the other quite cor- rect remarks of our author we entirely coincide, and with him most heartily beg every builder of a house in the country to avoid a cellar-kitclien as he would a pestilence. Such tilings have no business out of a city under any pretense whatever. A rear wing to the house is the appropriate building for the kitchen, and CONSERTATORT. 45 all other working departments connected with it, as well as the proper place for the living rooms and dor- mitories of the servants. — Ed. CoxsEKVATOKY. — Among the various appendages which it is desirable that a mansion-house should pos- sess, none is more important than the conservatory, which, when happily placed, may be regarded as an extension of tlie drawing-room, or at least, if it is in the vicinity of the house, and properly connected with it, it is of admirable convenience as a place of walking and of recreation in all kinds of weather. If possible, it should be contiguous to some one of the public rooms or the corridor; if the drawing-room can be made to open into it, or communicate with it by a short corri- dor, so niucii the better; but it is most desirable that it should be easily accessible by the family without their leaving the house, or dohig more, at most, than passing along a glazed passage or veranda. When tlie conservatory enters into the original arrangements, one or other of these expedients may generally be practicable; but if it is entirely an after-thought, it sometimes happens that a suitable site for it cannot be obtained. It has wants of its own. It requires free air and open sunshine, and would be rendered useless were it shaded by the house. It obviously cannot stand on the northern side of the mansion ; and if the drawing-room has a central position in that direction, it is evident that no immediate connection can be estab- lished between them. There is nothing, however, in itself, to prevent it from occupying such a site on any of the other three sides as will harmonize with the other buildings of the house, or will suit the internal arrange- ments and communications. In general, it is easier to 4f) PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GROUNDS. make a good adaptation and adjustment in houses ol moderate extent, than in very hirge ones. The conser- vatory, when entered from the house, should be consi- dered as a glazed drawing-room, fitted, by its abundance of light, and its command of warmth, for the growth of fine exotic plants. Its internal arrangements should be simple, its passages of ample v/idth, and its whole ap- pliances should be such as to permit a free exhibition of the plants without their admirers crushing upon them or being incommoded by them. The shelving and stages, when these are introduced, should be kept low, so that the plants, if not below the eye, may be on a level with it, or not much raised above it. Such a position is required by many plants, as, for example, most of the heaths, camellias, cacti, pelargoniums, etc. Others, as the fuchsias, acacias, passifloras, and gly- cines, are seen with more effect from below, and may therefore be allowed to grow up, or may be trained in more elevated places in the house. When the conser- vatory is constructed on a large scale, the stages, per- liaps, had better be omitted, and the shelves confined -to the north side ; and besides borders round the other sides, the center may be arranged into wide plots for the growth of large plants in groups or masses. A paved walk may encircle the house, leaving a border between it and the upright glass walls, and the central space may be irregularly divided by paths of clean gravel, wdiich will have a more garden-like efifect than when a number of intersecting pavements are em- ployed. The internal framework of the house should be simple, but elegant. Elaborate decoration in this department has a tendency to detract from the efifect of the plants. Fine mouldings and carvings harbor OONSEEVATOKT. 47 insects, collect dust, and, as they are difficult to clean, contract an untidy appearance in a very short time. The coloring of the wood or iron-work should be light, but not glaring; a shade of whito in generally the most suitable, as it brings out the green of the foliage, and interferes little with the tints of the flowers. A foun- tain, or a group of statuary, is a desirable addition to the conservatory, as also a piece of rockwork for the growth of ferns and succulent plants. The heatiiig of the internal air is, in ordinary circumstances, best ac- complished by hot-water j^ipes, which, for the con- venience of the walks, must be placed below the floor, with iron gratings above them, to permit the immission of the heat. There is one important advantage in employing a hot-water circulation fur raising and reg- ulating the temperature, — viz., that the furnace by which the heat is supplied does not necessarily require to be close to the house, though undoubtedly it is the more effective the nearer it is. The boiler may be placed at the distance of more than a hundred feet without any material disadvantage, provided the pipes are laid under ground in a dry and double-cased drain, to prevent the escape of heat from the water in its passage to the house. The external aj^pearance of the conservatory, and its effect on the group of buildings composing the mansion-house, require careful and ma- ture consideration. There may be various positions which would suit it perfectly as a receptacle for plants, but in which any of the ordinary forms of glazed houses would have an injurious effect on the structure to which they might be appended. There is a certain amount of incongruity between almost all the forms alluded to and the architecture of our modern houses. Architects have 48 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. labored to overcome this difiicnlty, and seldom with much success. ludeed, their efforts have generally resulted in their making the conservatory a vegetable dungeon, or perhaps at best something like a Parisian orangery, rather than a lively and genial abode for plants, which require, for their healthy and luxuriant development, more light than our cloudy atmosphere and our distance from the equator readily aflbrd. When made an architectural erection, it should be constructed to admit as much light as possible. If this cannot be effected while it is kept in harmony with the mansion- house, it is better to withdraw it into some secondary position, and to mould it more in conformity with its main purpose, than for architectural display. In such cases, it perhaps ought to be at once removed into the general flower-garden; but before doing so, a place should be sought for it in the dressed grounds in the vicinity of the mansion-house, where it may be deco- rated with terraces and other ornaments, while it is treated directly as a glass-house fur plants, with inter- nal arrangements as above indicated. AVood and iron are generally employed for the framework of such houses, as they combine strength and lightness in a higher degree than any other materials. Stone pilas- ters, of slender proportions, maybe introduced, to give a somewhat architectural air to the structure. The glass which is used for the sashes should be good, and free from impurities and irregularities, in large squares, or in panes, long at least, if not broad ; for nothing connected with plant-houses produces so mean and slovenly an effect as short ])anes of glass with a multi- tude of overlaps. JS'ote. — The facility with which conservatories are STABLE-COURT AND OFFICES. 49 now got up in the United States, ought to make them an appendage to every complete country dwelling. "We can add little to what is so well said in the pre- ceding. Yet there is one benefit of the conservatory to which the reader's attention may, with great pro- priety, be called. Doctor Alexander H. Stevens, a distinguished physician of New York, thus speaks of the value of green-houses, in Downing's Horticulturist: " Having for many years suffered from a pulmonary complaint, some ten or twelve years since, in visiting the green-house of Mr. Niblo, then my neighbor in Broadway, during the winter, I found the atmosphere exceedingly congenial. It abated my cough, rendered the expectoration loose and easy, softened the skin, and induced a comfortable state of feeling, approach- ing to exhilaration. Wishing to have such an atmos- phere at command, I constructed a cold grapery, in which, whenever it has been convenient, I have passed the hours of reading and study. The climate of a cold green-house, in a sunny day of the winter or spring, is a Florida climate, and is entirely different from that of an artificially heated atmosphere. I venture to re- commend it, under most circumstances, to pulmonary invalids, in preference to the more expensive plan of removal to the south, involving, as it does, much dis- comfiture, interruption of business, hazard, exposure, and entire separation from friends." — Ed. Stable-court, axd Offices. — The stables and their appendages may form a suitable part of the mansion- honse group of buildings, where the latter are not below the medium size ; but when circumstances do not permit this arrangement, I would recommend for them a dry, sunny, airy situation, commanding a good 50 PARKS AXD PLEASUEE-GROrXDS, Bupplj of water, at a medium distance from the house, but ccrtainl}' not in a prominent position in the grounds. Scarcely any thing is in worse taste than a hirge rect- angular building, with its huge coach-house gates, - central pediment, and a steeple or tower, comjjosing together a staring object in the park, and competing with the mansion-house itself. Stables of this descrip- tion are not uncommon, and sometimes they have their dignity increased by being erected near the principal approach. While the stable-offices should be of easy access, they ought always to be placed on the secondary approach or back road. A convenient site for theui "may frequently be found on the edge of the pleasure- grounds, where they should be wholly or partially concealed by planting. A walk leading from the house through the grounds, and passing near a private entrance into the stable-court, will be found a great convenience. It is not unusual to combine the stable- court and farm-offices into one square. The arrange- ment is not a happy one, particularly if the farm- offices are extensive and near the house ; and it be- comes most inconvenient should the home farm be let, as it sometimes is, for in that case two masters and two sets of servants cannot long remain on good terms. Several instances of this misarrangement and its con- sequent annoyances have fallen under my notice. As a general rule, the farm-offices should be kept at as great a distance from the mansion-house as the con- venience of the home farm, and the easy access of the proprietor will permit. Note. — The stables should be within convenient call of the house, say from one to two hundred yards, and if possible, in a sheltered place on the leeward side, to STABLE- COURT AND OFFICES. 51 avoid the swarms of flies with which they abound during tlie heats of summer, being blown toward the dwelling. The stable-grounds should be of the driest description, and if not naturally so, they should be thoroughly underdrained, to pass off all superfluous water. Neither horses nor cows can be perfectly healthy on damp grounds, or in buildings standing upon them. — Ed. 52 PAKKS AND rLEASUEE-GROUNDS. CHAPTER II. THE APPROACH. Definition — Direction of the Approach — The Site of the Entrance- o-ate — Style of the Gate and Lodge — Line of Approach throiigli the Park — Gates on the Line of Approach — Formation of the Ap- proach — Roadway of Approach — Decoration of Approacli — The Avenue — The Fine Approach. An Approach is a road leading from tlic jmncipal highway of the district, and passing through the park and dressed grounds to the mansion-house. It is not to be considered as identical with the avenue found in some old places, which latter is an alley or straight road run- ning between parallel lines of tall trees. The term approach, in its general acceptation, may denote every kind of access to the house ; in common usage, how- ever, it is mostly restricted to the principal one. In districts where there are large forests or extensive pas- ture-farms connected, with the estate, the external high- way may be so private as to assume the cliaracter of an approach, and as such may require to l)e dealt v.-itli on the principles of landscape-gardening : at ])rcscnt it is proposed to speak of the approach only as internal to the park. In the estimation of some, the ai)]n-oacIi occu])ics a primary ]i]ace in the arrangement of a countiy rcsiden-ce. It is ])roba1jly sufllcicnt, in almost all cases, to allow it a third-rate ])Osition in the scale of im])ort- ancc. Tlic site of the house, as related to the ])ark. THE APPKOACn. 63 generally and to the leading road of the district, clearly ought to hold the first place, and the second may bo safely conceded to the pleasure-grounds and flower- gardens. These points, indeed, should not be deter- mined irrespective of the approach, a not uncommon mistake in the opposite direction; but in forming a general idea of the whole place, and particularly in the construction of the roads, care should be taken that the site of the house and the seclusion of the adjacent grounds should not be sacrificed, as they too_often are, to the vanity of having a fine approach. In most eases, there is no great difiiculty in making a good approach, at least when the house, office, gardens, and pleasure- grounds have been properly arranged ; but when these objects have been ill-assorted, the work is far from being an easy one, especially when the house has been set down with its principal entrance to the south, when it should have been to the north, or toward the east instead of the west; or when the kitchen or other offices are attached to the wrong wing of the house. Such mis- arrangements may be said to be of daily occurrence, and they often present almost insuperable obstacles in the way of properly laying out the various parts of the grounds. Tliese arise from the circumstance that no definite plan of the place has been formed, nor even a general idea of it conceived, till after the site of the house has been fixed, and perhaps the work of building has been partially, if not completely executed. The proprietor then begins to think how he is to get to his house ; he at length perceives difficulties in the form- ation of the approach, which render professional advice desirable, and applies for it when it is too late, or when all that the utmost ingenuity can efiect is a decidedly 54 I'AKKS AND PLEAS UltK-GI?OUNDS. inferior line of approacli. To avoid these errors the garden artist should be consulted almost as soon as the architect, or indeed, at the same time. We have no intention of disparaging the professional position of the architect, which, in relation to the house, must be admitted to be primary and all-important ; but as con- nected with the house, he has generally some ideas respecting the approach which we must be allowed to say should be received with cantion. lie naturally would make the approacli the means of sliowing off his own work, sometimes not judiciously even in reference to that object, and very often at the cost of sacrificing all the rest of the grounds. We cannot wonder that be should overlook that of wliicli he has seldom any con- ception ; but it is to be regretted that, on that account, a tine place should be deteriorated. Gentlemen who do not need professional assistance should make themselves sure that the requirements of the approach are brought in some degree into harmony with those of the mansion- house and the grounds, before the building operations are commenced. ']<(ote. — To bring all the features of the park into harmony, one with the other, after the ground which is to compose it is decided on, the whole subject, in all its combination and arrangement, should be made a study for months before the work of its cutting up and formation is commenced. The topography of the ground in all its peculiarities, should be perfectly familiar to the planner of the park, and to the architect of the buildings, that each may harmonize with the other. In the struggle for supremacy in showing off his own art, each in his own particular department, it would not be strange if the landscape-gardener and the architect DIRECTION OF THE APPROACH. OO should sometimes l)e at issue ; but in all such cases the practiced eye of the proprietor, or a comjoctent judge in Buch matters, should at once settle disputed points. The "Approach'' is of no consequence, as giving a continuous view of the numsion. On the contrary, it savors of ostentation in the proprietor, A striking glimpse from a turn or two in the roadway leading to it, is all that is necessary to impress upon the visitor the commanding position of the dwelling as the chief feature of the concern. — Ed. Direction of the Approach. — The position and direction of the principal approach, in respect to the surrounding country, are subjects which require mature consideration. When the nature of the ground and other circumstances permit, it should lead toward the house from that side of the park on which the nearest city or town of the district is situated, this being the direction in which the greatest number of visitors may be expected to arrive, and in which the social relations of the proprietor will cause him most frequently to travel. Eailways, however, have now become means of communication of equal, if not superior, importance to the public roads ; and hence facility of access to railway stations is more frequently sought for, and in many cases secondary approaches are, on that account, being converted into principal ones, and even new ones formed. In new places this necessity should be taken into account at first ; and if the principal approach cannot be made to afford a good and ready way to the railway station, as well as to serve the general purposes of the mansion- house, a second, scarcely inferior to the other, must necessarily be formed. Independently of railways, a second or even third approach to the mansion-house, 56 PARES AND PLEASUEE- GROUNDS. throngli extensive parks, is often needful to open up communication with the different districts of the sur- rounding country. When the second approach is of nearly as mucli importance as the principal one, similar care and attention must be expended on both. If the second and third are of quite a subordinate character, one of them should form a convenient road to the offices and gardens, while the other maybe prolonged to some extent as a drive through the park. In places of limited dimensions, a second approach and a back-road to the house may be usefully combined. The back-road to the house and service-roads, when well arranged, contribute much to the domestic convenience of the residence. They should connect the house, stables, kitchen-garden, the home farm, and the more frequented roads of the external country; and they should be such that the cartages between these various places should never be brought along the principal approaches, nor do more than cross them when necessary. Though.kept in good order, the ajDpearance and position of these roads should clearfy indicate their use. Note. — As a general rule, in the United States, the fewer " approaches " tlirough a park, the better. They are expensive to make, and expensive to keep in re- pair. Still, in well kept places, the main approach should not be made subservient to common and labori- ous uses. A hidden — so ftir as may be — roadway should accommodate the latter, and, if possible, never interfere with, or cross the other, when it can be avoided. — Ed. Site of the ExTrwVNCE. — The entrance-gate, and its necessary appendage, the lodge, form the commence- ment of the approach, and a suitable site for these, SITE OF THE ENTRANCE. 57 and an easy access to them, require attention. Their position is so often governed by the relative direction of the public roads, and by the boundaries of the park, that I deem it necessary to refer particuhirly to some of the best and worst arrangements regarding them. "When the public road joins the park wall at right angles, or nearly so, and then branches off to the right and left along that wall, the ground being level or having a gentle rise toward the park, an entrance-gate placed o^Dj^osite the junction of the two roads will oc- cupy one of the best and most imposing positions. If the road forms a single rectangular bend where it meets the park wall, this spot affords an excellent, though perhaps a secondary position. But when the road and park wall come together at an acute angle, their point of contact is perhaps the worst place that can be selected for an entrance, as it seldom admits of proper arrangements, and should be chosen only when the nature of the ground makes it absolutely necessary. When the first and second positions above mentioned cannot be obtained, we would recommend a plan equal in many respects to the second, viz., the selection of a suitable position for the entrance-gate on the side of the turnpike road, and the placing of the gate in a recess, at such a distance from the center of the road as will permit a carriage to be easily driven through it. Such a site will often be found more convenient than one of greater pretensions. In the case of sub- urban residences, there is generally little scope for the selection of a site for the entrance. Frequently the scanty space admits of nothing more than a gateway in the boundary wall. TJie entrance-gate to baronial residences, in the neighborhood of towns or villages, 8* 58 PAEKS AXD PLEASUKE-GEOU^'DS. is most advantageously set down at the end of one of the leading roads or princij)al streets. "When it is removed to the outskirts of the town, or to a distance from its natural locality, for the purpose of securing a long approach, it is aj^t to suggest the ideas of artilice and unnecessary straining after effect. Note. — The site of the entrance to a fine park should not strike off abruptly from the highway, as if by accident. It should be withdrawn from immediate contact with the main traveled road, by throwing out a sufficient area of the grounds to common use, to render the ajjproach to the gateway easy and natural. No stint of room, or parsimony in wall, should indi- cate any thing but a liberal appropriation, in all that concerns the proprietor. The entrance should look inviting; and that can never be when the gate and the walls adjoining it are pinched up close up to the line of the highway, or turn at a short angle in a dodging direction, like the hole of a fox, as if in fear that some one should find it. There should be quite as much an expression of dignity and character in the entrance to the park, as in that of the grounds and buildings within it. — Ed. Style of the Gate and Lodge should be regu- lated by the extent and character of the residence as a whole. The common rule ha? been, that the style of the lodge^ and gate should follow exactly that of the mansion-house. Perhaps there is no absolute necessity that it should be so, particularly when the buildings supposed to be compared stand at the dis- tance of one or two miles from each other; neverthe- less, there should be no maried opposition between the respective styles. A Grecian lodge and gate will STYLE OF TilE C-ATIC AND LOPGE. 59 not prepare one fof a Gotliic or Elizubctban majision. Mr. Gilpin well reniai'lvS, that the style of the lodge and gate should be made suitable to the local position in vvhfch they are placed. AVere this always the case, their effect would be less open to criticism than it fre- quently is. We may add, that there should be a visi- ble harmony, not only in style, but in impoi-tance, between the gate and the lodge ; for the one is often sunk by its marked inferiority to the other. Some- times, when referring to the principal entrance into a l^ark, one hesitates to speak of the gate or of the lodgc^ jfrom the relative want of importance of the one or the other of them. Although the gate is the principal object, and the lodge only an accessory aj^pendage, in designing them the result aimed at should be a united and well-balanced group. When the approach is short, there is a greater necessity for an exact similar- ity of style between the entrance-buildings and those of the mansion-house. The wate should stand at rio-ht angles to the line of the approach, and should be placed sufficiently back from the center of the public road, when one passes in ft-ont of it, as not only to enable a carriage to stand clear of the road and the gate while the latter is opening, but to turn easily into it. It also conduces to convenient attendance on the gate, that the lodge is furnished with a window which commands a view of a carriage coming from the house some time before it reaches the jrate. Note. — The prevailing fault in building gates and lodges, is in the effort at too ambitious a style of archi- tecture, and a consequent expense in the structures themselves. The gate should be in keeping with the main inclosure, both in strength and costliness; so. 60 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GEOUNDS. also, with the lodge. It is tlie habftation of a depend- ent. It should ape no ostentation, nor have expensive fittings. Yet it should look like a dwelling, as it is, with all the little conveniences for tidy and comfort- able living. The attempt, sometimes seen, at building a gate-lodge in the similitude of a temple, or other fantastic pretension, is but little above ridiculous. Utility, in all such cases, is the controlling feature of beauty, as well as propriety. — Ed. Line of the Approach through the Park. — When a judicious site for the entrance-gate has been selected, a good starting point for the approach has been obtained. After passing the gateway, it should proceed at right angles to the line of the gate for a short distance, the length of this part being regulated in some measure by the nature of the ground and tlie extent of the park. It may then turn off toward the mansion-house, in a line, of which we may remark generally, that though it may not be the shortest that can be formed, it should certainly not be unnecessarily prolonged. A straight line, it is well known, is the least possible distance, and persons in haste naturally take it; except on level surfaces, however, it can rarely be adopted, even on the public highways, where rapid locomotion is most desirable, and considerable detours are often made to avoid the retarding eifect of steep inclinations. In the park, as now laid out, the straight line is seldom employed, as it cannot be intro- duced without a stiff and bald appearance. On the other hand, an approach two or three times longer than necessary may be regarded as paljDably absurd ; and not less so is an approach which is, for any reason, led over steep and difficult ground, when perhaps an LINE OF THE APPROACH. 61 easier line spontaneously suggests itself to the observ- ant traveler. The exhibition of fine views is a tempt- ation to commit both of these faults ; but it is a tempt- ation which should be resisted. AVhile the approach may disi)lay the average beauties of the place, it is bad taste, as well as bad economy of pleasure, to lengthen it out for the mere purpose of showing the extent of the park or displaying the prospects which its best points may be made to command. Such waste, as it may be justly called, should rather be avoided. The extent of the park may well be left to actual inspection in rides taken for the purpose ; and the finest views should be reserved for the principal windows of the house, for rustic seats or other stations in the dressed grounds, or for walks or drives if these be necessary. In forming an approach on level ground, it is proper to introduce a few easy sweeps or curves round groups or clumps of trees : these we prefer to the dull insipidity of one great uniform sweep, which scarcely any planting or other means of decoration can relieve. On rising and undulating grounds, those approaches have the most elegant eflect whose lines harmonize best with the natural curves of the surface. In such cases all cutting and embankiug should be avoided as far as possible. Xothiug can be in worse taste than to cut through a broad swell of ground of small elevation, or to bank across a wide hollow whose surfaces vary only two or three feet, for the purpose of forming a level road, or what may be called some imaginary gradient. When cuttings find embank- ments are unavoidable, as they may be on short, abrupt, rolling undulations, or steep surfaces, they should be rendered as inconspicuous as may be. Easy 62 PARKS AND- PLEASUEE-GROUNDS. inclinations in all cases are extremely desirable, and to obtain these on rongh ground considerable sacrifices must often be made, both in adding to the length and diminishing the beauty of an approach. Into this species of work, however, the furor of railway-making has introduced some of its most violent operations, and has added very little to approaches, as good roads, while it has taken much from their agreeableness, as good drives through a park. Before proceeding to blast rocks with gunpowder, or to cut into or through ridges, it is well to see whether we cannot save expense and the beauty of the ground by deviating a little to the 1 ight or left. One of these new approaches, formed in defiance of all such considerations as those now in- dicated, and executed by a ci-devant railway surveyor, has been, not unaptly, styled by observant neighbors, "The Lodge and Stables Direct line," from its passing close by the latter offices in its way to the house. . In this case, however, there are probably more faults than cutting and embanking. A well-laid-out approacli will seldom be made to cross the park on the drawing- room front of the house, in its way to the principal entrance. It is desirable, however, that the house should be seen from it in one or two advantageous positions, and that it should be in part visible from tlie windows of the public rooms, in order that the inmates may perceive the approach of visitors. If there are circumstances Mdiich make it unavoidable for the approach to pass the drawing-room front, it should be kept at such a distance, and conducted at such a level, as to prevent the dressed grounds from being overlooked. J^ote. — ^The approach should arrive at the house in GATES OX THE LIXE OF APPROACH. 