I tra is defigned abled for re L have ciscayouted to contrive it in the 
moft intelligible and Compendious manner I was able, both in regard to the ftyle and alfo the — 
d ; judging it unneceffary to fill feveral pages with repeated. 
figures of the plants here exhitg 
> dire@ions for the management “of every plant, when a few lines may fufice for’ the greater 
| part of them: for as I have been parties | in the culture of the ‘firlt plant (page 1.) that may 
ferve alfo as a dire€tion for moft of the reft, with fome fmall variation; for in general all trees 
and. fhnubs- that: come from within or near the fame latitude in thefe countries, require a ma~ 
nagement in raifing thent little different from one another. 
As to the figures of the plants with all their parts, as leaves, awe fruit, "eke though they 
are comprifed in little room, they are neverthelefs reprefented in their natural fize, which | 
neceflarily gives a more perfect idea than if they had been contraéted to a fmaller feale. I fhall 
conclude with one obfervation, which of however little confequence is neverthelefs remarkable, 
which is, that a {mall {pot of land in America has, within lefs than half a century, furnifhed 
England with a greater variety of trees than has been procured from all the other parts of the 
world for more than a thoufand years patft. 3 : 
N. B. Thofe marked with an afterifk are not engraved. — | os 
Page 20, for Zanthoyx/um read Zanthoxylum. 
A CONTENTS. 
