# | Year | Text | Linked Data |
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1 | 1855 |
Lauder, Thomas Dick. Review of "Sir Uvedale Price on the picturesque" [ID D28710]. Er schreibt : "The Chinese garden, with which [Robert] Fortune's works have now made us familiar, and the English garden, in the form it ultimately assumed, present two distinct types. The one is nature dressed by art ; the other is an artificial imitagion, or rather parody, of nature, cramped and dwarfed to bring her beauties within the compass of a narrow enclosure. The English garden in its failure degenerates into the Chinese." |
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# | Year | Bibliographical Data | Type / Abbreviation | Linked Data |
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1 | 1855 | Lauder, Thomas Dick. Review of "Sir Uvedale Price on the picturesque ; with an essay on the origin of taste, and much original matter. In : Quarterly review ; vol. 98, no 195 (1855). | Publication / Laud10 |
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