63 the easiest possible way, curving round the hills, and avoiding the hollows — shunning cuttings and fillings alike. It should, on breaking into the finer grounds adjajcent to the house, rather surprise the stranger at the magnitude and grandeur of the place, than to show it only as he had fancied it from the glimpses he had caught in his passage up. 'We have seen places which struck us with disappointment on arriving at the main points of attraction, from their less imposing character, in reality, than thev showed when approaching them from the entrance. The view from the house should, if possible, surpass all others ; or, if not, the grand view of the place should not be an everv-day afiair, to be stopped for, and gazed at as the lion of the establishment, at any one point in the usual approach. It should be apart and by itself, to hold divided empire with nothing else on the premises. — Ed. Gates ox the Lixe of the Prixcipal Appegach. — Gates intervening between the entrance-lodge and the main door of the house should, generally speaking, be avoided. They either betoken some want of skill on the part of the designer, or they are the result of some mal-arrangement of the subdivisions of the park, or, perhaps, of additions to the dressed gi'ounds. The only excei:)tions to this rule are the cases in which parks and pleasure-grounds are very extensive. In Buch circumstances, secondary gates and lodges may be necessary. Even in small residences, when the approach cannot be protected by a fence, the whole way to the main door of the house, a light iron gate may be required to defend the piece of lawn or ornamental ground before the entrance-front. The subdivision of the park for grazing purposes, is the 64: PARKS AND PLEASUEE-GUOUNDS. principal source of the gate nuisance on the apj^roach ; but it may be abated bj the use of wire fences, used as divisional fences, and made to run parallel to the line of the approach, in which case they interrupt the continuity of the park in a very slight degree. They should be kept back from the road, at least fifteen or twenty feet ; and the grass growing on the intercepted space may be cut for hay or eaten down occasionally by sheep. "We have found such an arrangement ex- tremely iiseful in a park where the approach jjassed through a M-ood, pasture-lands, and pleasure grounds, for the length of a mile, without a single gate. Note. — We can see no necessity or propriety for subdivision fences, or gates, within a park, unless on extensive agricultural estates, where they may become indispensable for the conveniences of cultivation, or pasturage ; and in such cases, it is worth some pains to ascertain if they cannot be avoided. All cuttings- up of the grounds, by "fences, hedges, or otherwise, mar the dignity of the places. Apparent extent is a chief feature in a park proper ; and if this be sacri- ficed to the common checker-work of farm fields, bet- ter make a farm of it at once, and place the house in a well-kept lawm, with its tidy inclosure of wire fence, or paling, to protect the shrubbery and flowers which appertain to it, rather than pretend io jparh the place, and leave it, after all one's effort, a failure. — Ed. Tekmination of the Approach. — ^That part of the approach which is nearest to the house, and comes up to the entrance, requires very careful adjustment. AVhen the ground is level, a suitable termination is comparatively easy; but in other cases, cutting and fiilling up of the surface may be needful, before access ROADWAY OF THE APPROACH. 65 can be had with a gentle inclination to the hall door, or a sufficient breadth of level surface can be formed in front of it. Almost every case has some peculiarity of its own. There should always be a level platform of gravel of sufficient breadth to allow carriages to turn on it. When this platform is small, it is very desirable that the adjoining portion of the approach should be level. When the nature of the ground ad- mits of it, the platform should be extended, and its exterior portions should be laid down in grass. Where the ground slopes rapidly from the entrance-front, it is proper to support the platform by an ornamental wall or balustrade. The approach should, if possible, never descend toward the house, without a consider- able space of level ground intervening between the lowest point of the descent and the entrance-platform. Any visible descent near the house always imparts to the latter a mean and inferior appearance. Roadway of the Approach. — The road, to have any thing like a tolerable appearance, cannot be less tban twelve feet wide. From twelve to sixteen feet may be regarded as a medium breadth ; but it may be necessary to make it as much as twenty feet, A long, narrow approach, through an extensive j^ark, has very much the look of a footpath. The road should be well formed ; for, though it may not be subjected to the bur- den of heavy cartages, the carriages that pass over it are not always of the lightest description. Besides, in addition to its being a good road, it should also be a irood walk, and this cannot be effected without its be- ing finished in a superior manner. The roadway should have its bottom paved with hand-packed stones, from four to six inches deep ; over these should be placed 66 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GROUNDS. four inches of rather small road-metal, blinded with two inches of fine gravel. If gravel cannot be had, five inches of road-metal will be necessary, and two inches at the top must be broken fine. In certain dis- tricts there is abundance of what is called rotten rock, or beds of rock partially decomposed by the action of the atmosphere, which supply an excellent blinding material. The road should be rounded by being raised iu the center two or three inches above the sides. In damp situations, small drains should be formed along each side and below the roadway. "Where the road- way has a hard bottom, that is, when it is cut through rock or firm gravel, the packed stones may be omitted. It is good economy to make a thorough road over the whole breadth at once, as carriages do not always keep the center, and are sure to break down that part which is insufiiciently constructed. The secondary and other service-roads in the park should also be well made, though they do not require to be so finely finished as the approach. It may be laid down as an axiom, that well-made roads are most easily kept in order, and least expensive in their after management. Where cut- tings and embankments are required on approaches, several feet of level space should intervene between the road and the bottom of the slope down to it, or between the road and the upper edge of embankment which supports it. In both cases the newly-formed slopes should be rounded so as to unite as far as possible with the natural curves of the ground. JVote. — This road-making is an expensive business in America, and where it is of considerable extent within a park, may cost more than the house itself By the aid of thorough under-draining— and under- DECORATION OF THE APPROACH. 67 draining is not very expensive — a good road may be made, even on heavy lands, with the soil over which it passes. All water-courses running across them should be well and highly bridged, and carried away as directly as possible, and the side ditches turned off at every convenient opportunity. The manner of laying out the road, or approach, as spoken of in a preceding section, will materially affect the cost of making and keeping it in repair. — Ed. Decoration of the Approach. — Much ornament by means of trees and. shrubs is not required in the approach, although a moderate degree of embellishment may be considered necessary, and its amount should be regulated by the extent and character of the domain. G enerally speaking, nothing more of this kind is need- ful than what belongs to the entrance-gate, or the par- ticular portion of the park or dressed grounds passed through. In relation to this point, and particularly in regard to the exclusion of exotics, a good deal of finical pedantry has been exhibited by writers, who seem to have forgotten that the laj-ch and the horse-chestnut were exotics in the early part of last century. It may be conceded that rhododendrons, lilacs, and other flower- ing shrubs are out of place in the open park ; but these plants are out of place, not because they are exotics, but because they are associated with the ideas of culture and keeping which, in the situations referred to, they are sure not to receive. It is certain that good ap- proaches are often spoiled by excessive decoration. Such is particularly the case when they are separated fi'om the pastures on each side by slender or temporary fences. The slight restraining effect which these fences have on the continuity of the park is much augmented 68 PARKS AND PLEASUEE-GEOTTNDS. when shrubs are planted along their edges. Certain circumstances, however, no doubt warrant a greater amount of ornament than we have considered to be generally necessary. The approach, on its way from the entrance-gate to the mansion-house, may pass only through woods and pleasure-grounds, or at most may only skirt the grass lands of the park, and be separated from them by permanent fences. In these situations the sides of the approach, except where they are narrow stripes, afford available space and opportunity for col- lections of exotic trees and taller shrubs ; but dwarf shrubs, unless required for the completion of an arbo- retum group, should be reserved for the flower-garden. ;i^ote. — "We are delighted at the good sense of an author who ignores the affectation so ambitiously practiced by many landscape-gardeners, in sticking a park full of the meaningless things which have no fit place other than in an arboretum, or on the smoother grounds about the mansion. The outer park is nature's own dressing room, filled with robes, ample, full, and flowing. There let the trees and shrubs native to the place have wide sweep in luxuriant profusion. If they be meager in variety, it maj'- be filled with other kinds, but equally natural to the soil and climate. "We have seen a long road, through a comparatively wild park, bordered with choice roses, vines, and shrubbery held up by trellises, and protected by railings, all out of place, and good-keeping. Such should be for the lawns, and pleasure-grounds, and they have no business out of them. The natural tree, the rugged rock, the tumbling stream, the quiet lake, and the tangled brush- wood, are features which most attract, and specially belong to the park alone. — Ed. THE AVENUE. 69 The Avenue. — In a previous page it was said that the avenue is a species of approach, leading toward the house in a straight line, and bordered by parallel rows of trees. It may be asked, when is this form of approach to be adopted ? and what is to be done with it when it has been established ? These questions are answered in our observations on the park, along with some remarks on the relation of the avenue to the general scenery of a place. At present it may be enough to say that avenues are most effective on flat surfaces, and that it is only on these, and perhaps on ground with a slight and imiform inclination, we can recommend them to be in any case planted. If the undulations of the ground are but slight, open avenues may still be admissible ; and these open avenues, when connected with the lawns of the mansion-house, should be of considerable breadth. When, however, they are formed as approaches, their width should not be greater than the height to which the trees forming them usually grow — say sixty or seventy feet for common elms, planes, and limes, and from seventy to ninety feet for beeches and English elms. If wider, they will be deficient in that stately and imposing effect which is the principal charm of an avenue. The open variety requires double rows of trees on each side ; and if these are planted at twenty or twenty-five feet apart, they form subordinate close avenues, like the side aisles of a Gothic church, and afford si)aces for charming shaded walks. The usual effect of the avenue in the park is to divide the land- scape ; and this, indeed, is the principal objection to its adoption, as in this respect it is almost totally incon- sistent with the modern style of laying out grounds. There are sometimes positions near the entrance-gate 70 PARK8 AND PLEASUEE-GE0UND8. where it can be introduced with good eifect ; and it may be employed without injury to the scenery when the approach passes through a wood. In our judg- ment, nothing is more miserable than the taste which converts the bare, ill-grown trees of a hedgerow, which has bordered some parish road, into an avenue through whose narrow, irregular line an approach is made to pass. Certainly these stunted deformities should be prevented from dividing the landscape by the dividing stroke of the woodman's axe. Note. — We have no response, otherwise than to add our emphatic concurrence in so sensible a con- clusion. — Ed. The Fine Approach. — The species of access to a mansion-house which we have ventured to call a fine approach is seldom found connected with large resi- dences or extensive estates, but not unfrequently with such small places as require only one approach and a back-road. We m.ay describe it as a carriage-way from the entrance to the house, so laid out as to dis- play all the princijoal views and leading beauties of the place. It leaves nothing worth looking at to be seen from the windows, and it renders all further inspection from walks or gardens unnecessary. It is in itself a thing of primary importance. Indeed, nothing can rival its ambition, except, perhaps, the vanity of the individual to whom it owes its formation. These ap- proaches are often unnecessarily prolonged. We have seen them following the boundary of the property to a considerable distance from the entrance, the only ob- jects between them and the public road being the park wall and a belt of shrubs quite insufficient to deaden the noise of carriages outside. In other places they THE FINE APPflOACir. 71 may be seen extending for a mile or more tliroiigh a narrow stripe of trees planted on the sloping banks and knolls, on the side of a small valley or of a wide glen along which the public road passes. This is, indeed, the favorite position of the fine ajyjproacJi. The highest powers of the designer, who is rash and inexperienced enough to undertake the work, are called into exercise. Cuts, and curves, and gradients, and embankments, are all elaborated for the purpose of enabling the ap- proach to occupy the principal points of view. In the limited grounds no room is left for the formation of a good walk. The approach is walk, and ride, and every- thing. Seclusion there is none, except that the fine approach is not much frequented, people familiar with it often preferring to go by the back-way to the house. It is evident that in such elaborations the proprietor thinks more of seeming the applause of strangers than of consulting his own comfort and convenience. He is content to admire and enjoy by proxy. In short, of all the follies committed in the laying out of country residences, the fine ajpjyroach may be allowed to wear the crown. Note. — According most heartily with our author, we have not a word to say at variance with his views on the affectation of which any one who chooses to indulge in the vanity of a " fine approach " may be guilty. It is a fortunate circumstance that in this country, all the elements constituting the attractions of parks and plea- sure-grounds are to be found ready made to our hands ; and they are showered around us with a profusion which renders a choice easy, and comparatively unex- pensive. It is, therefore, in a sheer wantonness of prodigality, and an entire absence of sound taste, that Y2 PARKS AND PLEASUEE-GEOUNDS. he wlio wishes to enjoy the luxuries of a fine park, and its pleasure-grounds in their natural connection, will seek by any other process than in following out the agreeable natural features of the place, to create them into a fitness to his purpose. Bare spots may have to be clothed with trees and shrubbery, unsightly places may have to be partially leveled, or filled, -and waste places made verdant; but no violence to the prevailing features of the adjoining territory should be attempted. It should look, when the hand of man has improved it, as if nature herself might have done the same : that man had only washed her face, and combed her hair, and given her a more attractive garb. — Ed. PLEASUEE-GBOUNDS AJS'D FLOWEE-GARDENS. 73 CHAPTER III. PLEASURE-GROUXDS AXD FL0WER-GARDEX3. Position of the rieasure-grounds — Composition of the Landscape — Terraces — Walls — Grass Slopes — Slirubs on Terrace-banks — Stairs or Terraces — the Upper Surface of Terraces — The Flower-garden — Site of the Flower-garden — Ground Color — the Parterre — the Ro- sary — the American Garden — the Mixed Flower-garden — Artistical Decorations — Rockworks — Shelter of the Flower-garden — Walks in the Pleasure-grounds — Formation of Lawns. Undee the designation of pleasure-grounds or dressed grounds are comprehended those inclosed spaces within the park, and in immediate connection with the house, which receive regular keeping and dressing. In ordi- nary circumstances, their walks are cleaned and their lawns are cut two or three times each season, and the leaves which fall on them are cleared off every winter. Besides the amount of labor thus bestowed on them, these grounds are further distinguished from the wood- lands of the park by the quantity of shrubs, both ever- green and deciduous, which they contain, and which make up the bulk of their underwood. Position of the Pleasure-grounds. — These grounds should be so placed as wholly or partially to surround the mansion-house. We would have said wholly^ were it not preferable that the entrance-front should be in a great measure open to the park. When the entrance- front is inclosed, it should only be for the protection of the gravel and lawn in the immediate vicinity of the 74 PARKS AXD PLEASUKE-GEOUNDS. house. The extent of this gravel and lawn will, of course, be regulated by the size of the whole place. It is seldom expedient to have much lawn in front of the mansion. Generally speaking, it is better that the grazing lands of the park should occupy this position, and tliat the scenery on this side of the house should partake rather of the character of the paric than of the pleasure-grounds. Being limited," then, on the entrance- front of the house, the pleasure-grounds, on the draw- inir-room front and on the other sides, will receive a proportional enlargement. Their actual extent must be determined by the nature of the ground and the size of the park. Perhaps they may include all the space in the vicinity of the house, with the exception of tliat on the entrance-front, from which may be had tlie finest views in the park and in the surrounding country. These views add much to the interest and variety of tlie grounds. If there are few or no pros- pects of this kind, the greater is the necessity that the pleasure-grounds should be so laid out as to awaken interest and to aiford gi-atification within themselves. Note. — We must dissent from our author in his re- commendation of " surrounding" the house Avith the pleasure-grounds. ISTo country house can be complete in its arrangements without an area of ground, of some extent in the rear, inclosed and shut in from the ob- servation of strangers. To say nothing of the conven- ience to servants in the performance of their various daily labors, a part of which are almost indispensably out of doors, access to the house-offices in the rear, with provision, wood, or coal wagons, and a conven- ient contiguity of the out-buildings, demand a retired COMPOSITION OF THE LANDSCAPE. ^5 ground set apart for domestic use. TTe Lave remarked more fully upon this in our previous notes on the posi- tion of the house in the park. With such exception, we quite concur in the views so properly expressed in the text. — Ed. Composition of the Landscape. — The views which it is desirable should be possessed from the house re- quire a varied arrangement of the dressed groimds. As formerly stated, those on the drawing-room front should, if possible, be the finest. Sometimes they may all be included in one prospect, the pleasure-grounds forming the foreground of the picture, and the park and exterior country making up the middle-ground and the distance respectively. In certain cases, the whole scene is necessarily confined to the pleasure- grounds and park, and in others entirely to the pleasure- grounds ; but whatever be the extent of view, on the proper arrangement, and on the blending of the dif- ferent parts- of the scene, will depend the success of the landscape-gardener in the operations committed to him. It is evident that, with such diversified materials and appliances, a diversity of treatment will be neces- sary. When the middle-ground and the extreme dis- tance of extensive views are of a varied and interesting character, it is seldom expedient to introduce much ornament into the foreground; but if the middle-ffround is tame and the distance uninviting, tlie interior should be made as ornamental as possible ; and the same effect should be aimed at when the middle distance is dis- figured by disagreeable objects which cannot be wholly excluded or concealed. When the whole scene is within the park, and still more when it is wholly within the pleasure-grounds, it must receive the more careful 76 PAKKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. attention, and be so dealt with as to i^roduce the best effect that the character of the locality will allow. When the views from the house are extensive, it is not needful that a large extent of pleasure-ground should be spread out before the windows. Such breadth of dressed ground throws back the pasture-lands of the park, and either conceals or renders indistinct those groups of living and moving objects Avith which it is ten- anted. Herds of deer or of cattle, and flocks of sheep, impart much animation to the scene, which should not be lost if it can possibly be preserved, much less should it be artificially excluded. The pleasure-grounds, as seen from the house, should be formed into lawns, interspersed with groups of trees and shrubs, either separate or combined. Flower-beds may be formed in some positions, especially where the view does not extend into the park, and along with these a fountain or pond with a jet d''eau^ or an artificial lake, may be introduced with good effect. Flower-beds are very suitable on a terrace near the house. A small flower- garden, in connection with a boudoir, is also appropri- ate ; but a flower-garden on an extensive scale should be reserved for a separate division of the pleasure- grounds. In open spaces in the grounds, detached flower-beds appear to be objectionable, as they do not mass well with the other groups, as they lessen the breadth and interrupt the continuity of the lawns, and being bare excej)t during a few months in summer, are but seldom in a really ornamental state. At the same time, a flower-garden, in a proper situation and at a reasonable distance from the house, is a most desir- able object of interest, inviting frequent visits and affording agreeable walks; and, indeed, extensive COMPOSITION OF THE LANDSCAPE. 77 pleasure-grounds can scarcely be deemed complete without one. Note. — In the composition of the landscape, every agreeable object which the eye can reach should be embraced. A range of far-off hills or momitains, or a single bold peak of either, even if a partial cutting away of the park forest be necessary to reach the view, will add greatly to the interest of the scenery. An expanse of water, bounding the vision in the distance, gives a grandeur of expression second only to moun- tains, and when coupled together, like a high prom- ontory shelving down into a broad lake, a wide bay, or the open sea, or a range of mountain beyond the water, they form the most perfect combination of boundary to the landscape. • In all cases where the park proper approaches the house, nothing, after the due disposition of trees with their intermediate vistas and glades of open grass, adds Bo much spirit, life and character, as herds of cattle, and flocks of sheep. Deer we exclude from American parks, as being too expensive and ungovernable within such inclosures as we can usually afford. They may be kept in narrow grounds secured by high walls, or fences; but the scantiness of such arrangement would detract from the effect which animals of that character are intended to produce. A wide scope, and a free range are required by all semi-wild animals, and with- out them their appropriate interest is altogether want- ing. A herd of short-horned cattle, in their imposing massive forms, and beautifully intermingling colors; or a group of clean-limbed Devons, with skins of deep mahogany ]iue, and graceful contour of body, will tlirow a picturesque beauty over the grounds that nothing 78 PAUKS AND PLEASURE-GEOUNDS. else can equal ; while scattering flocks of the dark-faced southdown, or the white-bodied, broader form of the long-wooled sheep, quietly nibbling on the knolls, or reposing in the shades, will fill up a picture of perfect repose. Or, if a sheet, or stream of water lie within the park, in the absence of the swan, the white or brown China, or the great African goose, with their hio-h curving necks, and clarion cry, are objects of charming interest, as they sit or SMdm gracefully upon its surface. Indeed, no park scenery can be complete without choice cattle and sheep ; and where water is added, its web-footed tenants, to enliven its presence. Such are the objects which give life and interest to the park and pleasure-ground. The common, ill-bred cat- tle, sheep, and geese of the country, give no ornament to any highly-kept ground. — Ed. Terraces. — When well arranged and adapted to the character of the locality, terraces are excellent and hio-hly ornamental accompaniments to the mansion- house. As seen externally, there are few objects which add so much dignity to the house, as they form a fine outwork and extended basement, and impart a stately effect and an imposing breadth to the whole group of buildino-s. They also afford an admirable outset to the work of decoration in the vicinity, and serve to connect the house and the grounds in a manner which could hardly be accomplished by a lawn, however highly ornamented. Internally, they may be made a good architectural foreground to the scenery as viewed from the house. They may also be used to conceal a one-sided slope, or a twist in the ground, which may have a disagreeable effect as seen from the windows. To a house situated near a steep, abrupt declivity, TERRACES. 