
frontispiece to the English translation of Abbe de Vallemont, Curiosities of nature and art in husbandry and gardening, London: 1707.
As I hope I showed in a recent post John Evelyn the 17thc diarist and garden writer spent much of his life designing the perfect garden: Elysium Britannicum. It was to be an Eden encompassing a complete miniaturized version of the world including almost every kind of landscape feature that he could imagine.
But what was a garden owner to do if they didn’t have natural waterfalls or cascades, mountains or “Groves and Wildernesses” in their back yard?
Quite simple said Evelyn: “if in the originall disposure of the plott, we find them not already planted by Nature” they must, quite simply, “be contrived”. This insistence creates an artificiality that is the very opposite of the great 18thc cry of “the genius of the place”. So how does Evelyn propose the gardener should go about it?










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