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The 'Garden of England', 'The High Weald', these are phrases that
describe a 70-year-old Area of Outstanding National Beauty in
Southern England. Among these dramatic landscapes and ancient
woodlands stand many castles, mansions and cottages, ringed with
orchards, meadows, drifting flowers and horticultural exotica.
Featured gardens range from grand landscapes to works of glorious
eccentricity, Arts and Crafts green rooms to postage stamp-sized
plots of ingenuity. Wilderness weaves into floral genius, while
native and exotic species stand side-by-side - all within the
unique climate of the English garden. Including chapters on English
Parks, Arts and Crafts Gardens and Woodland Gardens, Where the
Wildness Pleases - The English Garden Celebrated pays homage to
English horticultural excellence and tells the gripping stories
behind some of our most breath-taking landscapes. This book also
features a handy Who's Who of designers, gardeners, plant hunters
and nurserymen, and a brief guide to English playing greens -
cricket, bowling, croquet and tennis. This is a welcome guide for
anyone interested in visiting this astonishingly beautiful part of
the country, or those thinking of buying a plot.
Welcome to the joys of nineteenth century gardening and design! The
Victorians were masters of combining geometric formality and
bright, formal, seasonal bedding to create lush, exuberant outdoor
living spaces. This delightful book presents Victorian gardening
style and design using beautiful landscapes lavish with carpet
beds, topiary, statuary, sundials, marble and stone walkways, as
well as classical architectural ruins, fountains, and pools. Many
restorations and recreations of Victorian gardens are highlighted,
including Osborne House, on the Isle of Wight (Queen Victorias
country home), Biddulph Grange in Staffordshire, and Down House in
Kent (home to Charles Darwin). Authentic Victorian writings, design
instructions, and illustrations guide the modern gardener on how to
shape up, Victorian style. Gorgeously illustrated with over 200
beautiful color photographs plus illustrations, diagrams, and
layouts of restorations and recreations, this book is sure to
inspire and give the reader confidence to experiment. All who enjoy
looking at and working in beautiful outdoor spaces will find this
book irresistible.
Water lilies are inextricably linked to the ancient cultures of
Greece and Rome, Egypt and the Far East, where they were highly
valued, just as precious metals or gemstones, their properties were
thought to be medicinal, spiritual and purely aesthetic; they have
been represented in architecture, printed textiles, religious
paintings and illustrations, cited in mythology, folklore,
mysticism and the creative imagination. This volume meticulously
records our enduring love affair with the most beautiful and exotic
of plants, the water lily. It is a comprehensive and detailed
account of their introduction into European culture, largely
through the passion and devotion of one man, Joseph Bory
Latour-Marliac (1830-1911), whose lifelong work in the field of
propagation, cultivation and commercialization of water lilies
inspired a generation of horticulturists, artists and poets to
create the words and images that are deeply embedded in our culture
today. Claude Monet, for example, used lilies from Latour-Marliac's
nursery to create his garden in Giverny. The work Latour-Marliac
did gave rise to development of specialist lily nurseries and
growers across Europe and North America; in fact, Latour-Marliac's
nursery still exists today, owned by Robert Sheldon, an American
who shared Latour-Marliac's passion for water lilies and water
gardening and has been the force behind the nursery's continued
success today.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone!
Do you dare delve into the thorny undergrowth? Why do jasmine
flowers make you more sexually alluring? When is an apple not an
apple? Are trees the tallest plants? What could I grow on Mars?
This book answers hundreds of intriguing questions about flowers,
plants, and trees for which you thought you'd never find an
answer--such as why are some plants edible and some poisonous? And
why are there large teardrops on the petal grooves inside a Crown
Imperial flower? There are answers to suit those with mythic poetic
traits and plenty to satisfy seriously scientific minds. The lives
and loves of plants and trees attract scrupulous observation, while
we also learn about plants and trees that feature in record
books--the tallest, widest, longest, heaviest, smallest, deepest.
Then there is the choosing of names--smart binomial nomenclature
that celebrates their shape, color, breeder, or discoverer; or
common names that echo their rural habits or coarsely interpreted
characteristics. Authoritative and entertaining, this book,
containing around 250 questions and answers by garden specialist
Caroline Holmes, is for everyone who has ever been curious about
things that grow.
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