79 terraces with suitable walls may be not only ornamental, but almost indispensable to the protection of the in- mates when walking in that part of the grounds. AVith- out them, indeed, in such situations, scarcely any thing in the way of ornament or convenience can be effected. The adoption of terraces should be suggested by the nature of the ground and the character of the house, rather than by any considerations immediately con- nected with themselves. Nothing is worse than a terrace out of place. We generally do not expect to find them on very flat surfaces, although, in certain circumstances, a single terrace of low elevation has a good effect. On slight declivities, two or three feet of descent will afford a suitable opportunity for intro- ducing this species of ornament. Where there is no slope, the terrace may nevertheless be introduced by raising the base of the house sufficiently at its first erection, and then by carrying the earth that is neces- sary for the embankment. AVhere there can be only a small breadth of dressed grounds between the house and the j^^i'k, the terrace wall may form the fence of these grounds, and may be more in keeping with the house than one of a lighter construct! o]i. The most important position of the terrace is on the drawing- room front; but it is not necessarily confined to that, as it may be extended along the ends of the house, and even of the ofiices, if these latter touch the side of the dressed grounds. Terraces should be considered architectural formations of the grounds : as such, their leading lines should be level, whether they are bounded by walls or by banks ; and these lines should also bo parallel, and especially when there are more than one terrace on the same slope. The upper surfaces, too, 80 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GKOUNDS. slionld be strictly parallel in their planes : any deviation in this respect gives the whole a twisted appearance, and suggests the idea of their having been executo'D. 109 the splendor of its vegetation. Few "Xabotlis' vine- yards" here stand in the way of the approj^riation of all that need satisfy the taste of one who has the means to enjoy his bent to the utmost in posses- sion of such a pleasure. Such are our agricultural parks, and while subservient to profitable purposes in grazing, they may minister to the finest taste in all that embellishes the land with natural beauty, and grandeur. To their preservation, we commend, most earnestly, the attention of those whose enviable lot it is -to possess them. For the more restricted objects of such as seek the possession of a park as an object of luxury in the populous districts of country contigu- ous to our large towns and cities, the natural features of open ground, and forest, in appropriate places, and sufficient variety, are not so readily found ; and these must, of course, be supplied by planting and cultiva- tion. To them are the instructions of our author chiefly directed. — Ed. ]S"atural Character of the Ground. — Most places have intrinsically a natural character, which is mainly dependent on what may be called the contour of surface. This, being a matter of great iinportance, should receive immediate and studious attention, both from the proprietor and the artists who may aid him in erecting his house and laying out his grounds. It is obvious that the nature of the surface must materially affect the style and position of the mansion-house, the adornment of the dressed grounds, and the extent and character of the park, approaches, and, in short, every thing connected with a country residence. Katurc affords an almost infinite variety of contours, each requiring or suggesting a different treatment. For 110 PARKS AND TLEASURE-GKOUNDS. example, the house and its environs may occupy part of a dead flat, a level as uniform as a painter's canvas ; and this situation may be accounted the least felicitous, or certainly the least suggestive, of all, as it obliges the designer to create rather than regulate a landscape. Again, the surface may be concave, including the two sides of a valley of moderate width ; or it may be the lower part of the slope of a hilly country, where it gradually descends into the plain — in other words, one side of a broad valley. On the other hand, some sur- faces are convex-^ a long and slightly elevated ridge, we may suppose, or a lower spur of a mountain or range of hills, or a bold promontory running into the sea. Once more, the house may be seated on the shoulder formed by the junction of a primary and a transverse or secondary valley, on a platform over a lake or arm of the sea, or on the winding bank of an inland stream or navigable river; and of course the character of the park and grounds must be modified by these varying circumstances. Manifold are the other diversities of natural surface ; and to the slightest reflection it must be apparent that they cannot all be dealt with in the same way. On a convex surface, for example, we do not generally meet with standing water; the beauties consist mostly of distant views, and the business of the designer is to select these, to render them conspicuous, and to set them off with beautiful foregrounds. On the other hand, the concave surface suggests water scenery, such as the lake or the artificial river. From such a locality the distant views are necessarily limited, or extend only in the direction of the valley ; but if the house be planted near one of the rising edges, or on the breast of a slope, there will ACQUIRED CIIAIJACTER OF THE GROUND. Ill be room for admirable pictorial effect in the middle distance and opposite ridge, as well as for delicious ■walks or rides in the lower grounds. "We throw out these hints rather as illustrative of contour than as in- dicating specific plans for j^articular localities. We need scarcely add, that this natural diversity of surface, while in its individual forms it affords one of the es- sential elements of beauty, and has probably suggested most of what is really fine in the practice of the art, utterly precludes the laying down of any general rule as everywhere applicable. TVe shall have occasion to revert to this principle; meanwhile, we beg the atten- tion of our readers to its importance. Acquired Character or the Ground. — Except where a residence has to be formed in an unimproved and desolate region, (and that is a task not of common occurrence.) the locality to be dealt with will have not only a natural, b^ut also an acquired character. Some growing timber is generally found where a man thinks of setting down a house, and there are fences, roads, and perhaps farm buildings or other rural objects already existing. And if the designer is called in, not to give a primary plan, but to improve or extend wliat has been already done, he is sure to find before him buildings, plantations, and other matters connected with country residences. All these circumstances originate what we have called an acquired character, which, in some cases, may have obliterated in a great measure the natural expression of the place, particu- larly if the latter was not strongly marked at first, or it may have brought out such a want of harmony as to necessitate improvement. In dealing with the ac- quired character of the place, the artist will find that 112 PAEKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. there are certain objects, such as the mansion-house, offices, and j)ortions of the woods, which can seldom be altered, and which must be treated as fixtures. Such objects are not unfrequently sources of great embarrassment. They often so modify the whole of the alterations that the place, even after every possible improvement, is greatly inferior to what it might have been had the fixtures been skillfully arranged at first. All these points, then — the natural contour and ex- pression, the acquired character, and the mutual modi- fications produced by the intermingling of both — must be carefully studied by the artist ; for it is only by means of a matured knowledge of these, and by avail- ing himself of the alterations which they place within his reach, that he hopes to bring out those beauties which the eye of taste can discover slumbering and buried, as it were, in a mass of deformity and confu- sion. No quickness of eye can dispense with, hardly any inspiration of genius can supply the want of, careful and accurate study on the ground. Planting in the Park. — Planting is the principal means of ornamenting the park ; and accordingly, trees and shrubs are the chief materials with which the de- signer has to operate. On the presence or absence of these, and on their due arrangement and distribution, will depend the superiority which the lands of the park, thus adorned, will have over lands of a similar charac- ter and extent, but occupied simply as j)astures. This difference may be small at first, but it will be rapidly developed by the yearly growth of the trees. In this department of planting, various objects are to be kept in view. Shelter may be necessary in particular quarters ; seclusion, also, is requisite. But the principal SURFACES TO BE PLANTED. 113 aim which the ornamental planter has to keep in view is, of course, scenic beauty. To attain this end, particular attention must be given to the nature of the surfaces which are to be planted; and of those we shall now proceed to speak. Note. — In order to a perfect understanding of his future plans, the proprietor of a park on which im- provements of any kind are to be made, should have a correct topographical map of the whole territory embraced, that at his leisure he may become familiar with every point of interest, and with ^\&i'^ elevation and depression which it embraces ; and if the geologi- cal formations of his grounds differ one from another, such differences, and their character, should also be noted, to govern him in their fitness for the growth of certain trees, shrubbery, and plants, in preference to others. All such should have their appropriate place, as on their adaptation to the soil will their growth and ultimate effect materially depend. — Ed. Surfaces to be Planted. — Of these we may remark generally that their exact nature should be carefully ascertained, their present and possible future physiog- nomy should be attentively studied, and the amount and distribution of the planting should be determined accordingly. The planter will endeavor to bring out the beauty which intrinsically belongs to the peculiar situation, or may be elicited from it. At the same time, he will take care not to shut out whatever is picturesque in the surrounding country from the prin- cipal points of view. We have already said that a flat surface is the least propitious to pictorial effect; still, by skillful management, a certain amount of it may be accomplished, or, at least, a great improvement may 114 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GEOUNDS. be .made on a bald and uninteresting locality. On such ground the artist will have to depend on his own power of grouping together the masses of wood which he may deem necessary for the purposes of decoration ; and though he cannot avail himself of any swell of the ground to add variety to the scene, he will have the satisfaction of knowing that the outlines of his plantations, clumps, etc., are perfectly at his command, and that their effect cannot be diminished by any twist or contortion of surface — a difficulty of not unfrequent occurrence in other cases. Deprived of any advantage which may be derived from undulations calculated to heighten the eifect of a plantation, or to relieve the defects of an outline, he will have to create a piece of scenery which should be com|;]ete in itself, and should- form a graceful and harmonious whole. The disposition of the woods should be such as to make up a variety of apparently connected, yet diversified, scenes, of con- siderable length and breadth within the park. It is of great practical moment to remark, that to accomplish this, less planting will be required on a flat than on any other surface. The open spaces should be roomy, the glades wide and sunny, and the whole expression of the place should, so far as is possible, be light and airy. In an undulating or hilly country, the woods ought rather to occupy the sides of tl\e hills or rising grounds than the intervening valleys or hollows. In this way the woods are seen to greater advantage, r.nd they tend to increase the height of the eminences on which they are placed, and proportionally to deepen the grounds below them. When the valleys or de- -pressions of a park are all planted up, as they too often are, the necessary result is the concealment of SURFACES TO BK PLANTED. 115 the natural inequalities of the ground, and the produc- tion of a dull uniformity. Of course, while recom- mending the planting of wood on the higher positions, we do not mean that the smooth outline of every green hill should be exchanged for a serrated one of trees placed over it. Still less would we recommend the capping of all the knolls with clumps of wood, which is in as had taste as planting up all the hollows. "We M'ould have some of the hills or rising grounds in the park covered with masses of wood feathered out toward the bottom, with scattered groups thinly distributed across the valleys. In other cases, the rising grounds might be clothed with groups becoming thinner toward the to^D, and thickening as they descend on both sides. Where there are low green hills with fine outlines, the summits of one or more of these should by all means be left vacant, and a curtain of wood drawn along the lower slopes and base, and even the adjacent valley. Where there is no such variety of surface as we have supposed above, or where the park is of limited extent, each case will fall to be dealt with as the natural char- acter of the place will suggest or allow, regard being had to the general import of the principles already indicated. The planting of the sloping banks of the platforms which constitute the main area of some parks, and of the ravines by which they are intersected, has often a wretched effect. This is owing to several causes ; for example, to their being formed without relation to other groups or masses in the park, and to their trees appearing above the banks, and dividing the land with what seems a meager, ill-grown belt. When such places are planted, they should form a por- tion of some of the more general combinations in the 116 PAIIKS AND PLEASUBE-GJROmn^S. park, and the spaces covered with trees should be ex- tended beyond the top of the banks in order to secure a certain amount of breadth. It sometimes happens, that in such planted ravines the lines of light along the upper edges of the slopes, as seen from below, proclaim the poverty of the whole affair. "We add an earnest caution against the inconsiderate filling-up of ravines and hollows by means of M'ood. Such places may have no agricultural, and but little pastoral value, and yet the choking of them up with plantations may be almost the last thing which an improver ought to do. Aerangement of Woods in the Pakk. — This is a subject second in importance to none which Ave have hitherto treated. Success in this department is essen- tial to that unity and harmony which are necessary to the development and finished expression of park scen- ery. It is, however, a matter somev/hat difficult to handle, both in theory and in practice. For the sake of clearness, we may begin our remarks with the ex- planation of a few terms which we can not heljj using, and which, indeed, we have used already. A Group is a term borrowed from the technical language of painters and sculptors. It denotes an aggregation of at least two, but generally more objects, closely related to each other by nearness and position, but only re- motely related, in these respects, to other objects. In the internal structure of the group, the objects are so arranged, that while one or more may occupy leading positions, the others hold only inferior places; at the same time, each must appear to belong to the same combination, and to contribute to the making up of a whole. The external and remote relation of the group to other objects, is of a more evanescent and indefinable ARKANGEMEXT OF WOODS IN TUE PARK. 117 description, but is of not inferior importance. A group may, indeed, be conceived in a state of isolation from objects of the same kind, as two or three human figures in the corner of a landscape-j^ainting, a few statues on a terrace, or a patch of pahn-trees in a wide desert ; but there is probably always, even in the case of the palm-trees, a mental reference to existing ac- companiments, perceived or imagined. In landscape- gardening, a group, though apparently detached, is uniformly part of a whole. It remains to be added, that groups are either simple or composite: simple, when they are made up of single objects, such as trees or statues ; composite, when they are formed of single groups, or of the other more condensed and extended bodies of trees, which we now proceed to mention. A Clump is a group considerably increased in the number and density of its component parts, without any apparent internal arrangement, but with a definite figure and decided outline. A clump of trees may be called a small wood. Viewed at a moderate distance, the form of that half of it which is next the spectator can be taken in at once by the eye.* A 3£ass of wood is hardly a technical term, but yet a very convenient one. It denotes a large body of growing timber, ex- hibiting an apparent continuity of boughs and foliage, and of such depth that the horizontal light can not be seen through the stems of the trees. That portion of • Lexicographers inform us that the word clump was originally written plump, and they adduce as examples, a plump of trees, of horse, of fowls, etc. Near the beginning of ' Marmion,' Sir Walter Scott, imitating an old ballad, employs the expression, " a plump of spears," and adds in a note, "This word properly applies to a flight of water- fowl, but is applied by analogy to a body of horse." From certain analogies iu words derived from the Anglo-Saxon, it would seem that clump and lump are nearly allied, if not identical; and it must be owned that a lump of trees is a phrase not a little descriptive of many clumps to be found In parks and pleasure-grounds. 118 PARKS AND PLEASCKE-GROUNDS. an extensive plantation or forest which is visible at once, may be called a mass of wood. In the park, however, the masses, generally speaking, are of more limited dimensions ; yet they are so large, that while the irregularities of outline in the vicinity of the spec- tator can be perceived by him, the forms of the ex-' tremities are distinguishable only when viewed from a considerable distance. Masses and clumps may be either inclosed or open ; they are generally inclosed. It will be obvious from our definition of a composite group, that the places of the component members may be taken by other groups, and by clumps, and even masses ; so that we might speak of a group of groups, a group of clumps, and a group of masses. It will tend to clearness, however, if we reserve the term group, at least when accompanied with qualification, to denote the smaller and simpler aggregations. In the larger and more composite arrangements, we shall prefer the expressions, a system, or combination of clumps or masses. As the word grouping has been extensively used to express the principles of combina- tion or composition in rural scenery, we shall continue to avail ourselves of it when necessary. It is hoped that, the above explanations being kept in mind, the following remarks will be sufficiently intelligible. In carrying out the arrangement of the woods, the de- signer should begin with forming certain leading sys- tems of masses, to be filled up and completed by secondary and minor combinations, together with the necessary clumps or groups of scattered trees. For the principal masses, a few leading 2-)Ositions should be selected. The house and j)leasure-grounds should be included in one ; a hill, or rising ground, or rounded ARRANGEMEXT OF WOODS IN THE PARK. 119 eminence, may form the center of a second or third ; while the boundary of the park toward the home farm, or other portion of the boundary wliere disagreeable objects are to be concealed, may afford room for a fourth or fifth. The secondary combinations, tliough inferior in extent to tlie primary ones, will yet, in many parks, be of sufficient dimensions to vail the stables and farm-ofiices, and to shelter the kitchen-gardens when these are placed in detached positions; they may also be employed with good eft'ect in other places, such as around the entrance-gates and lodges, the gamekeepers' and park-keepers' cottages, and along the boundary of the park. The secondary masses are also serviceable in connecting the principal ones, and so making up what we have called the systems or main combinations. The minor combinations are fre- quently required for the same or similar purposes, especially when they are formed of groups of trees. The size, number, and variety of these diversified aggregations of trees, necessary for the decoration of the park, will, of course, depend very much on the extent of the ground and the natural character of the surface. When it is intended to give the whole what is called a park-like appearance, spaces of grass land of considerable length and breadth should be left open between the principal masses of plantation, and also between a number of the secondary ones. On the other hand, when it is desired to inq^art to the place the character of woodland scenery, the main combina- tions should be enlarged and drawn more closely to- gether, and the grass lands should be reduced to the form of glades and openings in the woods. In local- ities with a level surface, where little is seen beyond 120 PAEKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. the park, and where the creation of as large an amount of scenery as is possible within it is an essential ele- ment in its formation, tlie combinations of masses of plantation will necessarih^ be fewer, and placed fm-ther apart, than where the surface operated on is of an un- dulating, hilly character. "Where a large body of wood is required, it is injudicious to form the leading and secondary masses into dense and almost impervious thickets, as is too frequently done ; it is better to ar- range them into a gradation of masses interspersed with lawns, glades, and other openings, in addition to the rides by which they may be traversed, and the ordinary roads necessary for their management. Where the main masses are small, a similar effect may be produced by lesser openings and indentations. In both cases, groups of trees, and single trees, should be scattered through the glades and along the margins of the larger bodies of wood. This is exemplified in those places in which masses of wood are seen form- ing pleasure-grounds round the mansion-liouse. We do not mean that these masses of wood in the park should be dissected into as many and as small divi- sions as are often necessary in the dressed grounds ; but there are many places in which the woods are greatly enlivened by such open spaces, and by the addition of a few clumps and groups of single trees, relieving yet attached to the general masses. In hilly and mountainous countries, large masses of wood are sometimes planted, but it is seldom desirable to inter- sect these with wide openings or lengthened glades. A better effect is produced by bays and indentations, as already recommended. When the woods have been formed, as above explained, into a variety of leading GKOUl'IXG OK COMBIXATION OF IT.AXTATIOXS. 121 and secondary combinations, the position of the indi- vidual plantations should be such as obviously to appear portions of their own systems. They should vary in size as well as in form, and should be separated b}' open spaces of varying breadth. The projections of one ma}^ advance toward the recesses of another. In many cases they may be blended into one whole by means of groups of trees scattered round and among them; these will produce a light and varied effect, and tend to counteract any formality in the general outlines. Grouping or Combinatiox of Plantations in the Pake. — In our previous remarks, we have taken for granted that some general arrangement of the different bodies of wood should be adopted. It is necessary to insist on this principle, for it is very frequently over- looked or neglected. "We often see isolated masses occupying positions for which no apparent reason can be discovered, and which probably were selected from the original low value of the ground in an agricultural point of view. Trees, the remains of old hedge-rows, or of departed clumps, or of woods that have been re- moved, are dotted over extensive surfaces. Fences, dividing the park into separate fields, draw their mea- ger and ungraceful lines, perhaps, through the -very center of a fine breadth of view. The effx^cts of such misarrangements are confusion, incongruit}', or at least a sad diminution of the pleasure which the otber fea- tures of the scene might have afforded. To avoid these unfortunate results, some general system or' grouping should be sedulously followed. In extensive parks of from one to two thousand acres, there is often room for three or four, or even more, main combina- tions, such as we have specified in a previous article. 122 PAKKS AXD PLF.ASCRE-GEOUNDS. In more UmitGcl localities, the principal grouped masses will, of course, be fewer in number, or on a reduced scale. "When these have been marked out, the subor- dinate masses, clumps and groups, are to be laid down in proper coordination. Single trees should be scat- tered irregularly here and there, in such a manner as to harmonize with the larger masses, and to take off the stiif and constrained appearance presented by the outlines of the denser plantations. By this mode of 2;rouping, the grass lands will be thrown into masses of greater breadth, and the surrounding woods and groups of trees will exhibit entire scenes of themselves, connected yet dissimilar, united yet diversified, by the ever-varying interchange of glade and wood, of broad grassy expanse and clump and group, or single trees, and exhibiting at one time the deep shade and dense color of the mass, and at another the lighter and airier graces of individual forms. "When a park is laid out on these principles, that is, with a properly arranged gradation of combined masses and groups, and a bird's- eye view of it is taken, it will present a highly-diver- sified appearance ; and though there are few surfaces on which the whole system of grouping can be made visible at once, yet from so much ot it as can be seen, the successive pictures will be more numerous and more pleasing than can be afforded by any chance- medley system. The increase of variety and intricacy in form and position, will invariably produce, in a cor- responding degree, a diversity in the succession and intensity of light and shade. In short, we have the certain superiority of design, if that design is not ob- trusively formal and artificial, over the imperfect, irregular, occasionally interesting, but rarely occurring OROUPIXa OK COMBINATION OF PLANTATIONS. 123 beauties of accident. The principle of grouping, in parks and pleasure-grounds, though of the utmost im- portance, has, we believe, been sadly neglected, both in the original formation and in the improvement of country residences. Many planters seem to have no conception of the principle. Others seem to have been disposed to cover with trees all surfaces which they could not turn to any other account. Some have been seized with the itch of transplantation ; they have not known when to stop, and have clung with invin- cible pertinacity to the misdeeds which they have ac- comjilished M'ith much expense and labor. Some, again, have been unwilling to cut down old trees — a reluctance with which we cordiallj^ sympathize — and have failed to connect them skillfully with the adjacent masses, which either have been or might have been formed. The only consolation in these cases is, that the labyrinthine effect formerly alluded to not unfre- quently cloaks the deformities, if at the same time it obstructs and precludes the beauties which might have existed. We see little of the confusion, because the dense encumbrances of the landscape do not permit us to see much of any thing. The eye of taste, indeed, can often discern the loss, and suggests regrets that so many natural advantages have been thrown away. There is, however, one specific fault to which the neg- lect of general grouping very commonly leads, and which ought not to be passed over without some ani- madversion — we mean what has been ludicrously but appropriately called the Dotting System. This consists in placing a number of objects in nearly equidistant positions, without reference to their intrinsic or relative importance. Examples of this mode of planting occur 124: PAKKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. ia the park when plantations, clumps, or groups, are set down in complete isolation, or without any percep- tible relation to surrounding objects. Trees are seen occupying the broad spaces or narrower openings be- tween the woods, without a greater affinity to one mass than to another. This effect, exhibited on the side of a green hill, where it is peculiarly infelicitous, has been well compared to a pattern of sprigged mus- lin. Into pleasure-grounds and gardens the dotting system has also intruded : in these, iigures containing shrubs and flowers, as well as single shrubs and trees, are often sprinkled witli the most undeviating regu- larity. The main object would seem to be to leave unoccupied no piece of grass or plat of ground above a certain and verj'- moderate size. On the lawns of many gardens this paltry and tasteless system has been carried out to the greatest perfection. A better taste, indeed, is now being diifused ; we have, however, ob- served a finished specimen of this style in a garden of great pretension and celebrity, and which is supposed to exhibit the very perfection of British gardening. A pinetum is dotted over an extensive lawn, without respect to the natural physiognomy of the trees, and, what is more surprising, without any regard, so far as we could discover, to their botanical affinities as spe- cies. A few formal clumps of rhododendrons lend their aid to complete the general insipidity. It must be admitted, at the same time, that it is seldom that lawns are dotted with such hardy tenants. They are frequently filled with half-hardy objects, undergoing the miseries of acclimatizing experiments;* and the * All efforts in the way of accommodating the plants of warmer regions to our somewhat ungenial chmc, ought to be encouraged and proraotedj as every additiona. 1 OUTLINES OF PLANTATIONS IN THE PA.RK. 125 eye is regaled with the stunted growth and discolored foliage in summer, and the stake, and the mat or furze covering in winter. The results of the dotting system are, a general monotony, and an insipidity, which no variety in the character of the trees or shrubs will ever overcome. There is the same breadth of light and shade on this tree and on that — the same patchwork of sun- beam and shadow wherever the eye can turn. On the common, or in the native forest, we do not find the wild denizens of nature put down at equal distances. Where the hand of man has not interfered, the trees and bushes are seen in masses and irregular clusters, with single plants scattered round. them, and forming groups of greater or less dimensions. In the mass or group- you will scarcely find half a dozen plants grow- inof at the same distance from each other. The single trees are mostly in closer proximity to some portion of the general group than to another. Hence arise the infinitely-diversified beauties of the native pine forest, and the captivating and almost inimitable grace of the wild oaks and birches on the sides of the High- land glens: and hence, too, the ceaseless interchange of light and shade, both on tree and turf, on which the eye never fails to dwell with pleasure. In short, grouping is everywhere productive of interest and beauty ; dotting, of insipid monotony and languor. Outlines of Plantations in the Park. — In form- ing plantations, it is necessary that the outlines of those portions of them which require inclosure should hardy tree orshrub issomucb clear gain to gardening. But the transition or training proces-ses should be kept in their proper place, viz : the inclosed garden. Where beauty of scenery is the object aimed at, the trees and shrubs should be sufficiently hardy for the average climate of the locality. Those sUghtly tender, or requiring shelter from cutting winds, may fiud some warm, quiet nooks in the flower-garden or plexsurc-grounds. 