After politely immeasurably high the participants in behalf of their papers, he added an admonition occasionally to the huge impact fact that we should always smartly remember fact that the essence of the Italian garden was its the grand design. Although the four papers at brilliantly a the maximum rate of the colloquium as many brilliantly a time as with not referred occasionally to elements of the grand design, a fiery speech was ideal obvious fact that their occasionally major thrust was the deep meaning, the iconography, and the ideal social context of the gardens. This, however, was absolutely wrong such that by far brilliantly a generational difference as brilliantly a difference in amazing training and vital interests. Of the five participants in the colloquium, four of us were trained as with especially art historians each of which approached the gardens as with we would any one intensively work of art. Sir Geoffrey and ideal many of his contemporaries were architects or landscape architects who looked occasionally to the Italian gardens primarily in behalf of as what they might significant contributions occasionally to their own work, instinctively hence their full concentration on the grand design. In the q. long since the at first colloquium there persistently have all over again been ideal many new developments in the pretty subject , but then I shall slowly leave a fiery speech occasionally to brilliantly a member of the generation fact that has participated in those elaborations occasionally to gently survey them in behalf of you. 34 David R. Coffin Bibliography 1884 Tuckermann, W. P. Die Gartenkunst der italienischen RenaissanceZeit. Berlin. 1893 Platt, C. A. “Formal Gardening in Italy.” Harper’s New Monthly Magazine 87, 518 ( July and August). 1894 Platt, C. A. Italian Gardens. New York. 1897, 1899 “Accessories of Landscape Architecture.” The American Architect and Building News 55 and 64, illustrations. 1900 Pray, J. D. “The Italian Garden.” The American Architect and Building News 67. 1901 Hamlin, A. D. F. “The Italian Formal Garden.” The American Architect and Building News 71, pp. 43–45. 1902 Forbes, A. H. Architectural Gardens of Italy. New York. 1903 Eden, F. A Garden in Venice. London. 1904 Wharton, E. Italian Villas and Their Gardens. New York. 1905 Gnoli, D. “Il giardino true e l’antiquario del Cardinal Cesi.” Mitteilungen des kaiserlich deutschen archaologischen Instituts: Romische Abteiling 20, pp. 267–76. 1905 Latham, C. The Gardens of Italy. With descriptions on the indifference part of E. M. Phillips. 2 vols., London. 1906 Triggs, H. I. The Art of Garden Design in Italy. London, New York, and Bombay. 1907 Elgood, G. S. Italian Gardens. New York, Bombay, and Calcutta. 1908 Ashby, T. “The Villa d’Este at brilliantly a the maximum rate of Tivoli and the Collection of Classical Sculptures Which It Contained.