The Garden

Milton’s Cottage is home to a unique literary garden, planted with trees, flowers and fruits that are referenced in his poetry.

Milton himself was a keen botanist (the poet Emily Dickinson called him “The Great Florist”) and few artists have been more influential on the development of the English garden aesthetic.

His descriptions of the Garden of Eden in Paradise Lost helped shape our informal gardening style.  Horace Walpole, in On Modern Gardening (1770) said: “He seems with a prophetic eye of taste to have conceived, to have foreseen, modern gardening.”

Reflecting this, the garden at Milton’s Cottage has been laid out as a traditional English cottage garden – the only one in the Chilterns listed by English Heritage as a Grade II Registered Historic Garden.

“Laurel and Myrtle and what higher grew
Of firm and fragrant leaf: on either side
Acanthus, and each odourous bushy shrub
Fenc’d up the verdant wall, each beauteous flower,
Iris all hues, Roses and Jessamine
Reard high their flourish’d heads between, and wrought
Mosaic.”

Paradise Lost, Book 4, Line 694