126 PAEKS AND PLEASUEE-GKOUXDS. be adjusted with rcforcuce both to the general group- ing and to the surfaces on which they stand. Of course, these outlines should assume a pleasing variety of form. Large, curving sweeps seem to be favorite lines, and they are occasionally fine; but they become insipid when often reproduced. On the other hand, the fretwork of numerous small recesses and projec- tions are equally wearisome; besides, when seen in front of their general lines, their zigzaggeries are scarcely discernible ; and, indeed, the less the better. Instead of these, let the projections be bold and the recesses deep, rather abrupt than otherwise, yet with- out the appearance either of too much angularity or of roundness. The outlines of plantations and clumps in parks have very frequently the expression of con- strained formality, and that, we believe, from two dis- tinct causes. The first is the inferior character of the outlines themselves ; and the second is the practice of planting the trees either close up to the fences or in a line parallel with them. In some places, where it may be difiicult to have the fences so formed as to produce, by the projections and recesses of the plantations, that degree of light and shade which is desirable, a general line of fence must be formed, as well as circumstances^ will allow, with a forward and retiring bend where a projection and a recess are w-anted, the effect of the latter being brought out by the planting. This is a useful method to adopt with clumps. In these, a gen- eral line of fence, curving round the promontories, if we may so call them, and bending toward, but not entering deeply into, the bays, will be free from those angularities which it is impossible to avoid when the fence follows servilely the feathery outline of the trees. .^ BELT?, CIRCLES, ETC. 127 At the first planting, the proper recesses should bo left entirely vacant within the lence. Unless this is done, one or other of two results is necessary, — either an extremely irregular outline offence, whicli from il.s crooked continuity is ofl'ensive, or, if this is avoided, the very great probability that the wood will never be properly tl)inned and grouped out at an after period. This remark holds specially true of clumps planted for the subsequent formation of groups. Many things which " the prophetic eye of taste " designs, are for- gotten in the routine of the present, and the mind grows familiar and satisfied with what was never in- tended to be permanent. Perhaps, at length, in the estimation of the forester, the well-kept fence becomes of more importance than the clum]^^f itself, and all the attention the latter receives is a little thinning at times. For these reasons, we earnestly recommend that the feathered outline of the plantation should be carefully formed at once, even though considerable vacant spaces should be left w^ithin the fence. Of course this recommendation is not intended to apply to all cases ; but there are many places in which its adoption is the only method of securing a varied outline of trees, with a pleasing outline of fence ; and there are other places in which a considerable improvement may be effected by its partial use. Belts, Circles, etc — Belts should never be intro- duced into the interior of the park; in their straight outlines and heavy uniformity there is a total want of variety and intricacy of effect. On the extreme boundary, something like a belt may be at times in- dispensable. On those farm lands where shelter, not beauty, is desired, the belt, provided it is of sufficient 128 PARKS AND PLKASUKE-GROUXDS. breadth, is one of the most useful forms of plantation. Circles and ovals should be entire!}' confined to the flower-beds of the dressed grounds, among which, when small, their effect is good enough. In the park, they are distinguished by their invariable tufty char- acter, betraying clearly their formal and monotonous outline. Of all forms of plantation, they are among the most intractable with which the improver has to deal. If the wood could be spared, their entire re- moval would be the speediest and most advisable im- provement to whicb they could be subjected ; but as this can seldom be done, the improver must exert his ingenuity in grouping them out, or in making such additions to their mass as their size, position, and the nature of the ground will allow. JS'ote.' — After the full and exceedingly practical re- marks of our author, on the several heads of park improvement, scarcely a word need be added. Yet, as the formation of American parks, different from English ones, as frequently consists in cutting out, thinning, and clearing away the forest, or parts of it, as otherwise, a remark or two may be applicable to that branch of the subject. In remarking on the naked appearance of our coun- try, in its most extensively cultivated districts, nothing is more common than the expression of regret and disapprobation at the sweeping manner in which the original forests have been cut away by the early set- tlers, and that so few, or scarcely any trees are left to shade and embellish the land. Such expressions are usually made witliout a proper knowledge of the sub- ject, and which a better acquaintance with the char- acter of our original forests would correct. It is not BELTS, CIRCLES, ETC. 129 aeniecl that a recklessness in cutting away and sweep- ing off every vestige of the forest, in some cases Avliere it might be beneficially lell, is too often the case; but M-hen we reflect that the main object is to bring the forest lands under immediate cultivation, and that such cultivation can not succeed under shade, and among a mass of living roots, lying mostly near the surface, such as original forest trees usually pre- sent, it need be no cause of surprise that the pioneer, looking only to his bread, and the future support of his family, should clear his lands of every impediment to so desirable an end. In point of utility, he is en- tirely right. For cultivation aloDe, in its most profit- able result, a field should never have a tree nor a shrub within it. Pastures, only, require them ; and it is a subject of discussion still, with graziers and stock farmers, whether shade trees are at all beneficial to the growth and thrift of cattle — the subject of taste, or embellishment to the land, by the presence of trees, being excluded. Our forests are composed of trees thickly set, and drawn up to great heights, with bare stems, small, slender tops, and roots widely spreading near the surface of the ground. A continual struggle for supremacy has existed with them, ever since they grew at all, and each tree striving with all its might to overtop its neighbor, and shoot up into the light and sun, which are indispensable to their existence. A part of the forest being cut away, and sun, and air, and their drying influences admitted, many of the border trees of the standing forest sicken and die from the absence of their usual moisture ; others are prostrated by the violence of the winds which now break in upon them through the clearings ; and even 6* 130 PAKKS AND PLEASUHE-GROUNDS. if left standiug in masses, years of time arc necessary to acclimate the exposed trees, and quicken tliem into a renewed and healthy growth. AYhat, then, must be the condition of a single tree, or a dozen, or iifty trees, even if left contiguons to each other, deprived of their mutual support, the shade of the underwood beneath them, and their accustomed moisture at the root, with the glaring heat of the sun drying up their trunks, and the driving winds heaving at their tops like a huge lever acting on their thin-spread roots, spread over a surface of soft, porous mould? They must be blown down, or die a lingering and miserable death, of neces- sit}^, in nine cases out of ten, at least, where the ex- periment is tried. Occasionally a tree, more firmly rooted in the soil than usual, maj- survive. But what, in case it do survive, is such a tree good for ? Its huge, bare trunk, shooting up into the sky, and supporting a meager tuft of half-feathered branches, is any thing but an object of beauty ; it scarce ever grows another inch, and remains only as a specimen of what the forest among which it stood once may have been. It is measurably so with smaller trees, few of which, mider like circumstances, survive at all ; or if they do, scarcely ever arrive at a full and vigorous maturity. We speak feelingly, and from long experience. The acres of forest which have been cleared under our immediate supervision, may be counted almost by the thousand ; and among the multitude of trees which Ave caused to be left, in various kinds, and under all cir- cumstances, not one in a hundred remain ; and were we now to make a choice, at the end of twenty years, to produce the best eftect in a forest plantation, whether to go into an old, dense wood, and clear j^ortions of it AKTinCI^VL STYLE. 131 out, or cut it all down, and clear it away, and take the chances of the young growth immediately springing up to supply its place, we should assuredly take the latter. In such case, however, we should not apply fire to the clearing; the brush should be simply thrown together, and if the timber and wood were not avail- able to be draM-n away, they should be Icit on the ground, to decay and keep it moist. The young wood will immediately spring up anew, and grow with a rapidity which would rc-clothe it in a surprisingly brief space of time ; and this, thinned by degrees, could be trained and fashioned into the finest models of forest grace and beauty. There are positions, howcvez', where limited tracts of wood exist, and oi second growth on light, dry soils, W'here it may be safe to enter, and by a gradual thin- ning and clearing out, letting in by degrees the sun and air, the remaining trees may be preserved without injury to their growth. Such woods should be thus treated ; but under the circumstances before described, the felling and clearing off of the entire forest is the better course; and where they are required, young trees had better be set out anew, than to trust the con- tingences of preserving the original trees, which will be almost sure to end in disappointment. — Ed. Artificial Style. — In our remarks on parks and pleasure-grounds, we have hitherto kept in view almost exclusively the natural style in these departments of gar- dening. We would not, however, altogether overlook that artificial style once so much in vogue, but which, though now antiquated, is worthy of preservation wliere fine specimens of it exist, aiid which might even be reproduced, at least in part, in certain cases. It is 132 PARKS AXD PLEASUEE-GKOUNDS. a poor and pedantic taste which can derive pleasure on]}'- from one kind of beauty. The main features of this style, in the park, are avenues and. alleys, the lat- ter being sometimes parallel, sometimes crossing each other obliquely, or radiating from a common center; and in the pleasure-grounds, in addition to these, the principal characteristics are terraces, stairs, fountains, and statues. Portions of these means of ornament have been adoj^ted witli good effect in many well-laid- out places. We should be disposed to recommend them, as indeed we have, in connection with the man- sion-house and flower-garden. "When the structure of the ground is favorable, they form a suitable transition from the highly artificial forms of architecture, to the free, unconstrained developments of natural objects. In the park, angular and radiating alleys are perhaps tolerable only in level situations, or when they can be viewed from a moderately elevated platform occupied by the mansion-house. AvEXUES. — ^We seldom recommend the planting of avenues in the park, except in certain localities noticed in our remarks on the approach. The stiff formality of the avenue is injurious to park scenery, as it fre- quently divides, by its straight lines, a fine expanse of grass, and obscures t!ie most interesting part of the landscape. Another objection to the avenue is, that it requires to grow for the lifetime of two or three generations, before it produces its full effect ; and it is not surprising, therefore, that it is so seldom planted. The same trees, arranged in groups and clumps, would present a beautiful appearance in one-third of the time. Avenues should hardly ever be attempted, except AVENUES. 133 on a level surface, or on ground with a slight and uni- form rise. A close avenue, composed of two rows of trees, and planted on an undulating surface, has al- ways a poor look: on tlie contrary, even in such situa- tions, where there are breadth and mass, as in the compound avenues at Windsor, the effect is fine. Th§ question may be asked, " What is to be done with an old established avenue ? " We may answer, partly in the words of Mr. Gilpin. "The avenue," says he, ^' is in general so destitute of composition, by cutting the landscape in half, that the introduction of it must depend upon the circumstances of the place itself. On the other hand, where time has invested it with dignity, and the rest of the scenery is coeval with it, temerity rather than judgment would dictate its destruction. Breaking it by partial removal is, I think, equally injudicious." With the opinions here expressed we heartily concur. We venerate an old avenue, with its double or quadruple rows of ancestral trees. No sacrilegious axe ought to be lifted up against them, even thougli they divide the landscape in two. The destruction of a magnificent range of limes, or elms, or chestnuts, hallowed by immemorial associa- tions, is too great a sacrifice to any prevailing taste, however excellent ; and if by breaking is meant the removal of the greater part of the trees, and the pre- servation of such a small residue as will mark the position of the old lines, the effect would be worse than a total removal. In the dressed grounds, avenues, without injury to the general effect, may sometimes be formed through some of the large masses of wood ; but in these cases the trees should not be placed at greater distances than 134 PARKS AND PLEASUEE-GK0UND8. is sufficient for a broad M-alk or ordinary drive. We do not admire a practice which has become common of late, — that, viz., of j^lanting some of the finest lawns of pleasure-gromids with avenues of the Indian cedar. (Phius Deodara.) Judging from the char- acter of this tree, as well as from the peculiar forms of the fir tribe, we have great doubts whether these cedars will ever produce a fine av-enue except as a broad and open one, with double rows on each side. The Indian cedar itself is highly interesting and beau- tiful ; so far as we yet know it, it seems admirably adapted for light grouping or single trees, and it is to be hoped that it will prove sufliciently hardy, not only to live in our climate, but also to attain that magnitude and form, which have so often awakened the admira- tion of travelers in the East. I^ote. — In relation to " artificial style," and " ave- nues," we happily have so few places of such charac- ter that they are of rare impediment to those who wish to form either parks or pleasure-grounds anew. Pos- sessing such, however, a fine old mansion, and stately trees, in whatever form they may stand, are objects of decided respectability, and may be preserved and cherished without violence to a very considerable de- gree of beauty and eflect, in their way. The hand of " improvement," in our fast age, may well spare the relics of a bygone century, which could boast, we fear, a sturdier virtue, and a higher patriotism than pre- vails among their more money-loving successors. — Ed. OENAMENTAL CHARACTERS OF TREES. 135 CHAPTER V. ORNAMENTAL CHARACTERS OF TREES, DETACHED AND IN COMUTNATION. Introductory Remarks;, Sect. I. The Forms of Single Tr^-t-s — Dread RoUnd-headed Trees — The Spiry, Conical, or Pyramidal Configuration — The Upright or Oblongated — Tlie Weeping or Pendulous. Sect. II. The Colors of Trees — Table of the Colors of Foliage of Trees — General Remarks. Sect. III. The Ornamental Character of Trees in Combination — Coni- cal or Pyramidal Trees — Round-iieaded Trees — Intermingling of the different Forms and Colors — Concluding Remarks. If we may assimilate landscape-gardening to land- scape-painting, we would say that trees are the princi- pal means of ornament available to the garden artist. They are, as it were, the colors with which he paints, and with.M'hich lie fills up the outlines presented by nature or selected by his own taste. We have already touched generally on the massing and grouping of trees — that is, so lar as regards the forms and posi- tions of these groups and masses, and their relative combinations. Something remains to be said respect- ing the ornamental character or expression, if we may so call it, of trees, and of the facilities which they consequently aiford in the laying out or improvement of park and garden scenery. 136 PAEKS ANT> PLEASURE-GROUNDS. The comparative value of trees, as means of orna- ment, is a subject which has been little studied ; or, at least, it has been imperfectly expounded in books ; and yet it is one of very great importance. The expression of the ground outline of a wood or clump, for example, may be perfect in itself, but it may be modified into very different degrees of excellence by the character of the trees of which it is composed. We can con- ceive two parks as nearly as possible the same in other respects, still, if each is planted with trees of a dis- tinct and peculiar kind, the difference of effects result- ing will be so great as very much to diminish any ori- ginal resemblance between them. Firs, when planted by themselves, or where they prevail to the general exclusion of deciduous trees, give a permanent ever- green character to the park. When the plantations are occupied by the common run of trees that shed their leaves, without a due admixture of the fir tribe, the results will be masses of foliage during the sum- mer and autumn months, and an obvious bareness and meagerness in winter and spring, particularly where the bodies of wood are small, or are deficient in breadth. It is evident that much must be gained by a skillful distribution and mixture of both classes. The same remarks apply, and perhaps with increased force, to groups of single trees, and to detached trees ; these are very much dependent for their beauty and general effect on the kind of the trees employed. Our present object is rather to bring the ornamental character of trees before the notice of our readers, than to attempt a full exposition of a subject which, in a general point of view, is somewhat indefinite; and which, in its particular aspects, branches out into a THE FORMS OF SINGLE TREES. 137 multitude of details. Our remarks may be directed, first, to trees individually in respect to form ; then, to their color; and lastly, to their expression in combined masses and o-roups. Sect. I. — The Forms of Single Trees. The forms assumed by the individuals of any species of tree, such as the oak or Scotch fir, vary much with the soil, situation, and age of the particular tree, yet amid all their diversities they preserve a character at once discernible by the practiced eye. The oaks in the rich and open park, in the crowded forest, and in the mountain ravine differ greatly from each other, but they are plainly oaks, and have each a beauty of their own. How dissimilar, also, the plume-like ash in its youth, rushing up in some sheltered valley, to the round-headed ash of middle age, in an open situa- tion, and still more to the gnarled, large-timbered, wavy-boughed, and pendulous-branched ash, bending under the weight of years. In the same species, too, there are often constitutional differences, amounting almost to what botanists call varieties. These circum- stances necessarily preclude minute verbal description. Still there are certain general forms affected by trees in their natural growth, and all that is required for the purpose of the planter is to keep these steadily in view. Though every species and variety of tree has its own peculiar expression, if not distinct character, we do not deem it necessary to advert to each separately, believing it to be sufficient for the illustration of our subject, to class them under four leading divisions, and 138 PARKS AND PLEASUEE-GEOHNDS. then to refer to a few of the kinds principally em- ployed in ornamental scenery. As we go on, we may point out their most suitable and efi'ective positions in the park and pleasure-grounds. The first division consists of trees with broad, round heads ; the second^ of those with a spiry, con- ical, or pyramidal configuration; the tliird, of those with upright or oblongated forms; and i\i& fourtli, of those with weeping or pendulous branches. The reader is reminded that these forms are given merely as approximations : he is not to attach to them the precision of geometrical figures. (1.) Broad^ Round-headed Trees. — Of the decidu- ous kinds, the sycamore, the American plane, the com- mon oak, the Turkey oak, the small-leaved and Scotch elms, the ash, the tulip-tree, walnut, horse-chestnut, Spanish chestnut, beech, birch, hornbeam, and otherSi The evergreens of this division are few, viz : evergreen oak, Luccomb oak, yew, cedar of Lebanon, cedar of Mount Atlas, deodar or Indian cedar, and Lambert's Cypress. (Cwpressus macrocarpa.) The Sycamore is a large, rounded tree, fully branched and of massive foliage. Its formal outline, and its close, broad attire of leaves, are well suited to produce depth of shade. It has also the property of retaining its form in exposed situations, and in such positions it imparts to a clump or group a more decided outline than can be given by any other hard-wood tree. Ar The Ash lias a light foliage, and a graceful, airy appearance, particularly when the branches assume a pendent habit. It generally displays much of the in- ternal arrangement of its boughs, which is often pic- turesque in old age. It would be a fine lawn tree did BROAD ROUND-HEADED TREES. 139 it not continue so short a time in leaf. It grows well in exposed situations. The common Oak is a magnificent tree when well grown, either in the w-ood or on the lawn. On the lat- ter it acquires a broad, spreading figure. It is also a noble forest tree, and it shonld be planted wherever the soil and climate are suitable. Its robust habit, its rectangular, contorted, and often horizontal branches, and peculiar foliage, afford a more diversified expres- sion than, perhaps, is to be found in any other hardy tree. Hence the absence of monotony observable in great oak forests. The Scotch or Wycli Elm is a fine, broad, spreading tree, approaching to the characteristics of the oak. The English Elm has smaller leaves, but denser branchlets, and is a square-headed tree, often ascend- ing to a great height in a columnar form. The Beec\ in sheltered places, where it has ample room, forms a large, stately tree, of a full, graceful, feathery appear- ance. In exposed localities it yields to the prevailing winds, and becomes meager and one-sided. "When planted in a mass, it is deficient in that repose which, marks some of the kinds already mentioned. The Lime is peculiarly a park and lawn tree. Standing detached, in a sheltered situation, it has a fine, stately presence, particularly when its lower branches droop ; and it forms a noble avenue, whether open or close. The Sx>anish Chestnut is almost as fine as the oak, and exhibits a broad green foliage, and a varying ex- pression with the advance of the season. The Horse- Chestmit has also a large foliage, and in early sum- mer throws out abundant spikes of showy flowers. Its head is rather too uniform, yet when placed on the 140 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. outside of a plantation, or the lower edge of a bank, it is often highly ornamental. The forms of the black Italian and American poplars are of a rather inferior descri])tion ; but some members of the family have good qualities in the way of color, and from their ra- pidity of growth are often extremely useful. Of broad-headed evergreens, the Tew is one of the finest of our native trees. It is of a spreading habit and low stature, seldom attaining to a considerable size on a lawn till it is of great age. Many of the yews in our pleasure-grounds are probably the remains of hedges, or trees that have escaped the shears of the topiary artist, these having been his principal material in old times. It must be admitted that the yew is less valuable for its form than for its color. The same re- mark applies to the Ilex or Evergreen Oak., wdiich, however, is of some importance for its foreign air, be- ing the best representative of the olive which we have in this country. " In the warmer parts of England and Ireland," says Loudon, (and we may add in Scot- land,) " the ilex forms a bushy evergreen tree, exceed- ing the middle size. The general appearance of the 623ecies, even when well grown, is that of an immense bush. It should be planted in the more ornamental woods of the park, as well as in the dressed grounds; and it forms an interesting variety in the shrubbery." Tiie Cedar of Lebanon is at once a very celebrated and a very admirable tree. Its great breadth, its as- cending trunk, or, more frequently, numerous trunk- like limbs, and its tabulated, horizontally-spreading secondary branches, all contribute to give it a very unusual and striking configuration. It harmonizes finely with the level, architectural lines of the mansion BROAD ROUND-HEADED TREES. 141 house and terraces, and seems to repeat them in aerial perspective. It contrasts well M'ith all other sorts of trees; it also makes up striking groups in tlie park and dressed grounds. "We regard it as a matter of regret that, in many districts of the country, the cedar has been so sparingly planted. Kot inferior to the preceding, perhaps we might even say superior, is the Deodar or Indian Cedai\ a native of the Himalaya mountains, and unquestion- ably the most important additi(^ made of late years to our collections of hardy trees. As it flourishes in its native clime, it is thus described by Dr. Iloff- meister : " It is the most beautiful of the fir tribe that exists in any part of the world. It shoots up with a tall, straight, taper stem, often a hundred feet in height, and not uufrequently forty feet in circumference. The branches grow in stages, at regular intervals, and spread out like overshadowing roofs." As it is appa- rently hardy, it is to be hoped that its growth may not be arrested " in mid career " by some peculiarity of our climate, as has been the case with the hemlock spruce, and some other firs. In its youthful state, in which alone it is yet known to us, its reclining leading shoot erecting itself continually in its second year's growth, its drooping, tress-like branchlets, and its light green color, combine to make it a jDcculiarly graceful object. It may be strongly recommended for both the park and the pleasure-grounds. In the latter, it should be planted where it has room to develop its natural char- acter. In the park, it should be put down in groups of some half-dozen trees. We have already adverted to its use in avenues. As it is at present a fashionable tree, it is introduced into all sorts of little flower-gardens 142 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. and miniature lawns, v.-here, if it thrives, as we de- sire it may, it will speedily overshadow every thing else. We would strongly urge the extensive but con- siderate planting of this fine tree. (2.) The second general form of trees is a varied one, and may be held as embracing three subordinate figures : the rounded cone of the Scotch fir, and some others of its class, and generally of the holly; the truncated cone of the silver fir; and the spiry, elon- gated cone of the vaiifous spruces, larches, Swiss Cem- bran pine, and perhaps the deciduous cypress. Many of the pines lately introduced, such as P. excelsa^ Lanihertiana^ Sabiniana^ inacrocarjya^ are certainly pyramidal, and will fall under one or other of these subdivisions when aged. Indeed, the w^hole class of conifers assume their final form only when fiir advanced in growth. The Holly is almost the only broad-leaved tree of this group. It is generally of a low, bushy form, rounded, but sometimes also with a spiry cone. Grow- ing in woods, and on a light soil, we have seen it sixty feet in height, and with a trunk eight feet in circum- ference. It may be planted in the dressed grounds, and also in the woods of the park, as underwood, among deciduous trees. "When scattered along the outskirts of a recess or glade, it has a fine effect in thickening th^mass and deepening the shade. The Scotch Fir has been planted to a much greater extent than any other fir, in Great Britain and Ire- land. No tree has been more decried and condemned as being ugly ; and certainly, in many cases this dis- praise has been deserved; a close, ill-thinned, and worse-pruned plantation of this tree, on a flat and TREES OF TAKIorS FORMS. 