John Dixon Hunt is director of the Center for Studies in Landscape Architecture at Dumbarton Oaks. His many books include The Pre-Raphaelite Imagintion: 1848-1900, The Wider Sea: A Life of John Ruskin, and William Kent: Landscape Garden Architect.
Preface
Preface to the First Edition
Part I. Green Thoughts and Shades
Chapter 1. Hermits in Their Landscapes
Chapter 2. The Old Hieroglyphic Landscape
Chapter 3. The New Empirical Landscape
Chapter 4. Marvell's Gardens
Chapter 5. Gardens of a New Model
Chapter 6. Landschips& Such Wilde Workes
Chapter 7. Borrowed from the Poets
Chapter 8. Tomorrow to Fresh Fields
Part II. Gardening, and Poetry, and Pope
Chapter 9. Scenes for Contemplation
Chapter 10. Artful Wildness to Perplex
Chapter 11. My Structures Rise, My Gardens Grow
Chapter 12. Multiplied Scenes
Chapter 13. Public and Private Virtues
Chapter 14. Professors of Gardening
Part III. The Ingenious and Descriptive Thomson
Chapter 15. The Varied God and Man's Continual Changes
Chapter 16. The Finished Garden
Chapter 17. The Villas Shine
Chapter 18. The Mind's Creative Eye
Chapter 19. The More Enduring Song
Part IV. The Landscape of the Bard
Chapter 20. Wild and British
Chapter 21. Furnishing the Mind's Apartments
Chapter 22. The Gentler Genius of the Plain
Chapter 23. Descriptive and Allegoric
Chapter 24. The Idiom of the Soil
Chapter 25. Night Thoughts
Chapter 26. Can Stow Such Raptures Raise?
Part V. The Landscape of Sensibility
Chapter 27. Landscape Business
Chapter 28. Place-Making
Chapter 29. Prospects for Poetry
Postscript
Notes
Index