id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 39803 Chambers, William, Sir An Explanatory Discourse by Tan Chet-qua of Quang-chew-fu, Gent. .txt text/plain 14365 564 60 survey the facts most pertinent to his publications on Chinese gardens naturalized the city."[9] At Kew, by making the garden cosmopolitan, Chinese gardening since Sir William Temple enunciated his shadowy century, Chet-qua finds more to commend in French and Italian gardens, edition Chambers had justified such artfulness, and his entire "Chinese" Chambers' _Designs of Chinese _A Dissertation on Oriental Gardening_ (London, 1772), of Chambers' Dissertation on Oriental Gardening," _JEGP_, 35 (1936), C. Bald, "Sir William Chambers and the Chinese Garden," either of our Chinese, or your English Gardening. natural beauties are many, and little more is left for art to do in It is thus that far the noblest part of our Chinese Gardens, and those an Artist, to set before you a new style of Gardening; than as a Chet-qua has no aversion to natural Gardening; but is, on the contrary, Natural Gardening, when treated upon an extensive plan, ./cache/39803.txt ./txt/39803.txt