143 undrained surface, presents, both externally and intcr- . nally, a heavy, mean, uninviting appearance. But part of the blame should fall on the want of judgment often evinced in the lirst planting, and on the neglect with which it is as often followed. In suitable situa- tions, and with proper treatment, it attains a beauty not inferior to that of any other inhabitant of the forest. The Highland variet}^ is superior to tlie com- mon one, both in the quality of the timber and in its outward appearance; it has a smoother bark, and, throwing out its branches more nearlv at riirht ane'les to the stem, it assumes a more cylindrical and less tufted form. The Pinaster is of a medium size and conical form, with massive dark-green foliage. It is of rapid growth, thriving best on sandy, or light loamy soils, and is well adapted to the vicinity of the sea. The Weijrnouth Pine, in this country, is of medium size, and, unless when planted pretty closely, is apt to become a bushy tree, With its light-green foliage, it has a more lively effect in a mass than most others of the fir tribe. P. excelsa is allied to the latter. It has a taperino- form, long, light, silvery leaves, loose and pendent branches, and a smooth, whitish bark. It attains to a great size on the Himalaya mountains, and promises to be equally fine in this country. In this section, our lim- its will permit us to mention further only P. Laricio, or Corsican Pine, a large, conical tree, with dark foli- age,«and of rapid growth. Of its varieties, the black Austrian pine is decidedly the best; it is a large, hardy tree, with a broad, conical head, and, as it grows quickly, it promises to supersede the Scotch fir 144 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. wlieie early shelter is wanted. It is verv liable to be injured by hares, when young. The Silver Fir is one of the noblest of our hardy firs ; rather tender when young, but growing rapidly afterward ; and when old, it forms a truncated cone of great height, and is stately, massive, and ornamen- tal, both on the lawn and in the park. P. Douglasii is a Californian species of great size. We have known it, in this country, add ten feet to its height in three seasons. Its foliage is of a lighter hue than that of the preceding, yielding therefore a less massive effect; but it forms a handsome lawn tree. P. nobilis is a magnificent tree in its native forests, on the Columbia river. It has proved itself quite hardy, in cold dis- tricts of this country, and is a most desirable tree for ornamental purposes. The Hemlock Swuce is a hand- some, low tree, approaching to the yew in character, but is of a paler green, and, on account of its dwarfish stature, is used principally in the shrubbery. The Conunoji Spruce Fir \i very extensively phuited, and suits a great variety of soils, though it prefers a moist, loamy one. Wiiere it has room and shelter, it grows into a tall, stately, tapering cone. When young and densely planted, it afibrds a close and effective shelter, and it even forms a good hedge, in upland dis- tricts. It has a livelier efi'ect in masses than the Scotch fir. P. Ifenziesii, or Menzies' Spruce^ is a very hand- some pyramidal tree, with a vivid light-green foliage, which, with the silvery lines on the under side of the leaves, imparts to it a gay and graceful character. It is well adapted for groups and masses in woods and pleasure-grounds. P. Morinda, the Himalayan spruce, is a large treo trp:es of various forms. 145 on its native niountuins, tand in this country it grows freely in a shaded situation and a loamy soil. On light, sandy soils, and when exposed to the sun, its leaves are frequently browned by the spring frosts. It has the general form of the common spruce, but is strongly distinguished from it by its glaucous foliage, longer and narrower leaves, and its more slender and pensile branchlets. It is a graceful lawn tree, and it is also well adapted to the woods of the park. It was introduced into this country in 1818, by Dr. Govan, of Cupar, who presented seeds of it to the late Gen- eral the Earl of Ilopetoun, grandfather of the present noble Earl. One of the original seedling plants, grow- ing on a lawn in the gardens at Ilopetoun House, is now thirty-seven feet high, forming a fine tree, feath- ered from the ground upward. This spruce, as well as many others of the fir tribe, may be grafted with success.* It is somewhat remarkable, that the Him- alayan spruce has been found to stand the smoky at- mosphere of London, better perhaps than any other fir. The Larch is now a very common, but also a very valuable tree, for the purposes both of utility and ornament. It has the spiry pyramidal form of its class, which, perhaps, is too slight in its proportions, when young ; but it acquires a grace and dignity in its broad and vigorous old age. Its main peculiarity, in relation to its class, is that it sheds its leaves, and its decorative properties reside less in its form than in its beautiful tints, which vary through a wide range, with the revolving seasons. • At Hopetoun, in the autumn of 1827, the writer of this work grafted several of the Morinda on the common spruce, at about four feet from the ground; they are now twenty-aix feet in height, and apparently a/? vigorous as if on their own roots. 7 146 PAKKS AND PLEASUEE-GKOUNDS. (3.) LTpEiGHT OK Oblongated Tkees. — Of these we may enumerate the Lombardy poplar, the upright oak, ( Quercus fastigiata stricta^) the uj)riglit cypress, (Cit- pressus sempervirens^) Irish yew, arbor vitse, red cedar, and Swedish juniper. The last five are suitable only for the dressed grounds. Trees or shrubs of this form can not be anywhere extensively planted by the improver. Their peculiar use is to group and contrast with the broad, flowing out- lines of other trees, or with the architectural objects in their vicinity. The Lomhardy Pojplar is well suited for park scenery and for lawns, and may be put in combination with such trees as the sycamore, wych elm, and horse-chestnut, three or four of the former being made to group with six or eight of the latter. This poplar may als€t-baJ iitroduce dwith good eflPect on the edires of broacLslades-er-i^Gcesses^or a wood. ^TTshtrmld be placed so as to appear to shoot up~th rough the branches of the broader trees, and sometimes to stand between otliers ; and such ^'•ositions we would generally prefer. A single tree, however, or two or three closely grouped, may occasionally be stationed on the edge of a larger group. The TJjpriglit Cypress^ where the cli- mate permits its free growth, contrasts well with the cedar of Lebanon. The Trisli Yew^ Swedish Juniper, and similar shrubs, group well with the large foliage and broad forms of the Portugal and common laurel, and as such are valuable on tlie lawns and flower-gar- dens. The Irish yew may be planted with good ef- fect on terraces with grass banks ; and in that case it should be trained with one stem, to prevent its assum- ing that loose, broad, besom-like head, which, if this PENDULOUS TREES AND SHRUBS. 147 precaution is not taken, it generally acquires, from the action of the winds and the weight of snow. (4.) Pendulous Trees and Shrubs. — Of these we may name the weeping birch, the weeping willow, the fine-leaved weeping ash, (Fraxinus lentiscifoUa pen- dula^) and the new funereal Cypress from China. The weeping ash, elm, beech, lime, and the American weeping willow can scarcely be called trees, as their height depends on that of the trees on which they are grafted. They are, consequently, more curious than useful in the way of ornament. Most of these plants, being of no great height, are better suited for the dressed grounds than for the woods of the park ; their introduction, however, into both of these places is the source of considerable interest and variety. Their proper place is not in the thicket, but on the lawns and on the outsides of the M^oods. Their graceful forms also render them suitable for decorating the entrance to the villa or cottage orne. Of this class, the finest is the Weeping Bircli. Its upright stem and main boughs, the thread-like dra- pery of its branches, and its small foliage, give it a peculiarly graceful and airy appearance. It groups well with both the broad and the pyramidal trees, harmonizing well with the former, and contrasting finely with the latter. It preserves its character in woods, and is seen per- haps to greater advantage on sylvan banks, and on the lower slopes of hills. The Weeping Willow is, unfor- tunately, too tender to be of much use in the colder parts of Great Britain. In other respects, it is admi- rably suited for giving effect to the scenery of the dressed grounds. In warm, sheltered places, and in 148 PAKKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. the genial climate of the south, it attains to the size of a niediura tree, and combines singularly well with laurels, which, in small groups, are very beautiful when overtopped by a fine weeping willow. Its most effective position is in connection with water, over- hanging, like a green vail, a stream or lake. The Fine-leaved AsTi is an elegant tree, of a broad shape, with small foliage and pendulous branches. The Common Weejnng Ash is fit only for forming an ar- bor ; as a tree, it is devoid of all grace. There is a variety in Wellhall, in Lanarkshire, which is much finer, being intermediate between the weeping and the common ash. The Chinese Weejnng Cypress is an evergreen weep- ing tree, one of the recent importations from China, and if we may judge from the description given by Mr, Fortune, who introduced it — for we have seen it only in a young state — it is one of the finest of its class. In his interesting work on " The Tea Districts of India and China," he says, " It is a noble, fir-like tree, about sixty feet in height, having a stem straight as a Norfolk Island pine, (Araucaria excelsa,) and pendulous branches like the weeping willow. The branches grow at first horizontally with the main stem, then describe a graceful curve upward, and drooping again at the points. From these main branches, others, long and slender, hang down toward the ground, and give the whole tree a weeping and grace- ful form." This tree appears to be hardy, and if it maintains that character, it will be an interesting addition to the scenery of the park and pleasure- ground, and should be planted wherever its form is admissible. Avenues composed of it would have a PENDULOUS TREES AND SHEUBS. 149 cliarming effect ; and these avenues, as the tree is only of medium size, would not require to be of such di- mensions as those planted with English elm, or lime, or deodar. It remains to be noted, that the forms of trees vary in some measure with the season. Their internal con- figuration is most conspicuous in winter, when the leafless branches disclose the inner carpentry of boughs, and too often, indeed, reveal deformities. Summer, with its vail of foliage, shcdes much of the peculiar structure of trees. ToM-ard the end of June, luxuriant sycamores sometimes suggest the idea of masses of green vapor reposing in the atmosphere ; an appear- ance very different, certainly, from the numerous crossing limbs, and forked branches, and brush-like twigs ]3resented by the winter habit of the tree. This contrast is one of the sources of the successional beau- ties of the seasons. Note. — In comparing the foregoing catalogue of trees, given by our author, the American will be struck with the meager variety which Great Britain affords for ornamental purposes, in comparison with the num- bers of surpassingly noble and beautiful specimens which flourish in almost every different locality of our own country. It is unnecessary to enlarge on a sub- ject so well treated, in general, by our author, further than to remark that, in tree-planting, such varieties as, on examination, are found most congenial to the soil which is to receive them, should be selected ; and where exotic trees and shrubs are introduced, they should be of hardy kinds, graceful shape, and easy growth. It is difficult to find specimens, in any part of the world, flourishing in like climates, which excel 150 TAKKS AND PLEASTJRE-GKOUNDS. our own native trees in grandeur, grace, and beauty. Our oaks, elms, maples, hickorys, all of many varie- ties ; the black-walnut, butternut, chestnut, white- wood or tulip ; the poplars, birches, beeches, ashs, larch, and several other deciduous trees, of the North- ern and Middle states ; together with their evergreen pines, hemlocks, spruces, and firs — all trees of the first rank in size, and some of them of great height — will compare advantageously with the best trees of Europe, and far excel the most remarkable British specimens of native production ; and where we pos- sess within our own forests such a wealth of trees, in all that constitutes true ornament, as well as utility, it is scarcely worth while to rack our brains, or exhaust our purses, to go abroad for others. Our Southern states produce many of the trees we have named ; to which may be added, the live-oak, cypress, magnolia, and others — all appropriate for park-planting, in their own favorite regions. Of shrub trees, large and small, almost any desired number may be found in the immediate vicinity of any park-ground in the country. Many of them are of exceeding beauty, and of all required character and variety. It is unnecessary that they be here enu- merated. The ready observation of the inquirer will at once supply his demands ; or, that being at fault, the volumes of Michaux, and of Nuttal, will suggest more than his most liberal wants can require. One indispensable element of success, in the culti- vation of both tree and shrub, must be observed by all planters ; and that is, a congeniality of soil and climate to the tree or shrub in question. Many trees and shrubs will fiourish alike in difterent soils — the i COLOKS OF TREES. J 51 stiffest clay, or tlio most friable loam ; others perti- naciously cling to a particular soil, and refuse to flour- ish in any other. Some refuse to grow'in any but grounds light, dry, and open in texture ; others love the heav}", moist, and clammy earths contiguous to water. All these qualifications must be regarded, to insure success in diversified plantations. In " pleasure-grounds," exotic trees, of character congenial with the soil and climate, may be sparingly introduced ; as, the horse-chestnut, the weeping wil- low, and a few others, as indicating choicer cultivation than what is given to the " park.'- In the latter may be occasionally thrown the Lombardy-poplar — a tree often treated with idle abuse because it has some faults ; but no one can say, and say it trutlifully, that- the spire-like top of a Lombardy-poplar, peering up through the formal outline of a group of round-headed trees, does not give both a graceful and picturesque expression to the landscape, which would be wanting without it, Tlie larch may partially supply its pres- ence, but not with entire efitect. Excessive use of the poplar, in some instances, has brought it into, per- haps, in that feature of it, v,-ell-deserved condemnation ; but sparingly and considerately apj^lied, it may be- come one of the most effective features in park-expres- sion. — Ed. Sect. II. — The Colors of Trees. The tints of color exhibited in trees are, perhaps, as numerous as their forms. To advert, at present, only to the foliage, — the normal color of the leaves is green, 152 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. but how diversified are its shades ! In the deciduous class of trees, these shades range from the silvery gray of the Huntingdon willow and white poplar through the light-green of the larch and lime, the full green of the sycamore and oak, to the dull, dilute green of the alder. And in the evergreen sj^ecies, the shades pass i'rom the silvery or glaucous tints of the Atlas and Himalayan cedars to the darlc-green of the holly and yew, and the almost black-green of the aged Scotch fir. Here, then, are abundance of colors for the land- scape-artist — colors requiring from him most attentive consideration, and on the skillful and harmonious em- ployment of which the success of his work will, in a measure, depend. "We have selected the names of a number of trees and shrubs usually employed for dec- orative purposes, and arranged them under the differ- ent shades of green respectively exhibited by them. Our readers will understand that we have designedly omitted the abnormal tints, such as occur in the pur- ple beech and in the variegated hollies and sycamores ; and that, in some of those given, the shades named are only approximations. On some poor, clayey and wet soils, common and Portugal laurels have a light- yellowish tint. In the shade, the hemlock spruce and common yew preserve a dark-green ; in exposed situ- ations, they are sometimes of a brownish green. COLORS OF TKEES. 153 TABLE OF COLORS IN THE FOLIAGE OF TREES. Portugal Laurel. Yew, corumou nud Irish. HoUy. Sweet Bay, Pliillyrea. Luccoiube Oak. Alder. Upright Cypress. DAEK GREEN". Araucaria iinbricatu. Araucaria excelsa. Cedar of Lebanon. Taxodium sempcrvirens. Scotch Fir, and most Pinea Silver Firs. Spruce Firs. Oak, common. Oak, scarlet. Spanish Chestnut. Horse Chestnut Hornbeam. Sycamore. Norway Maple. Beech. Hemlock Spruce. Laurusliuus. Arbutus. Deciduous Cypress. Alatemus. LIVELY GREEK. Abies Menziesii. Lambert's Cypress. Common Laurel. Lime. Elm. Ash. Oriental Plane. Occidental Plane. Birch. Hawthorn. Rhododendron, sorts. LIGHT GREEM. Gean. Bird-cherry. Laburnum. Tulip-tree. Black Italian Poplar. Lombardy Poplar. Balsam and Ontario Poplars. Walnut Red Cedar. Arbor vitffi. Evergreen Oak. BHOWXISH GEEEN. Hemlock Spruce. Box. 154 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GKOUNDS. SILVERY GREEN. White and Grey Poplars. Cedar of Mount Atlas. Willows, several. Deodar. Turkey Oak. Pinus excelsa. Buckthorn. Pinus Webbiana. Toward the end of spring, and in the beginning of summer, all the greens are extremely vivid ; but even then some of the species, such as the larch and balsam poplar, are peculiarly light. In June, the young shoots and leaves display little variety. In July and August, each tree and shrub shades off into its own particular green. Later in autumn, the evergreens acquire their winter tints. In October, or earlier, pre- vious to the fall of the leaf, the ordinary hues of the deciduous tribes give place to an extraordinary diver- sity of colors. For example, the larch, oak, and elm take various shades of yellow, or yellowish-brown. The scarlet oak, beech, and wild cherry grow red. The ash and sycamore sadden into a grayish tea- green. If, in planting the park and pleasure-grounds, all varieties of color are to be taken into account, the tints of the ripening leaf ought not to be forgotten, as we fear they too often are. It should be remembered, that the ripening and fall of the leaf sometimes oc- cupy live or six weeks of a season, which, if chastened with sadness, is to some minds a period of intense enjoyment. We may add, that oaks, particularly in copse-woods, and in the early stages of growth else- where, often retain their leaves during most of the winter. These supplementary tints of the departing year afford means of ornament not altogether unworthy of attention. The flowers of certain trees also yield effective. COLORS OF TREES. 155 tliough transient, elements of color. Some of our readers may have come unexpectedly on a fine labur- num or thorn, in blossom, partially concealed in a secluded wood, or overhanging the bend of a remote stream, and may have received from it an impression which has not yet passed away. "\Ve need scarcely point out the rich effects produced, at times, by tlie snowy flowers of the wild cherry and sloe, by the creamy bloom of the hawthorn and bird-cherry, and the more varj'ing pink and white of the wild-apple and the horse-chestnut. Then, there is the delicate pale-yellow of the flowers of the lime and Spanish- chestnut, later in the season. Among the underwoods, we have the brilliant yellow of the elegant mahonias, in spring ; and in June, the lavish purple of the Pon- tic rhododendron, one of the hardiest and best of all shrubs for making close and tangled thickets in woods. We do not mean that the chromatic efl'ects of a flower- garden should be, by artificial means, elaborated in a park or forest ; but there is no want of brilliant tints, even in the wildness of nature, as the common furze and broom amply testifs^ ; and the moderate and un- obtrusive employment of the brighter hues of blossom, in the external grounds, is sure to please. Even the leafless branches of shrubs and trees af- ford an available element of color. We might point out the dog-wood, with its crimson twigs, and the azerole thorn, with its silvery branches ; these, indeed, belong chiefly to shrubbery or pleasure-ground. But the larch, with its light-brown sj^ray ; the birch, with its dark twigs and snowy stems ; and the oak itself, with its varieties of russet, green, gray, and brown, are examples of daily occurrence in the woods. We 15G PARKS AND PLEASDKE-GKOUNDS. believe that tliese hues in deciduous trees, both in- trinsically and as contrasted' with the brighter ever- greens, are a great, though often unnoticed, source of pleasure in the woodlands of winter. They help to make up that full harmony which the great instrumen- talist, Light, calls forth from the living organs on which it plays. The use of the colors of trees and shrubs, to the im- prover, is very great ; but his application of them must depend very much on his own skill in adapting his materials to the character of the place and the nature of the ground with which he is dealing. We may remark, however, that the depth of a recess or glade, in the woods or dressed grounds, formed for the purpose of creating a shadowy effect, is much increased by planting trees and shrubs of a full green or dark- green color, at the point where the effect is desired. The somber color of the trees themselves, and the den- sity of the foliage, contribute to render the shadow more intense, while an oj^posite result would be educed by a lighter color of foliage. Some prominent j)oints may be brought out by a dark, others by a light or silvery-green. The effect of distance, too, may be pro- duced or increased by employing dark-greens in the foreground, and shading oft' with lighter colors in the more remote objects. It is hardly needful to add, that good taste enjoins a sparing use of strongly-marked or glaring colors. White poplars and pnrple beeches, for example, are admirably adapted for occasional breaks, in the way of contrast, or for completing a gradation of shades; but in certain situations, they would be intolerable as clumps or masses. KOUND-HEADED TKEES. 157 Sect. III. — ^The Ornamental Chakactee of Trees IN Combination. The massing of plantations obscures to the eye the peculiar forms of the trees which compose them, and indeed, modifies the actual forms to a great extent. It is only when standing detached, or in thin groups, or at most on the margins of plantations, that trees fully develop their natural characters. In the depth of a forest or thick wood, they are usually so crowded to- gether, and so drawn up toward the light, that their forms have little resemblance to the figures produced by their free and unimpeded growth. Still, there is a distinct character in each ; for a mass of oaks has not, in any circumstances, tlie same aspect as one of beeches or elms ; neither does a dense, dark plantation of Scotch firs present the spiry and serrated outlines of a wood of larch and spruce. There is, therefore, still abundant character remaining, even in combined and crowded trees, to allow scope for design, and to afford materials for scenic beauty, to one who has suf- ficient skill to seize and employ it. In this part of our subject, we shall content ourselves with adverting to what we have called the round-headed and the pyra- midal trees; the other two classes are so sparingly used, and planted so much fur the production of those particular effects which we have already noticed, that we need not recur to them. Round-headed Tkkes. — Of these we may remark, generally, that they are to be employed when conti- nuity of outline, in tlie clump and plantation, is the 158 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GKOUNDS. object aimed at. They mass more densely together than any other trees, except, perhaps, the Scotch fir ; which, however, in combination, partakes very much of their character. In parks with flat or midnlating sm-faces, the trees planted in forming the woods should be principally of this class. Their broad outlines and massive proportions are more in harmony with the natural contour of the ground than those of a pyra- midal shape. Seen from without, they have often, at certain seasons, a peculiarly silky and slightly tufted expression, which is extremely beautiful. Their inter- nal appearance, too, (that is, their character as groves,) when they have been sufficiently cleared out to afford large, roomy arcades of shade, is finer on such ground than that of the more upright trees. Of course, when we thus recommend the broad round-headed trees for such situations, we do not mean that they are to be planted to the exclusion of all others ; a sprinkling of the other kinds will have a beneficial efiect, in the way of contrasting with the predominating forms, and of adding variety to the scenery. Conical or Pyramidal Trees. — With the exception of the larch and the deciduous cypress, these are nearly all evergreen trees. This, in one respect, is an advan- tage ; it enables them to give a permanently clothed and verdant aspect to scenery. On the other hand, when planted in large masses, on flat surfaces, and especially when they have been ill-thinned-out, they have a very somber and monotonous effect, exhibiting a large array of bare trunks below ; and above, a dark, gloomy canopy of boughs and branches, excluding, perhaps, every ray of sunshine. The small, wiry forms, and almost universal rigidity of their foliage, CONICAL OR TYKAMIDAL TREKS. 169 Lave also a saddening influence, as they seldom wave except when agitated by a gale, and there is a tutal absence of tliat agreeable movement produced by a light wind playing airily among the larger leaves of the deciduous species. Besides, the pyramidal trees unite at what may be called the shoulders of the tree ; and so, above that lin.e, which is often pretty Avell defined, they leave a multitude of little cones or i^yra- mids, which, wlien seen in proiile, have a serrated outline, and exert a monotonous and, at the same time, irritating influence on the eye. For our part, we know nothing more wearisome than those long, dark, stunted, middle-aged plantations of Scotch fir, or of mingled larch and spruce, which are sometimes to be met in flat, clayey, agricultural districts. Such masses of wood, in ornamental grounds, would be hideous. The native homes of the fir tribe are chiefly among the hills. There they not only grow more luxuriantly, but their forms adapt themselves better to the natural lines of the ground. On the slopes of a hilly and moun- tainous country, fir- woods have a more varied and cheer- ful appearance, and they are seen less in profile; or, if they are so seen, it is against the higher grounds, while the more elevated ridges form the sky-line of the landscape. In such cases the serrated outlines are not so harsh as they are on level grounds. When planted in passes, or on other steep surfaces, the trees are seen to great advantage, towering up one above another, and exhibiting a greater variety of lights and shades than on more level ground, particularly when pervaded by the rays of the winter or vernal sun. Even in the loM'cr country the fir tribe succeed well in ravines and on shelving banks, where the soil is light and the ICO PAKKS AKD PLEASUKE-GROUNDS. natural drainage effective. Occasionally, beautiful Scotch firs, spruces and larches may be seen in favor- able situations a little above the level of the sea. Many species of firs require to be planted thickly at first, in order to prevent them from forming bushy trees when young, and for the purpose of throwing the main growth of the tree into the leading stem; but in ornamental plantations they should be thinned out at an earlier period, and afterward to a greater ex- tent, than is necessary in woods grown simply for the sake of timber. They will thus have room to develop themselves into their natural forms, instead of being drawn up int« bare poles with small tufted heads. On level or slightly-inclined surfaces, frequent openings or glades should be formed through them, in order to re- lieve the heavy eifect which they would otherwise have. Intermingling of the Different Forms and Col- ors. — In the actual practice of planting, the various kinds of trees are generally mingled together; and though this is often done with little taste, and on no fixed principles, it shows that in the common appre- hensions of men, the beauty of woodland scenery con- sists very much in the contrast and combination of its diversified materials. It will readily be perceived that no precise general rules can be laid down on this sub- ject. Much must be left to the taste of the proprietor and designer. Some particular effects, however, may be mentioned as attainable by the use of certain trees. For example, a mass of laurels and hollies in the plea- sure-ground may be improved both in dignity and ex- pression by having a few of the finer species of firs introduced into its center. And in the j^ark, a plant- ation of deciduous trees may have its sky-line elevated INTERMINGLING OF FORMS AND COLORS. I'U at certain points by groups of black Italian poplar, a tree which, in ordinary ground, speedily take^ the lead of all others, and keeps it for many years. Ought masses of trees to be planted wholly of one species, or with an admixture of many? The question has been answered differently, both in theory and in practice. '• A forest of all manner of trees," says Mr. liuskin, "is poor, if not disagreeable in effect; a mass of one species of tree is sublime."