From London to Land’s End

her Majesty, impatient of enjoying so agreeable a retreat, fixed

upon a building formerly made use of chiefly for landing from the

river, and therefore called the Water Galley, and here, as if she

had been conscious that she had but a few years to enjoy it, she

ordered all the little neat curious things to be done which suited

her own conveniences, and made it the pleasantest little thing

within doors that could possibly be made, though its situation

being such as it could not be allowed to stand after the great

building was finished, we now see no remains of it.

The queen had here her gallery of beauties, being the pictures at

full-length of the principal ladies attending upon her Majesty, or

who were frequently in her retinue; and this was the more beautiful

sight because the originals were all in being, and often to be

compared with their pictures. Her Majesty had here a fine

apartment, with a set of lodgings for her private retreat only, but

most exquisitely furnished, particularly a fine chintz bed, then a

great curiosity; another of her own work while in Holland, very

magnificent, and several others; and here was also her Majesty’s

fine collection of Delft ware, which indeed was very large and

fine; and here was also a vast stock of fine china ware, the like

whereof was not then to be seen in England; the long gallery, as

above, was filled with this china, and every other place where it

could be placed with advantage.

The queen had here also a small bathing-room, made very fine,

suited either to hot or cold bathing, as the season should invite;

also a dairy, with all its conveniences, in which her Majesty took

great delight. All these things were finished with expedition,

that here their Majesties might repose while they saw the main

building go forward. While this was doing, the gardens were laid

out, the plan of them devised by the king himself, and especially

the amendments and alterations were made by the king or the queen’s

particular special command, or by both, for their Majesties agreed

so well in their fancy, and had both so good judgment in the just

proportions of things, which are the principal beauties of a

garden, that it may be said they both ordered everything that was

done.

Here the fine parcel of limes which form the semicircle on the

south front of the house by the iron gates, looking into the park,

were by the dexterous hand of the head gardener removed, after some

of them had been almost thirty years planted in other places,

though not far off. I know the King of France in the decoration of

the gardens of Versailles had oaks removed, which by their

dimensions must have been above an hundred years old, and yet were

taken up with so much art, and by the strength of such engines, by

which such a monstrous quantity of earth was raised with them, that

the trees could not feel their remove–that is to say, their growth

was not at all hindered. This, I confess, makes the wonder much

the less in those trees at Hampton Court gardens; but the

performance was not the less difficult or nice, however, in these,

and they thrive perfectly well.

While the gardens were thus laid out, the king also directed the

laying the pipes for the fountains and JET-D’EAUX, and particularly

the dimensions of them, and what quantity of water they should cast

up, and increased the number of them after the first design.

The ground on the side of the other front has received some

alterations since the taking down the Water Galley; but not that

part immediately next the lodgings. The orange-trees and fine

Dutch bays are placed within the arches of the building under the

first floor; so that the lower part of the house was all one as a

greenhouse for sometime. Here stand advanced, on two pedestals of

stone, two marble vases or flower-pots of most exquisite

workmanship–the one done by an Englishman, and the other by a

German. It is hard to say which is the best performance, though

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