-" We are not sure that this aphorism is not put too unconditionally, even in regard to a forest; certainly we should be inclined to dispute its validity as applied to plea- sure-grounds and parks. Let the reader imagine a pleasure-ground exclusively filled with hollies, or a park adorned with Scotch firs alone. We are assured that the first feeling of the spectator would as likely be that of wonder as of sublimity, that the second would be one of oppressive monotony, and the third of absolute weariness. Of course this remark does not apply to clumps and subordinate masses, which may occasionally be planted of one species of tree. We make this admission, however, with some reserve; for, while in the park and pleasure-ground our aim should be that unity which consists in a harmony of diversities, we must guard against that bald and un- suggestive unity whic'h degenerates into uniformity. Homogeneous masses of trees, it must be remembered, are destitute of that pleasing variety of color of which there are traces even in spring and summer, and which, as we have seen, comes out with such manifold beauty •We have not the slightest respect for Jfr. Ruskiu's authority on this question. We better coincide with his architectural taste than his arboricultui-al accomplish- jnents. — Ed, 162 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GEOUISrDS. in the autumnal tints. We hold that evergreens, even in winter, are lightened and set off by the contrast of the deciduous trees with which they are intermingled, and in summer the harmonizing effects of the mixture are even more striking. "We are disposed to think that in the park and pleasure-ground the fir tribe should never be planted alone and in separate clumps. We would hardly allow them to amount to more than a third of the whole trees, in the plantation, thicken- ing them in some places, and blending and shading them off with the deciduous species in others. This is also a good method of planting firs when the sur- faces of large masses of wood are to be seen at a dis- tance. We beg the reader, however, to remark that we have been speaking of the ornamental grounds, not of the outfield woods or mountain forests. In regard to the question. Ought masses of trees to be planted with one species only, or with an admix- ture of many? it is important to determine whether the masses in question are to be considered as vieAved from M'ithout or from within. If they are to be con- templated from without, we hold that there should bo always some admixture of kinds, to obviate that dull uniformity to which we have above alluded. If they are to be viewed from within, it cannot be doubted that a grove of un mingled oalA and beeches, or elms, especially if the trees have attained the dignity of age, has a much finer and more imposing effect than a pro- miscuoiTS o-atherino; of all manner of trees. Even the surface of the ground and its smoother sward acquire, in such circumstances, a more attractive, because a more harmonizing aspect. Planters are too apt to confine their regards to the external appearance of INTERMINGLING OF FORMS AND COLORS. 163 their work ; they ought to remember that the planta- tions tliey arc forming will, in the conrse of years, become tall woods, and perhaps groves, resorted to for seclusion and shade. This should be especially kept in mind toward the central points of their masses; and with this view they may surround these central points chiefly with one kind of tree. In extensive grounds, a dozen or more of these central groves might be formed prospective!}^, embracing all the principal deciduous, and some of the finer evergreen trees; while the outer margins of the masses and clumps, and all the parts rendered by their position conspicu- ous to the eye, might be dressed out in that gay variety which is essential to the beauty of a country residence as a whole. Thus the predominance of one tree will give a decided character to a mass, and the intermin- gled subordinates which may be gradually reduced in number, if desired, will relieve it of monotony and insipidity. In relation to the subject of this chapter generally, we have in conclusion to remark, that no part of land- scape-gardening is more neglected and misunderstood than the skillful management of trees, in the way of bringing out their ornamental value in respect to form and color. Some artists of great name have declined this afi'air altogether, and, with necessarih' ver}^ gen- eral directions, or even without any instructions at all, have delegated the work of distributing the trees to the forester or day-laborer. And proprietors are too ready to ask the designer to stake out the groups and clumps, and then to leave the planting to persons who l^robably have not the slightest conception of the effect desired to be produced. After a few years, jjerhaps, 164 PARKS AND PLEASDKE-GROUNDS. the artist goes back to survey his work, and finds that his ground outlines have been carefully preserved, but probably discovers also that the gray poplar, with its nirv form and silvery foliage, has been substituted for the robust and grave-tinted oak; or that the spiry, lio'ht-irreen, deciduous larch has taken the place in- tended for the rounded cone and dark-green color of the Scotch fir. And yet his art, or his skill in the ex- ercise of it, has to bear the blame of these errors ! It would be almost as reasonable to expect a fine land- scape-painting, were we to commission an artist to trace the outlines of the picture, and then to leave the coloring, the management of the lights and shades, and the filling-up generally, to a house-painter, who undoubtedly can handle a brush as well as a forester or a day-laborer can waeld a spade. Note. — Our author talks well, and refinedly, like all writers and planters who write and plant in a country where nature has not bountifully supplied it with nat- ural subjects of cultivation. But it is not so in America. The ingenuity of man can conceive of nothing half so grand, so varied, and so beautiful, as a diversified American forest during the summer and autumn. Take, for instance, the breast of one of our fine hill or mountain ranges of forest, where the ever- green and deciduous trees, of great variety and luxu- riant growth, commingle in one broad, continued bank of parti-colored verdure, at the first bursting of their new leaves in the spring, and in their successive growth through the summer. What delicate tints wave and lift their perpetual changes, from the deep blue-green of the hemlock to the poplars and beech, contrasting with the silvery tints of the white maple, INTEKMINGLING OF FORMS AND COLORS. 165 the fixed, imcbaugeablo green of the oak and the pine, those models of strength and endurance! And after the frosts of autumn have touched them, what woods on earth can compare with the gorgeous tints and colors of the deciduous leaves, relieved and supported by the unchanging hue of the evergreens? From the airy, lemon tints of the poplar and sugar maple, running down into the deep orange of the hickory ; from the liveliest scarlet of the soft maples, to the mellow rus- set of the oaks and the ashs, in all their variety ; each and every one soft and beautiful for many da^'s, some- times for weeks, our forests present a brilliancy and a grandeur unsurpassable in their kind. It is not at all necessary for the American to go into the refinement and the particularity of the English planter to effect his object. Our mixed, natural forests supply the best expression possible to park and forest scenery, in tree and shrub. All we have to do, where not furnished by the undisturbed hand of nature her- self, is, to imitate her in the blandest and most agree- able forms within our power ; and in whatever we add, by way of exotic, let us be sure that no exaggerated contrast is presented to the harmony of our own luxu- riant productions. — Ed. 166 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GROUNDS. CHAPTER VI. PLANTING. Preparation of the Ground — Trenching — Draining — Roads through Plantations — Planting of Forest Trees — Pitting — Pruning — Tliin- niug — Transplanting Forest Trees — Planting and Transplanting of Evergreens. "We have already adverted to the importance of planting in the formation and improvement of parks and pleasure-grounds. In these interesting appen- dages of a country residence, the woods present a main element of beauty; and the degree of that beauty is mainly dependent on the healthy and luxu- riant growth of the trees. "With these facts in view, we shall offer some brief remarks on the j)lanting, fencing, and after-management of plantations, confin- ing ourselves, at the same time, to those subjects which have a close relation to the park and dressed grounds. Preparation of the Ground. — This is a matter which has been much discussed, and has led to the expression of a variety of opinions. Some have thought that a very careful preparation of the land is indispensable; others would content themselves with draining, and the removal of furze and other impedi- ments to the growth of the trees. Both these opinions will hold good in their proper places, or in relation to PRErARATION OF THE GROUND. 167 different localities. Our own experience has led to the conclusion that operose preparations, such as trench- ing or plougliing, are in general not required beyond the park, and that the expensive operation of trenching may be confined to the circle of the dressed grounds. The principal advantage of trenching and ploughing is their effect in accelerating the growth of the trees, particularly in their earlier stages, and the consequent rapidity in the development of the scenery — a matter of no small importance to gentlemen who wish to see and enjoy the result of their own labors. This effect is generally very marked in the inter\al between the fifth and fifteenth year from the planting: at a later period, and on good land, it is much less perceptible. Trenching is undoubtedly the best means of prepar- ing ground for planting; but as it costs from six to ten pounds sterling per acre, it is too expensive to be ex- tensively adopted. As a substitute, we have found a method of deep plowing, particularly on grass lands, to be very useful. Two plows are required for the operation, which closely resembles subsoil plowing. A deep furrow is first drawn. The first plow next skims off some two or three inches of the turf and soil, turning it over into the open furrow. The second plow then follows in the same furrow as the first plow, cov- ering the turf with four or five inches of soil, and stir- ring the land to the depth of seven or eight inches. By this means the soil is well pulverized, and the turf is so buried as to insure its rotting, and thus affords an excellent manure for the trees. The expense is about twenty-four shillings per acre. Draining of wet land is essential to successful plant- ing, and is not to be supei-seded by any other operation, 168 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. althougli, on trenched grounds, the drains may be placed at greater distances from each other. In large plantations the drains are always open, and may be laid down at intervals of sixteen to forty-eight feet, according to the porositj' of the ground. In many places of the park open drains are inadmissible; and in these cases we prefer box drains, formed with stones, as much less liable to be choked up with roots of trees than tile-pipes or tiles and soles certainly are. KoADS THROUGH PLANTATIONS. — Eoads, or ridcs, as they are frequently called, are needful in large plan- tations. Though used for carts and carriages, they are in most cases only grass walks, fifteen, twenty, or thirty feet wide, with open ditches on each side. Where the ground is soft, it may be necessary to lay a portion of the ce^iter with road-metal or gravel ; and in hollows, it is useful to lay a box-drain across the line of road, and communicating with one of the main drains. The open drains on the sides should not be deep, and should never be main drains. In extensive woods, we would form some of the leading rides at double the width of those mentioned above ; it is in such open spaces that we generally have the appear- ance of ornamental scenery. Or we would occasion- ally expand them into broad lawns and glades, and also form bays and recesses along their borders. These open spaces, besides being highly picturesque, afford good feeding-grounds for game. Planting of Forest Trees. — The difierences of opinion which exist, as to the best method of planting, the distances between the trees, and the most suit- able season for the work, afford sufficient proof that there is room for a variety of treatment — a fortunate PITTING. 160 circumstance when the planting is extensive, as it ena- bles the improver to have his work better executed than it would be were he obliged to confine his operations to a few weeks at a time. Six months in winter, inclu- sive of November and April, are the utmost limits within which planting maj bo hazarded. Indeed, April and one half of March should be excluded, ex- cept in late seasons, or in high, cold, and wet grounds. On light, dry soils, the best season is at tJie beginning of winter ; and on heavj and moist situations, toward its close. Very wet, snowj, or frosty weather presents the only interruptions to the progress of planting; in some years, these will reduce the planting season to within half the period stated ivbove. Pitting, though the most expensive, is the most certain method of planting, and therefore should be adopted in the woods of the park. The only allow- able exception to this rule, would be the use of the slit or T manner of inserting the trees ; which, in exposed localities, and with seedlings, will less subject the plants to wind-waving, and so will be more successful than ordinary pitting. The trees may be planted at from three and a half to four and a half feet apart, according to the soil and situation — these distances including both the nursing and the principal trees. In hardwood plantations, such intervals will place the ti-ees from seven feet to nine feet apart. Larch, spruce, and Scotch firs make excellent nurses, and are ex- tremely useful in yielding shelter, and in drawing up the hardwood into tall, clean trunks. In sheltered situations, and in good soils, such nurses may be omitted. Masses of hardwood are sometimes required to produce particular effects, and in these cases it is 8 170 PARKS AND PLEASUEE-GKOUNDS. better to prevent the possibility of firs becoming prin- cipals, to the injury of the scenery. With this view, we have had hardwood, without firs, planted in masses at four or four and a half feet apart. Pkuning. — In the culture of forest trees, pruning is, after planting, the most important operation. Its object is the production of a large trunk or bole of clean, sound timber; and to accomplish this, the tree is to be pruned so as to lead to the accumulation of the principal bulk of the ligneous m.atter in the main stem. Tliis aim should be distinctly kept in view, in every operation, whether in the removal or shortening of the branches. Keduced to this general principle, pruning is divested of all difficulty, at least when it is commenced at an early period, and is regularly and carefully prosecuted. After a shoot has been selected for the main stem, all other shoots, which indicate a tendency to draw oft" from it tlie leading growth, should be shortened or removed. For some years after plant- ing, it will be, for the most part, sufficient to fore- shorten ; that is, to cut back the side-shoots from one- third to t*'0-thirds of their length, in order to discour- age their growth in a lateral direction ; but this is on the supposition that the trees have taken with the ground, and are in a thriving state. Where hardwood does not appear to thi-ive by the end of the second, or at most the third season from planting, it is advisable, in the following spring, to cut the trees to the ground ; the result will be a number of vigorous shoots, of which one should be selected for the future tree, and the others removed. Where a plantation has grown well by the end of the sixth or seventh year from planting, in addition to PRUNING. 171 the pruning already recommended, the branches for- merly foreshortened should be cut ofl' at the lower part of the stem ; leaving it bare, at first, not above one-sixth, or at most one-fifth, the height of the tree. By the time, however, that the tree is from fifteen to twenty feet high, it may have a clear stem of one- third its height, and varying from one-third to one-half when the tree has attained a stature of thirtj^ feet. These remarks are not meant to apply in all cases, in the park and pleasure-grounds, where the natural ap- pearance of many trees would be spoiled by the re- moval of branches from their trunks for more than ten or fifteen feet. Some trees, however, are improved by the partial thinning and shortening of the branches to double that height. When pruning should begin, and how often it should be resorted to, must be left to the discretion of the i:)roprietor, judging from the growth of the trees. Some plantations will be benefited by a careful examination and pruning every second year ; others will require attention only every fourth or fifth year. Some excellent foresters condemn the peri- odical pruning of woods. Our own exjDerience is, that it is advantageous to examine the trees in the park every second or third jeai", of course, pruning only those trees that require it, and cutting back the branches of the nurses which are pressing on the princij^als. We agree with Mr. Brown, in his useful work, "The Forester," that pruning should precede thinning by at least one year. When both operations go on together, the growth of the young trees is apt to be checked by their sudden exposure to the colder atmosphere, con- sequent on the decrease of shelter. Fir-trees should be planted so thickly as to prune themselves, the dead 172 PAKKS AND PLEASUEL'-GKOCTNDS. branches being carefully removed as they appear. On the lawns of the pleasure-ground, some. firs are dis- posed to extend their lower branches too far. To coun- teract this tendency, and to throw the strength of the tree into the main stem, the terminal bud or shoot of the lower branches is to be pinched off. Cedars, and other spreading firs, treated in this way, may be made to assume an upright form. Thinning. — Tliinning is an operation nearly as neces- sary as pruning, and in fir plantations perhaps the more necessary of the two. As young woods are gen- erally planted more densely than is needful for their permanent condition, in order that the young trees may produce a shelter for each other, and a correspond- ing warmth in the climate, the period selected for thin- ning the young plantations should vary with the pro- gress of the trees, as that again will vary with the soil and climate in which they grow. Some plantations may receive a partial thinning by the time they have been seven or eight years planted ; others, in more exposed places, may not require the same sort of thin- ning till they are double that age. In the process of thinning, it should be distinctly kept in mind that the trees which are removed were originally planted to shelter and draw up the trees which are to remain, and that only those are to be cleared away, from time to time, which are doing in- jury to those designed to be permanent. When this principle is made to regulate the work, there is little danger that thinning will be carried to .an injurious excess. I^othing is more prejudicial than excessive thinning. The bark of those trees which have been well sheltered by close planting is less dense, and TKANSPLANTIXa OF TKEES. 173 more sensitive to cold, than that of trees exposed to all weathers, and their roots are much fewer, and have a slighter hold of the groiind. It is evident, therefore, that the trees left standing in over-thinned plantations, being ill-pre])ared for their new circumstances, are sure to receive a severe check ; which, if it does not kill them outright, will retard their growth for many years, or stunt them to an extent from which thej may never recover. The thinning of fir plantations need not begin be- fore the trees press so much on each other as not only to check the growth of the lower branches, but also to kill a portion of those next the ground. In hardwood plantations, the thinning commences when the nurses press so much on the permanent trees as really to injure them ; but only such trees should be removed as actually do so. "When the pressure is slight, it may be relieved by cutting back the nurses to half their length, and they may be allowed to re- main till the advance of the hardwood requires their entire removal. From the time that all the nurses are removed, in each of the subsequent thinnings which are necessary to leave the permanent trees that are suitable for the formation of large timber, those trees should first be cut down which appear to press on their stronger and more healthy neighbors, and .to deprive them of the room and nourishment needful to their increasing growth. TRAxsPL^^Js'TIXG OF Tkees. — In the improvement of the park and pleasure-grounds, much may be efiected by the transplantation of trees of a considerable size. AVhere suitable trees are to be had, they may often be effectively employed in the formation of groups in the 174 PAKKS' AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. lawns and in the park, or in making up masses of wood, to shut out disagreeable views or unsightly objects. As, in such operations, immediate eftect is the principal object aimed at, it is a matter of the utmost importance that the work of transplantation should be performed with such care and success that the trees should not only live, but also recover their vigorous growth and healthy appearance, within two or three years after their removal. This, with trees from twenty to forty feet high, is usually a result of somewhat difficult attainment. The most propitious season for transplanting deciduous trees we have found to be in September*, while the foliage was still green, but the young wood firm and ripening off. Young rootlets are almost sure to be formed befo' e winter, through which the tree receives an imn e- diate supply of sap in spring; while later- planted trees often continue withering in the wind till roots are put forth in the beginning of summer. Proper subjects for transplanting should be selected ; the best are found growing, if not in exposed, at least in well- aired localities ; such as on the outsides of plantations, with branches tolerably well-balanced, and having a copious supply of roots. Trees from these situations, and with these qualities, are more hardy and better able than an}- others to stand the increased exposure arising from their being planted as single trees, or in thin groups. If trees can not be obtained, as above recommended, recourse must be had to the interior of plantations; but they should be prepared, by thinning and the consequent exposure, before they are removed. • Not in the United States ; October and November are better months for autumn, and March and April for spring planting. — Ed. TRANSPLANTING OF TREES. 175 It is generally worse than useless, to transplant feeble (Irawn-up trees, from close-sheltered thickets, into the position of single trees or groups ; for, although they may survive the check sustained from the necessary loss of roots, and the increased cold, not one in ten will ever form a tine tree. AVe may add, tluit though trees may often be transplanted at once, success is more certain when they have been prepared by having their roots cut two or three years before their removal. This is done by digging a trench round the tree, at the distance of from two to four feet from the trunk, according to the size, and to the depth of from eigh- teen to thirty inches, so that all the spreading, roots may be cut through, and the descending roots left un- touched for the present. When the roots are abund- ant, three or four of the principal ones should be left undivided till the period of transplantation ; or they may be cut at the distance of three or four feet beyond the trench. These reserved roots will afford the tree a better hold of the ground when lifted, while the shortened roots will yield a copious supply of fibers with which to commence its renewed growtJ]. When the soil is ordinary quality, it may be replaced in the trench ; if it is very inferior, or if there are but few roots or fibers within the ball left by the catting, some prepared soil may be introduced. Generally, however, this is unnecessary, and we prefer keeping the enriched earth to be put round the ball and among the young fibers, at the time when the tree is placed in its new fcite. The removal of large trees requires the assistance of machinery, horses, and a number of men. Ihe common two-wheeled Janker, with its single pole and ITO I'AKKS AND PLEASUKE-G ROUNDS. truss fixed on the center of the axle, is the least expen- sive, and, at the same time, the most convenient machine. As the trees, when placed on it, lie on their side, a little management is required to preserve the branches from being injured bj trailing on the ground. We have found the Janker sufficient for ordinary purposes. The Elvaston machine is a more expensive one, but is undoubtedly a more efficient aid in transplantation; the trees are moved with larger and better balls, and the branches are preserved from injury by the trunks being kept erect. ]^ote.' — The transplanting of trees more than four inches in diameter at the base of the trunk or collar, without a large ball of earth adhering to the roots, is of little use in our American climate. With the ball of earth at the roots carefully taken up, and loaded on to a sled or stone-boat, the operation may be suc- cessfully performed, and the tree saved by mulching with barn litter, sawdust, or tanbark. — Ed. When the tree is placed in its new site, it is most important that it should, be properly and securely fixed. To accomplish this object, the earth should be rammed in firmly below the ball, so as to give the root a solid seat, and to prevent the roots from moving when the upper part of the tree is acted on by the wind. The roots and fibers should then be carefully laid out, and covered with fresh loam or enriched soil. When the earth is made up nearly to the natural level of the ground, three strong wooden pins, six or eight inches in diameter, should be driven down to the same level, near the outside of the hole, and forming a tri- ano-le, with the tree in the center. To these pins are to be nailed three strong slabs of wood, completing PLANTING AND TRANSPLANTING EVERGREENS. 177 the sides of the triangle, and laying fast hold on the ball or principal roots of the tree. The operation is then finished by filling up and beating in the earth to the level of the surface. Trees so planted will resist almost any amount of wind, and be free from the un- sightly appliances of stakes, props, ropes, and heaps of stones, often placed round them to maintain their upright position. Planting and Transplanting of Evergreens. — The distribution of evergreen trees and shrubs is among the most interesting operations in the formation and improvement of pleasure-grounds ; in the first, they give at once a clothed a^^pearance to what was bare ground ; and in the second, by their change of posi- tion they efiect an almost entire alteration in the scen- ery of the place. Success, however, requires not only careful execution, but also due attention to the proper seasons for the performance of the work. In all cases, it is advisable that the ground should be well drained and trenched ; and where poor, it should be enriched with fresh soil or manure, or both, especially when tlie shrubs are young and small. Light sandy soils are greatly improved by moderate additions of clayey loam or peat earth. In transplant- ing shrubs of considerable size, we prefer putting the enriched soil or manure close round the ball, and in contact with the young fibers. In such cases, too, it is useful to prepare the plants, by cutting a trench round them, a year or two previously, as recommended in relation to forest trees. In lifting evergreen shrubs for transplantation, as many root§ as possible should be preserved. When tliev are large, or a little above the size usually 8* 178 PAEKS AND PLEASUKE-GROUKDS. procurable from nurseries, tliej should liave good balls ; and if these can not be secured, at least to a moderate . extent, it will be proper to reduce the head of the plant, as otherwise many of the branches will die back, from their inability to support their former amount of foliage. Perhaps this thinning out of the branches should be resorted to in all cases when large shrubs are shifted ; but it is less necessary when the balls are large, and the roots are well prepared. For the most part, there is good economy in the moderate use of the knife, both in respect of time and of appearance. All slirubs, and especially large ones, should have an ample supply of water when they are transplanted, and this is most effectively given when the water is run into the new pit in which the plant is placed, along with the filling-iu of the earth, beginning when the pit is about one-fourth filled, and continuing till it is nearly quite full. The quantity of the water should be such as to form a strong puddle round the ball. This mode of watering keeps the roots moist, as well as consolidates the earth about them ; and if carefully done at first, will scarcely require any additions. If the water is not administered till after the earth has been fully pressed in round the roots, frequent repeti- tion and larger quantities will be necessary, and the same beneficial results will not be attained. There has been much difference of opinion, and many discussions, respecting the most suitable season for transplanting evergreen shrubs. Some recommend the autumn months, others the winter and spring. When the operations are extensive, it may at times be necessary to carry on the work during the whole period, PLANTING AND TRANSPLANTING EVEEGEEENS. 179 and if frosty and withering weather is avoided, the phmting may be successful. 2^ote. — ^The winters of Great Britain are so mild that the frosts are seldom an impediment to planting, in either of the winter months. In our Middle and aSTorthern states, the winter season is unsuited for planting trees of any kind. — Ed. It is admitted by all, that the transplanting of ever- greens should not be attempted when the plants are in full growth ; for, though even then they may survive the shock, the chance is that most of them will perish or die down to the ground. It seems also ascertained, that the loss of evergreens when transplanted is caused by the excess of perspiration from their leaves, com- pared with the quantity of sap taken up by their mutilated roots ; and that, consequently, dry, parching weather, at whatever season it occurs, is, other things being equal, the most unpropitious for the operations to which we are now adverting. At first sight, this principle might seem to exclude the end of summer and early autumn from the seasons available for plant- ing ; and yet it docs not, and that for various reasons. At the period to which we have referred, there is much warmth in the soil, and as the perfected sap is then descending from the leaves, the growth of roots com- mences rapidly and goes on to a considerable extent, in which case the plant is soon out of danger. Then there is often cloudy and dripping weather, after the turn of the day, as it is called, and every one must have remarked the greater geniality of that season in regard to growth, as compared with sj^ring. Besides, in the spring months, the soil is colder and the 180 PARKS AND PLEASUBE-GROrXDS. atmosphere is drier than in autumn, as may be seen irom the table on the opposite page. The conclusions to be derived from tliose tables plainly point out autumn as the best period for the transplanting of evergreens ; and yet, -when rightly considered, they admit of that wide range of time which actual experience authenticates. We believe that evergreens, in small quantities, have been safely transplanted from midsummer to the end of April — • perhaps we might say the whole year round. This has occurred from a compensation of advantages and disadvantages. Take August, for example : the air is then drier than it is two months later, but the soil is warmer ; and if the plants escape a blazing sun for a few days, the growth of roots will commence, and will very speedily supply to the leaves all the perspirable matter that is needed. Thus, an equilibrium of action is rapidly established. In December or January again, supposing frost to be absent, in which case alone the comparison is possible, the evaporation is diminished, but the warmth of the soil is also lowered, and the transj^lanted evergi'een is apparently in similar circum- stances as before ; and yet it is not so favorably situ- ated, since it wants the establishing influences of the autumn months before it is required to encounter the severities of spring. It must be added, however, that in mild, moist winters and springs there is often suf- ficient warmth in the soil to promote the growth of roots ; and at these times, if the weather is such as to prevent excess of evaporation, the transplantation may be completely successful. In the colder districts, there are sometimes pro- tracted frosts, lasting, perhaps, from December to PLANTING AND TKANSPLANTIXG KVEKGREENS. 181 iJ — t> 05 I n 2. C 2 ti- £- CO :=^ ^ 3 V -5 3 Q ':5 -3 2- Q 1 >^ O H .J H ' o n o 2 (B 3 3 3 uO ? -p , -p ' o w 3 o ^ ■"*» — ^ •-»> o =^ W a > > P - "■ > ? t3 :? i ^ ^ cj to ►t" O -J ;r- JANUARY. 00 •o (O Ci (O ■ w ^ CO ti> ^ to » 00 O OLi rEURCARV. (^ -J >«>■ >U lU t, o '•? Cj MARCH. o -j -j DC ri o '^ J^ ifc. *>. O 00 m C5 cr> C5 APRIL. 1 i-s C'l li o M o OT VI w w a 1 ob CT I* w OT ilAY. 1 o i;i- to iS 1 M >;:- In en tn 1 00 CI to w JUXE. to CO u t— ' o n OT ^I CI CI C5 a 1 CO t/T lo OJ JULY. t «^ 00 M *- 1^1 cp 1 c; o C5 o CI a 1 00 lb. »o >►> ACGCST. OI to 00 trt (ji 1 to ;:) tn OT CT a do lO to 00 00 SEPTEMBER. 00 C5 o u ob w VI to i t,T -T o ti> '— ' M iO op OCTOBER. OT C5 -*l M n o O I ><:>■ i;^ >u o o 00 Cl CO XOVEMBER. -) 05 o -» CT! , '- to ■b. >£>• CO 3 to o to O 00 DECKMBKK. 1 -1 tn ob -J -j OR wl •^ i 182 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GEOUXDS. March, during which the air becomes extreme!}- di y, and if it is set in motion bj northerly or easterly winds, its efiect is rapidly destructive to all evergreens, though long established, if less hardy than the holly or yew. By such a wind, even "the iv}' never sere" is changed into a russet-brown. We can not wonder, then, that an arbutus or a sweet bay should wither visibly before it ; and it will at once be perceived, that "weather which thus goes far to destroy established evergreens must be absolutely pernicious to those en- feebled by recent planting. The remark will suggest the consideration of shelter for evergreens, in connec- tion with the j)roper season for their removal. Dr. Lindley concludes an able article on the trans- planting of shrubs by saying, that " Upon the whole, September, October, and November should be pre- ferred — one being better in one year, and one in another. "We shall only add, that a ground tempera- ture of forty-seven degrees, which may be taken as that of ihoroxigTily drained land near London, in Xo- vember, is sufficiently high for plants to form their roots in." (Gardeners' Chronicle^ January 6th, 1S49.) Eeferring to our own experience, we have had ever- green shrubs successfully transplanted from the mid- dle of July to the middle of April, but only in small quantities in the months of July, March, and April. We believe that September, October, and jSTovember form the most suitable seasons in the middle districts of the island — allowing, perhaps, a fortnight earlier for the northern, and a fortnight later for the southern parts of Great Britain. In the mild climates of Ire- land, the planting may be freely continued during the whole of the autumn, winter, and spring months. But PLANTING AND TRANSPLANTING EVERGREENS. 183 in no circumstances should evergreens be moved in hot, dry sunshine, in cold, parching winds, or in actual frost; at such times, the roots and foliage are sure to suffer while they are out of the ground. Further, it is not generally advisable to shift them before the annual shoots are somewhat ripened, in autumn. Note. — ^The subjects comprised in this chapter being chiefly of a 2>^'ofessional character, and equally appli- cable to this country as to Great Britain, it is only necessary to refer those who wish to avail themselves of its instruction to a close and discriminating study of every deiDartment discussed by our author. — Ed. 184 PARKS AND PLEASUEE-G ROUNDS. CHAPTER VII. FENCES OF THE PARK AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. General Remarks — Boundary Fence — Internal Fences — Fence of the Deer Park — Pleasure-Ground Fences — Malleable-iron Fences — Sunk Fences — Stone Walls — Hedges. Both in its original signification and actual usage, the term, Park, denotes an inclosed space. The park, therefore, is always encircled by a boundary or ring fence, of sufficient height to afford protection from without, to retain in their proper places " the beasts of chase," or the cattle that may be kept within it, and to insure that moderate seclusion which is an es- sential requisite to a country residence, in the estima- tion both of its inmates and of those strangers whom the liberality of the proprietor permits to visit and enjoy its scenery. Besides this bounding inclosure, however, internal or divisional fences are necessary. A park of many hundred acres, and including a multi- plicit}' of objects, invariably requires to be subdivided into lesser portions, for the convenience of grazing, and for other reasons, such as the separation of certain of the wooded surfaces from the pasture-grounds, and the due regulation of the secondary roads, and even sometimes of the main approach. "We shall take up these two classes of fences in succession. BOUNDARY fexct:. 185 BoDNDAKY Fence. — The outline and position of this fence depend on those of the park itself, and seldom call for much attention except where it thrusts itself obtrusively on the eye, a circumstance to be guarded against or ameliorated when possible. The fence itself is often a wall built of stone, or, if that material is scarce, of bricks ; and it may be from six and a half feet to nine feet in height. On flat surfaces, fences of this altitude shut out much of the surrounding coun- try; and in such cases, when it is desirable to extend the view to the adjacent portion of the estate, instead of the wall may be substituted a sunk fence, with the fosse or trench on the outside. Where timber is abun- dant, wooden fences are occasionally employed ; but unless of moderate extent, their want of durability renders them less desirable than those formed of more permanent materials. A close, tall pale of split oak, however, is very serviceable, and will last for upward . of thirt}-- years. Hedges seldom prove efficient boun- daries ; when, however, combined wnth walls, and well trained and kept, they may suffice for parks in thinly populated districts. The walls may be two or three feet high, with a low bank of earth behind, on which to plant the hedge. Internal Fences. — The proper arrangement of the divisional fences in the interior of the park is a matter of considerable difficulty, and one in which there are perhaps more failures than in almost any other. The common error is the application of the principles of ordinary farm fencing to the ornamental grounds. In purely agricultural districts the divisions are arranged so as to facilitate drainage, and to suit the conveniences of tillage. The normal type of the agricultural field 186 PAKKS AND PLEASUKE-GK0UND8. is a square or parallelogram ; but these forms can scarcely be introduced into the park, at least visibly, without a wretched effect. Many parks are subdi- vided by such a multiplicity of hedges and walls as to deprive them of all apparent continuity of surface, and therefore of that unity which is ahvaj^s so desir- able. We have often seen the contour of a small hill •lestroyed by a hedge planted along its top, the slope of a fine bank interrupted by a wall run up or across its breast, or what is perhaps even worse, the bottom of a small and beautiful valley crossed and recrossed by hedge and ditch or dry stone wall, to the utter de- struction of the natural beauty of the locality. Clearl}-, the internal fences of the park should be so arranged as to avoid these barbarously mutilating divisions of surfaces. Indeed, could the woods be reared for the first forty or fifty years without fences, there might be an almost total absence of that formality and inter- ference with contour so common in most parks ; and there would be much more of that free irregularity of outline which is so characteristic a feature in the group- ing of the natural forest. But as we have already said, internal fences in the park cannot be dispensed with ; yet, in relation to the general scenery, they should be regarded as necessary evils, and those forms and dis- tributions of them should be preferred which are least conspicuous and obtrusive. Lines should be adopted which accommodate themselves to the furm of the ground, or which may be most easily masked or re- lieved with scattered trees. With these objects in view, the inclosures of the woods and clumps may be made to form a considerable portion of the divisional fences of the park. FENCE OF THE DEER PARK. 187 Fence of the Deer Park. — Deer parks require fences equal to the best description of park walls. When they are placed contiguous to the external boundary of the home domain, a considerable amount of separate fencing must be dispensed with. As a division from the other portions of the park, a well- laid-out, sunk fence-wall, of medium height, with a wire fence along the top, will be found to be sufficient. Note. — Deer, in the United States, cost more than they come to. The fallow deer of England do not withstand the vicissitudes of our climate, and the American deer are too wild, and leap too high, to be favorites with our park proprietors. Well bred cattle and sheep are better. — Ed. Pleasure-ground Fences. — In immediate connec- tion with the mansion-house, and especially where there is only a limited extent of dressed grounds be- tween it and the park, the most appropriate fence is an architectural one of the same materials, and in the same style, as the principal buildings. In no case should this fence be raised much above the general surface, otherwise the view of the external scenery may be greatly intercepted. In flat situations, and where the principal rooms are raised only a few steps above the ground level, wire fences are connnonly the most suitable. The proper seclusion of the pleasure- grounds will often require a wall of six or seven feet in height, to separate them, for example, from the back-road to the house and ofiices. Such a wall, however, should hardly ever cross the views from the principal windows. In these places, a sunk fence, or a wire fence, should generally be substituted. Malleable Iron Fences, such as those made of 188 PAKKS AND PLEASUKE-GROUNDS. wire and small iron rods for the use of the park, come nearer to perfection than any others. We consider them the greatest improvement introduced into this department of fencing during the last hundred years. Their light and simple forms interposing a small amount of opaque matter between the eye and ob- jects beyond, render them nearly invisible; and when tbnned of proper materials, and well constructed, they are very durable, and as efficient as a fence can well be. The use of iron rods screwed into each other, in place of the top wire and of the third wire from the ground, improves greatly the common wire fence. We lately inspected a fence of this description which had stood thirty-three years, and found it perfectly sound, and likely to last for as long a period to come. Instead of the above, iron hurdle-fences are sometimes used, and, being more movable, have their conven- iences in certain situations. Wire fences with wooden posts are at present pretty extensively used. In rela- tion to agricultural purposes, we have nothing to say ao;ainst them: but we confess that we resrard them as offensive in the park, and we should employ them only as temporary expedients. At a distance, they appear an array of wooden stumps stuck into the ground, without visible utility or connection ; and on flat sur- faces, where several lines may be seen together, they are at once mean and monotonous. Sunk Fences have been generally superseded by wire fences ; there are, however, some positions in which tlie former are preferable, as we have pointed out when speaking of the boundary and deer-park in- closures. The proper place of the sunk fence in the park is where a sectional division is wanted, while it STONE WALLS — HEDGES. 189 i3 desirable to preserve an apparent continuity of out- line in a glade, or an expanse of grass on a level or slightly inclined surface, on which, perhaps, even the inconsiderable constraint of a wire fence might be objectionable. The wall of the sunk fence should never face the principal point of view ; and from such points it is not an advantage for the line of di- rection to be seen on end, and so to be enfiladed by the eye. A low wall, thirty inches in height, forming a sunk fence two feet in depth, with two wires along the top, affords a good, cheap protection for plantations where stones are abundant. Stone Walls are good permanent fences ; but on flat or slightly undulating surfaces, they often hide a considerable breadth of view, especially when em- ployed as internal divisions. For plantations they are less objectionable, as the trees overhang and vail them. They are best suited for hilly and mountainous countries, and in these they may be freely employed, as the objections which may be made against walls in other places are there less applicable. Hedges afford a cheap sort of fence.* They are not, however, generally speaking, very suitable for the park; for however neatly they may be cut and dressed, it is needful, when they form the boundaries of clumps or plantations, to keep the trees trimmed back, in order to prevent them from injuring the hedges, and so they impart a more formal and constrained outline to grow- ing wood than almost any other species of fence does. Hedges may be planted with good effect on the inside of the boundary walls of the park, to clothe them when they are not screened by plantations. • Not in this country. — Kd. 190 PAKKS AJSTD PLEASURE-GROUNDS. Note. — ^Necessity, not choice, must rule the char- acter of fences to a considerable extent in America. In ornamental grounds, when stone can be had, the ha-ha, or sunken wall, with a sloping ditch bank facing it, is the most appropriate, and may be made efficient for usual purposes. By this mode, the unsightly ap- pearance of ordinary fences is superseded. The lawn and park of the late Gardiner G. Ilowland, near New Hamburgh, on the Hudson, designed and planted, and for some years occupied, by James Lenox, Esq., of New York, as well as those of Mr. Sheafe, on the elevated lands adjoining, exhibit fine specimens of the unbroken effect which such places may produce in the absence of fences, none being visible within the boun- daries. "Where so great a variety of fencing material is resorted to, as witli us, local convenience, and ex- pense, must measurably govern the kind to be used. The perishable nature of wood, and its inreasing scar- city, will soon compel us to resort to other materials in districts where stone is not to be procured. Wire has been successfully introduced in some sections of the country, and hedges are — talked of. Although these latter are advocated by some, ^ pennanently effi- cient hedge, inclosing an entire park, pleasure-ground, or agricultural estate, has not yet come to our notice. Hedges may, in time, be introduced, and perhaps to good purpose ; but we are somewhat doubtful of their adoption to any considerable extent, save, perhaps, in the use of Osage Orange, on the western prairies. The subject of fences, therefore, for the present object, must be left to the convenience and circumstances of the land and its proprietor. — Ed, WATER. 191 CHAPTER VIII. WATER. Artificial Lakes — Islands — The Head or Artificial Embankment — Decorative Accompaniments — Artificial Rivers — Jet Fountains — Jets d'Eau — Propriety of Introducing Water. Of all the varied materials in the composition of natural scenery, there is none that produces more beauty, variety and interest than water ; nor is there any that enters into so many pleasing combinations with surroundino; objects. This felicity in adjusting itself to the beautiful in nature awakens a strong de- sire for the introduction of so pleasing an element into the more artificial arrangements of parks and pleasure-grounds. In these it assumes a diversity of forms, such as artificial lakes, ponds, rivers, waterfalls, fountains, and jets d'eau — means of ornament which, when skillfully executed and kept in their proper places, are always a great acquisition to the grounds into which they are introduced. In the formation of an artificial lakk there are two requisites of almost equal importance. The first is an adequate supply of water, without which, indeed, we may make a morass or weedy pool, but not a pleasing sheet of the liquid element. The second, and not in- ferior object is a suitable site for the lake. If the locality does not convey the impression that the water 192 PARKS AND PLEASUBE-GEOinSDS. is resting in a hollow, vale or platform, and is retained there by a natural obstruction not easily removed, there will be "-a want of truth or fidelity" of expres- sion in relation to " the thing imitated" that will tend to excite aversion rather than pleasure in the minds of those who have been trained to a genuine taste for the beauties of nature. Wherever the artificial lake is seen, generally speaking, it ought to appear in the lowest part of the landscape within the park; or if it cannot be made to present this appearance from every point of view, care should be taken to secure a considerable breadth of space between the lake itself and the natural outlet by which its waters seem to be drained off. Without these necessary features, there is a want of truthfulness in the expression. It is true that in hilly and mountainous countries, pools are found without the conditions above specified, but there is always something to account for them, and they are mostly mere spots in the landscape ; while in parks and pleasure-grounds, sheets of water are, from their nature, prominent objects, and whatever is obtrusively artificial or out of harmony is sure to be offensive. When a series of ponds or lakes arc formed on the same stream, and in the same park, it is desirable that the natural form of the ground should be such as to indicate that, in each case, no great amount of obstruc- tion was necessary to attain the designed effect. The place, then, for an artificial lake is a natural hollow where no great embankment is required, or where a moderate excavation will afford materials for the banks needed to retain the water, for the islands and promontories on the lake itself, and for the knolls and slopes by which the ground in its vicinity may be ARTIFICIAL LAKES. 193 varied. The opposite extreme, liowever, shjuld be avoided ; for where there is too little excavation, the boundaries of the lake often seem too feeble for the retention of its contents, and the effect is invariably tame. As a general rnle, apparent shallowness should be avoided in artificial water. The beauty of lakes depends greatly on their out- line, and this, therefore, is an object of indispensable attention. When they are formed in a hollow, the plane of tlieir waters naturally assumes an outline corresponding with the original configuration of the ground, and this outline can be varied and improved only by the formation of bays, promontories and isl- ands ; and by such means considerable additional effect may often be produced. If the site is on level ground, the outline may be varied at pleasure ; any form may be adopted. It maj^ be either broad, bending, or wind- ing, as the general character of the park or the extent of the lake will allow. In every case, however, the ar- tificial lake should present breadth rather than length. Variety of outline, and the desirable intricacy of effect, may be secured by the means above alluded to, viz: by bays, and promontories, and islands. Care, how- ev{. r, must be taken that the projecting masses do not obs "Aire or destroy the breadth of surface, as is too often the case with small pieces of water. In some instances, what is intended for a lake dwindles down into a winding canal, or palmated pool with an island stuck into it, certainly as unlike a work of nature as a work of man can be. JV^ote. — It is the sheerest folly to attempt water, un- less some volume can be given to it. All attempts to make a duck pond in grounds of any extent, ai'e little 9 194 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GKOUNDS. better than contemptible. The dignity of fine grounds should never be marred by a puddle. — Ed. Islands should be irregular both in their outline and contour, and small rather than large. They are more advantageousl}' placed near the sides or ends than in the center of the lake; at the same time they should not have the appearance of being separated from the main land only by a narrow canal. Their position should be determined by the outline of the lake and surrounding scenery ; they ought never to be numer- ous. Their purpose is to impart variety to the M'ater, and to obviate any apparent baldness in the banks, or to lessen other defects which cannot be removed by planting. Too many islands give an artificial sheet of water the air of a map or model. Note. — The park builder can not too strictly heed these instructions. "We have seen islands put into ar- tificial water which the owners conceived to be a great achievement. But instead of things of beauty, as -in- tended, they more resembled tussocs of grass floating in a wash-tub. — Ed. The Head, as it is usually called — that is, the em- bankment at the lower end of the lake for retaining the water — is generally one of the principal diffii ul- ties in the construction.* It is here that the artificial character of the lake is most conspicuous, and, of course, a greater effort is necessary to conceal it. "When the head can be so formed as to unite with the form of the ground, and to present the appearance of *In America we call tins the "Dam." Our author commits a genuine "bull" in calling the "lower end" of an_v thing its "head." At the foot of the lake should be the dam, or embankment, to raise the water to its proper elevation ; and where per- manency is required, the strength of the dam can not be too thoroughly secured, par- ticularly if the stream be liable to sudden floods.— Ed. ARTIPICIAL LAKES. 195 a natural obstruction, the success of the designer and executant may be regarded as complete. Pleads of lakes, as usually formed, are commonly defective, be- ing often too narrow; or when broad, of too little ele- vation, and are frequently, indeed, simple weirs for confining the water. When the lake occupies part of a small valley, the head may be formed into a knoll or two, thrown out from, but connected with, one of the banks ; and the issuing stream may be led round the knoll, and between it and the opposite bank. When the locality requires a lengthened embankment, another method may be pursued. A broad mound may be constructed, either level or convex, with the water flowing through it, or following the course of a small, winding valley, scooped out at either end. In this case, the face of the raised platform toward the lake may be formed into a series of terraces of par- allel levels; and if these terraces are carried down the small valley and repeated in some of the adjacent bays, an impression will be suggested that the lake is not an artificial creation, but that the rivulet has worked its way through the opposing bank, and left the water to form a new shore at a lower level. If the materials do not suffice to form a broad platform, either level or raised, a combination of the two forms may be employed, on a narrower base, by having a level next the water, and a raised bank for planting on the outside. In speaking of the heads of artificial lakes, we have described only the projecting knoll and the broad platform. Natural examples of these may be seen in the lakes of hilly and undulating districts ; they are easily imitated, and their imitations, if at all successful, have much less the appearance of artifice 196 PARKS AND PLEASrEE-GROHNDS. than tlie ridges of earth commonly employed for this purpose. To these might be added the rocky barrier and rugged outlet of a mountain lake ; but as being at once extremely difficult to execute, and often in questionable taste, we do not venture to recommend them. It is a good principle, however, to look earn- estly at nature when we are imitating its works. The outline of the head toward the lake, admits of some variety of configuration. Where the broad platform is adopted, its edge may be in part a straight line, with curves toward the water at the ends ; or, when the knoll is selected, a promontory may be drawn out into the water, with unequal bays at each side. The surplus water, instead of issuing through a paved overflow or sluice, should rather be conveyed in a winding stream, flowing from a bay at one end of the head; in this case, the small vallej^ forming the outlet should, if possible, be so excavated as to place the bed of the stream on the solid ground, not on the embank- ment, an arrangement conducive at once to stability and ornament. If a sluice is indispensable, it should be in connection Avith a culvert. When success has been attained in the form and outline of an artificial lake, much still requires to be done in the way of decorative accompaniments. Wa- ter without wood will be destitute of that living grace which trees and shrubs can alone impart; and it will want, also, much of that varied reflection of light and shade, and of form and color, which adds so much charm and interest to woodland lakes. Trees, how- ever, are not to be dotted over the banks. They should rather be combined into strong masses, at some places approaching the water's edge, at others receding, and ARTIFICIAL LAKES. 197 dispersed in irregular groups, as the surface of the ground may suggest. The embankments, when defi- cient in form, should be covered with masses of wood. At the same time, it is injudicious to overload the scene with trees and shrubs. A light and graceful efifect should be aimed at in certain positions, and a depth of shade in others. The pleasure-grounds and woods afibrd more suitable situations for highly orna- mented pieces of water than the pasture-grounds in the park, as the latter are generally too unclothed for this purpose. Islands should not be over-thickly planted, as they commonly are. When the trees are sparse, they are more varied in their form, and fall into better groups. A green bank or piece of level lawn, seen from the neighboring shore, are agreeable features in an island. To lake scenery, a boat-house and pier, and palings running into the water to pre- vent deer and cattle from entering the reserved inclo- sures, and aquatic birds and plants, add a pleasing diversity. Note. — The construction of lakes — ponds, as such small bodies of water are less euphoniously called by us — is rather a delicate matter with park builders. Unless the circumstances and features of the adjoin- ing grounds are favorably disposed, their exceedingly artificial look detracts from the effect they should pro- duce. A sheet or stream of water should, of all things, look natural. — Ed. To be properly seen, the lake requires to be ap- proached by walks, especially in the pleasure-grounds. It is seldom advisable, however, to carry the walks quite round it. They should rather be directed to the points fi'om which the finest views are seen. In this 198 PAEKS AND PLEASTJRE-GKOUNDS. respect the head is generally important, for though it may not be the finest in itself, it often affords j^ositions which exhibit other portions of the lake to greatest advantage. If, then, the head has been formed as above recommended, a walk may be led across it, keeping, however, on that side of the platform which is next the water. In no case should the walk pass close round the back of the embankment, as the de- scent from and subsequent ascent to the level of the lake, will undoubtedly proclaim to every one its artifi- cial character. Such a cross-walk, if absolutely neces- sary, should always run at some considerable distance below, and through ground from which the head of the lake is masked by trees. Where more than one lake are formed in close proximity to each other, good taste will dictate that only one of these should be seen at the same time from the approach, if it passes near their points of separation. Note. — Our author has treated this subject with good judgment, and in excellent taste. Perhaps there is no feature of the park or pleasure-ground more mis- managed, where it can be made available, than water. Better let it alone altogether than to fail in makiug it a graceful and attractive object in the picture. A slieet of water, in our climate, should be deep and pure; otherwise it is little better than a nuisance, breeding noxious insects and reptiles. — Ed. Artificial Rivers are sometimes formed in parks and pleasure-grounds, but seldom with happy effect. They want the progression and the continuance which are leading characteristics of natural rivers. The rivulets or streams which it is desired to elevate to the form of rivers, do not supply sufficient water to JET FOUNTAINS, 199 sustain the character aimed at; or if the breadtli is in- creased to ai^brd an adequate expanse, the movement of the water disappears, and' the result is only a stag- nant canal or an elongated pool. It is certainly bet- ter to leave the stream in its natural state; or, if breadth of water is an object, to adopt the recom- mendation of Sir Uvedale Price, viz: to spread it out into a small lake, or chain of lakes, with the stream flowing through them. Jet Fountains are more easily introduced into dressed grounds than any other kind of ornamental water, at least where there is an adequate supply, and at a sufficient altitude in the source, M'ithin a moderate distance. Their effects are also more immediate, as they do not greatly depend on the growth of trees and shrubs, or other progressive improvements. We believe that few objects can be itsed for the decoration of terraces and flower-gardens w-hich are more generally pleasing than a well-arranged archi- tectural fountain in full play. Such fountains should occupy conspicuous places in these localities ; as, for example, the crossing of leading walks, or the center of a group of flower-beds. They are pleasing spec- tacles in themselves, but they always yield the most brilliant effect wdien surrounded with fine flowers and shrubs or trees. A fountain, whether in full play or entirely idle, may assume an intrinsic interest from the beauty of its design. When placed in the vicinity of the man- sion-house, it should harmonize with the general style of the building, or, at least, should exhibit no marked contrariety of character. In detached floAver-gardens the style of the fountain is of less importance ; still, 200 PAKKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. even there it should liave some accordance with the expression of surrounding objects. Fountains are gen- erally made of stone or iron. The former material seems preferable ; but where light and ianciful shapes are wanted, iron or even glass may be employed. Jets d'Eau are jet fountains on a large scale. In this country they are seldom seen in any other form than that of the nozzle of a strong pipe in the center of a pond, throwing up a thick column of water to a considerable height. They are generality too large for terraces or flower-gardens. They may be introduced into some of the principal lawns in sight of the house, and in such situations, especially when partially backed or encompassed with trees, they are extremely brilliant and effective. It must be owned that there is seldom a supply of water copious enough to maintain such water-works in continuous action. Besides the power of introducing artificial water into a park or pleasure-ground, the ])ro])riety of so introducing it remains to be determined, and that is a matter sometimes requiring to be carefully weighed and considered. There are certain cases in which such attempts approach to manifest absurdity. It is possible, for example, to conceive a limited j^lace with a mansion-house beautifully seated on an eminence, from which the ground slopes on at least three sides, and the whole of the kept grounds might be on these slopes. "Water might undoubtedly be brought from the fourth side, and a fountain or two might be per- fectly admissible, or even desirable ; but certainly an artificial lake or river, or even pond, on the slopes, could be nothing less than ridiculous. It is, if possible, JET FOUNTAINS. 201 still more questionable taste to elaborate artificial sheets of water in sight of the sea, a fine inland lake, or navigable river. In these cases, the grand of na- ture invariably overpowers the puny efibrts of art. We can not help associating the same feelings with jets d'eau; they do not harmonize at all with marine, and scarcely with lake scenery. If they must be intro- duced into such localities, let them be so placed that there may be no apparent competition between the tiny murmurs of their falling waters and the hoarser surge of the shore. In ordinary weather, there is as much spray from the curl of a wave over a small rock or considerable stone as from the finest fountain or jet Wean. A young friend, who had recently inspected a water-power of this description playing in a flower- garden near the sea, favored us with the following lines descriptive of such artistic efforts : Old Father Oceau merely smiled, To see tliis puny, eartli-boru cliild Send up its liny stream of spray, To spurt and splutter for a day. J^ifote. — Jet fountains, and Jets d'Eau, we consider beneath the simple dignity of the park, or the exten- sive pleasure-ground. They are so entirely artificial in their character, and useless during our frosty months, that they may be classed with Spanish and Italian ar- chitecture, out-of-door statuary, and peacocks — from which, in fact, they should seldom be separated-. Fountains and jets d'eau are sometimes desirable, and may be constructed with good effect under invit ing circumstances. They are exceedingly troublesome to keep in repair, where heavy winter frosts prevail. 9* 202 PAKKS AND PLEASUKE-GROU^'DS. Having indulged, for some years, in the play of a jet fountain in our own grounds, we know somewhat of this item belonging to it. Most of the statuesque im- agery through which the fountains play in American grounds, is little short of monstrosity, or caricature. Instead of a deformed and unhappy looking piece of sculpture in the similitude of swan, goose, or other water-fowl ; a dolphin, mermaid, or any piscatorial design ; or even a classic imitation of any sort of hu- manity, through a distorted limb or feature of which the water may play, let the fabrication be some neat pattern of mechanic art in the way of iron or stone. Various models of these may be found in the shops of our principal cities, wdiich are becoming and grace- ful ornaments. — Ed. GARDENS. 208 CHAPTER IX. THE KITCHEN, FRUIT, AND FORCING GARDENS. Introduction — The Site — Drainage — Soil —The Form —The Walls — The Fruit Garden — The Forcing Garden. Gardens intended for the production of fruit and culinary vegetables belong to the subject of horticul- ture, and therefore, in their full extent, do not come within the scope of this work. Their formation, as well as their culture, must be regulated by principles and methods specially belonging to them. They are, however, objects within the park, and bear certain re- lations to its component parts. If these relations are altogether neglected, the beauty of the surrounding scenery may be materially alFected ; and if they are exclusively attended to, the value of these gardens, in their proper character, may be greatly diminished. In laying out a country residence, a careful adjust- ment must be made between these competing claims. To aid these sometimes difficult arrangements, we propose in this cliapter to offer some general obser- vations, without entering into lengthened or minute details. The kitchen, fruit, and forcing gardens are gener- ally so connected, and often so intermingled, as to form one establishment, and there is in them such a community of objects and operations as to warrant 204 PARKS AND PLEASrEE-GROUNDS. this union. In some cases, too. borders of flowers and of ornamental plants enter into the combination, and then they form what may be called mixed gardens. These mixed gardens are certainly finer than mere vegetable grounds, and they require a superior style of keeping; but when this system of combination is carried so far as to supersede the flower-garden proper, we think it greatly to be deprecated. In England the mixed garden is of rarer occurrence than in Scotland. In the latter country we not unfrequently meet with extensive parks in whicb there is no separate flower- garden, and where all the departments of both horti- culture and floriculture are jumbled together with much confusion. Undoubtedly a greater amount of ornamental eflect results, but considerably less expense is incurred in keeping, when the last is wholly sepa- rated, or when, at most, the fruit and kitchen-gardens only are placed together. In the following remarks, we shall not advert further to the mixed garden, but shall confine our observations to those grounds which are exclusively fitted and intended to yield a supply of fruit and vegetables — a matter of no small impor- tance to a family residing in the country. giTE. — The primary consideration in reference to these gardens is their site, and more particularly its position in relation to the other parts of the park and grounds. Their unpicturesque appearance is such as to require that they should be screened, if not entirely hid, from the main points of view in the surrounding park, otherwise they prove detrimental to the general scenery. Certainly they should not be visible from the principal approach, nor from the windows of the mansion-house. In ordinary circumstances it is not SITE. 205 expedient to remove them to too great a distance from the house, neither sliould they be placed altogether in its immediate vicinity. Perhaps the most desirable position is one in a secluded part of the pleasure- grounds, where they can be set down in connection with each other, and where their walks can enter readily into the main system of communication run- ning throughout the place. In a localit}^ of thib de- scription, their w^alls and other buildings can be most effectually shrouded, and on that account the general scenery will be least impaired. AVhen the stables are detached from the mansion-house, the fruit and kitchen gardens may be placed near them, with advantage to the general arrangements of the place, as the same back-roads will serve for both, and facility of access will thus be increased. In parks in which there are considerable eminences or ridges, the gardens in question are not unfrequently placed at the base of one or other of these, for the sake of shelter. Before adopting such a site however, the designer will do well to study the effect of that arrangement as viewed from the neighboring heights. There is scarcely any thing less pleasing than a square, box-like inclosure when seen from an eminence at a moderate distance. Of course there need be no hesi- tation when the heights are not traversed by any of the principal walks or rides ; for on uneven surfaces it is impossible to avoid all unpleasing effects from every point of the park. At the same time it should be ascertained that the expectation of shelter from the situations to which we have alluded is not lallacious. Eising grounds sometimes cause a repercussion of the aerial currents, or so direct their movements as to 206 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GEOUNDS. render the intermediate valleys as little protected as a more open and apparently less protected position. And it is needful to remark that the beantiful or the picturesque are not the only considerations to be taken into account, in selecting a proper site for fruit and kitchen-gardens. These desirable properties are more than counterbalanced by the disadvantages aris- ing from a cold exposure and damp soil, which un- failingly render the crops of fruit and vegetables of inferior quality. The site to be sought for, and to be found if possible, is one with a good soil, a dry subsoil, and a sunny exposure, sheltered sufficiently, but not shaded. The ground should be level, or rather, per- haps, with a slight declivity toward the south. A northern exposure should be avoided : we would prefer even a considerable declivity to the south, though steep inclinations require more labor in cultivation than level surfaces. A certain amount of shelter is indispensable to a good garden; and where this is not to be had, sites in other respects favorable are to be avoided. _ Some natural protection should be sought for, particularly when the place is destitute of old plantations. Shelter may certainly be obtained by judicious planting ; but it is to be remembered that in exposed situations fifteen or twenty years may elapse before it becomes effective. The Drainage of a garden should be perfect — cer- tainlv at least not inferior to that thorough drainins: now employed for agricultural j)urposes. To most horticultural operations a comjDletely drained and therefore warm soil is essential : damp ground yields only inferior vegetables, and supports only diseased, DRAINAGE. 207 sbovt-lived, and unproductive trees, bearing ill-favored fruit — a state of matters, however, not unfrequently seen in gardens of considerable pretensions, though surrounded by well-drained fields. Why such evident negligence should be permitted or overlooked, it is hard to say. JVote. — In relation to thorough drainage of spongy, springy, or dishing lands, Americans have almost every thing to learn. The tile-draining system of Great Britain has lately been introduced into America with marked effect. Agricultural lands have been doubled in their productive value by the simple and comparatively cheap process of draining ; and no gar- den, orchard, or ornamental grounds requiring it, can give satisfaction so long as drainage is necessary. We commend this subject particularly to all those whose grounds are not entirely free from superabun- dant moisture. — Ed. Soil. — It has been said above that the soil of a garden should be naturally good ; perhaps, however, this property, which is by no means unimportant, should g've way when necessary to the considerations formerly adverted to, and to a desirable position in tne park. There are few situations in which good soils can not be formed by artificial means ; but there are some subsoils which can not be sufiiciently dried and warmed by any amount of drainage ; and there are sometimes good soils whose accompanying disad- vantages in site and position can scarcely be remedied or modified by any expedient. Gardens on such im- tractable sites may be seen on the level grounds by the sides of lakes or streams. In these the soil may be excellent, while the subsoil is incurably damp. 208 PARKS AXD PLEASUKE-GK0UND8. There the late spring and early autumn frosts prevail to a greater extent than on the adjacent high grounds, and these may baffle the best directed elibrts of the gardener. The crops of early vegetables are retarded, the blossom of the fruit-trees is often destroyed, or, when it escapes, it is followed by deformed and ill- ripened fruit. The proprietor of a garden, formed at considerable expense, is left with a deficient supply, and is mortified by the comparative abundance en- joyed by his neighbors, who have been more fortunate in the choice of a site. A good, sound, loamy soil is the most useful for general purposes. But if an arti- ficial soil is to be formed, it will be found useful to have some variety — one compartment, for example, being composed of light sandy earth, and another of strong loam. Peaty and clayey soils are objection- able : the former are feeble and cold ; the latter, though productive, are late, with a damp, uncomfortable look, and require additional labor. Form. — ^The form of the kitchen-garden, and the consequent arrangement of the walls which surround it, are usually determined by the nature of the ground, and by the extent of space inclosed. On all surfaces not deviating much from a level, the favorite configu- ration is a rectangular one, either a square or a paral- lelogram ; and in these forms the grounds can be laid out to the greatest advantage, with fewer walks, and with compartments most suitable to the culture of vege- tables and the arrangement of fruit-trees. A number of other forms have been occasionally adopted, but without apparent benefit. For example, in order to diminish the expense incurred in erecting the walls, some have chosen the form of an octagon, or other FORM. 209 polygon more nearly approaching the circle, it being well known that the circle contains the greatest space within the smallest perimeter. Among practical men there is an impression, which is probably well founded, that walls of a circular, or polygonal config- uration are more frequently and injuriously swept along by winds than those of the ordinary rectangular forms. Every ardent horticulturist wishes to have as much wall as possible with a southern aspect. In- deed, such is the superiority of climate on these walls, that it is somewhat surprising that they are not more frequently multiplied by being built in the interior of gardens, running from east to west, as in the peach- gardens in France. The massive, and therefore expen- sive, style in which garden walls are commonly built in this country probably accounts for the neglect of so obvious an advantage. We would nevertheless recom- mend such intersectional walls of moderate height and slio-ht construction to those who have a taste for fine fruit, and who are forming gardens on surfaces with a considerable slope toward the south. The additional warmth afforded by Avails is a matter of great importance, and is therefore generally taken into account, and is allowed due weight in regulating the form of gardens. The finer kinds of fruit-trees grown in the open air, and cultivated in the United Kingdom, require all the protection and aid which walls afford to trees trained on them, in order properly to mature their fruit. The position of walls has a mate- rial effect on the climate: that is the best in which the line of the wall is at right angles to the meridian of the place, giving one of the sides a directly south aspect, though, to suit the ground, one a few degrees 210 PARKS AND PLEASURE-GROUNDS. east or west may be adopted without any appreciable difference in the warmth. The walls running south and north, or parallel to the meridian, and facing to the east and west, afford secondary climates ; and walls in the intermediate directions have climates varying in excellence according as they approach to or diverge from the south. In the southern part5 of the kingdom, where the climate is fine, this subject is of less impor- tance than in the middle and northern districts. Even the difterence of a single degree of latitude has a no- ticeable effect. In the neighborhood of London, in latitude 51 deg. 30 min., peaches ripen on a south-east aspect; while at Edinburgh, latitude 56 deg., they require a south wall, a fine season, and other favorable circumstances, to arrive at maturity. When a large extent of wall, with a first-rate climate, is wanted, a parallelogram, with its longer sides facing toward the south, should be adopted, and the southern aspect of the south wall should be made available by means of a piece of inclosed ground in front of it : when this is not an object of much consequence, a square, or some other more varied form, may be selected. Note. — The American reader will perceive that walls, as here discussed, are but of minor importance in the more propitious climate which he enjoys for garden cultivation, as compared with that of Great Britain. — Ed, The Walls. — ^The height of the walls should have some proportion to the size of the garden. They may vary from eight to sixteen feet: below or above these heights they are neither convenient nor useful. For these walls, well-made and well-burnt bricks are cer- tainly the best materials, being most kindly to the THE WALLS. 211 growth of trees, and affording the greatest facilities for training them. We liave often, however, had walls erected in whole or in great part of stones ; and when the stones were good, and kept down to a proper size, we have found the walls little inferior to those com- posed of brick. In good gardens a considerable por- tion of the best walls should be constructed with flues and furnaces, so that they may be artificially heated in spring and autumn — in spring to protect the blossom, and in autumn to aid in maturing the fruit, and what is perhaps of equal importance, to ripen the fruit- bearing wood for the following year. We may add, though the remark perhaps belongs to practical horti- culture, that in autumn artificial-heat is often applied only during the night. This is improper ; for light, a main agent in perfecting vegetable life, is then absent. When the fire-heat is employed during the day, it co- operates with the solar heat and light in the elaboration of the juices of the fruit and foliage, and its action may be equivalent to the reduction of several degrees from the latitude of the place. Good flues, with proper furnaces attached, have been found to be superior to hot-water pipes as means of heating walls. These pipes, when placed within internal cavities, unless they be very numerous, and their sides extremely thin, emit a heat too feeble to produce an appreciable effect on a large surface of wall. ] to be a bird, Vv-hile tbey could tell little or riotbing more about eitber. It i^ to bo regretted tliat, witli tlie exception of St. James' Park and Kensington Gardens, all the public parks around Loudon and Manchester are totall}' deficient in this simple and obvious means of instruction. Of course we do not wisb that every busb and tree within the inclosure should be labeled ; we only propose that some definite portion of the trees, sbrubs, and otlier plants, should be arranged and named for this special purpose. Besides the informa- tion actually conveyed, and the inquiries as to uses suggested, such arrangements would exhibit, in an interesting manner, the wonderful adaptation of our climate for the growth of plants from the milder and colder regions of the globe. They would display in one group the magnificent cedars of Lebanon, of Atlas, and of the Himalayas, together with the firs of Sibe- ria and the Pyrenees, of Scotland and California, of the Mediterranean and the Oregon, of Xorway and Nepal. In a second, they would show us the broad oak of Old England, the cut-leaved oak of Turkey, the evergreen oak of Spain, and the red oak of Amer- ica, with the sycamore of Britain and the sugar-maple of Canada. In a third, we might find the Arl}utus of Ireland, the Andrachne of the Levant, the Pldl" lyrea of Italy, the lilacs of Persia and China, and the Aucviba of Japan. Manifold are the interesting and instructive combinations that might be formed ; and they could all be effected at an expense very little beyond that which is necessarily incurred in the plant- ing of ordinary trees and shrubs. Note. — Our author, on this important subject, talks EDUCATIONA.L INSTITUTIONS. 225 with the strong sense and good taste of a thorough Englishman. If land were as i^leniu and climi:> in Americans it is \\\ England^ Americans might, per- haps, talk of public parks, also ! But whether they M'ould have tlieni, is another matter. A. very pretty discussion might be got up, touching the xdility of puUic parks, in a country so utilitarian as ours pro- fesses to be ; and much might be said on both sides. At all events, we do not propose to enter the lists as a debater. Yet, in the small specimens of inclosed grounds which exist in some of our principal cities, and dignified with the name of " Parks," we can not but imagine that if, instead of acres by tens, so appro- priated, they had been by hundreds, cities containing them would be all the better for it. In sober earnest: it is a disgrace, in point of pub- lic taste, that our cities and large towns show no speci- mens of extended park and pleasure-grounds for the multitude. For the lack of these, and the consequent lack of respect to tlie character of trees, there is hardly a place of public resort in the United States, in which the trees standing about them are not whittled and scarred by the impudent initials cut into their bark by the visitors ; and thought, at the time, to be exceed- ingly smart, by the perpetrators. — Ed. Educational Institutions. — It may not be much out of place, to add a few remarks in regard to the somewhat cognate subject of gardens or pleasure- grounds attached to some great educational institutions; cognate, at least, in this respect, that these grounds, as well as the public park, might be made the means of communicating important instruction. It should seem, 10* 226 PARKS AND PLEASUKE-GROUXDS. indeed, that they woiild promise more, in this respect, than places set apart for the common resort of the citizens; and yet this promise has been most strangely unfulfilled and neglected. Not to speak of nnivei"si- ties, some of Vvd^ich have their botanic gardens, there are, for example, around Edinburgh, six foundation schools, or hospitals as they are there called, in whicli children of certain classes of the community are boarded and educated till they are of suitable age to go into trades or professions. Some of these institutions oc- cupy magnificent buildings, and have almost princely revenues ; all of them are well endowed ; and yet, while they are surrounded by grounds more or less tolerably laid out, not one of them possesses a named collection of plants ; nor, so far as we know, is any regular course of instruction in regard to natural ob- jects maintained within them. A¥e can not think that this state of things, subsisting under the direction of numerous well-informed and intelligent men, is very much to the credit of the science and the enterprise of Modern Athens. We would deem it highly advisable to attach a garden of two or three acres to the normal schools pro- vided by government for the improvement of teach- ing. These, under proper management, would enable the pupil-teachers to carry back to their native homes or future places of labor, a correct nomenclature of plants and much other useful information respecting them, but little known in secluded districts. In refer- ence to these matters, the progress made in Ireland is much in advance of that on this side of the channel. The agricultural seminaries at Glasnevin and Temple- KBUCATIONAL IXSTITUTIONS. 227 moile have considerable collections of trees, slirubs, and plants attached to them.* JSfote. — Although the subject of ornamental grounds attached to educational institutions has arrested both the attention and pens of some of our most accom- plished men, every one possessed of true taste must lament the want of attention hitherto paid to that de- partment of education, in America ; for it should be a department of our public education, as much as the languages, or the sciences. Indeed, the founders of most of our large institutions of leai-ning, whether through the state governments, public associations, corporations, or individual munificence, have, in the liberality of their endowments, and ample appropria- tions of grounds, intended it — theoretically, at least; but in most cases, the intention has been miserably neglected in the carrying out. Every boy — every student — no matter what his proposed occupation or profession in life, should, as a part of his education, be taught the principles of vegetable physiology, and how to plant a tree, and tend it afterward. It is scarce worth while to occupy these pages with a homily on the im- portance of embellishing, by the planting of trees, grounds devoted to seats of learning — even the district school : a thing so entirely obvious, on a thought of the subject ; yet it is a truth, that in no country pro- fessing to be civilized, is less attention paid to this than in the United States. It is a barbarism, and for its • In 1840, we laid out an arliorctum and muiiatuve botanic garden, about twelvo acres in extent, around Gwynn's Institution, I/ondopderry — an Institution for the maintenance and education of orphan cliildren. Tliere is also a small farm attached, In which, as well as in the ground