“GREEN DALE CABINET.” 45 
pair of these doors are each divided into four panels ; the lower 
pair, each into two panels ; and these are in each case separated 
from each other by inlaid bordering. The ends of the cabinet are 
each divided in a similar manner into three panels in height ; 
two in the upper and one in the lower portion. 
By the simple diagram here appended I have endeavoured to 
show the arrangement and character of these panels, and of the 
painted and inlaid designs—which in all cases are reproductions 
of Vertue’s views—with which they are decorated. The designs 
| 
) A Cc | A rs 
13 I ea 3 16 
| B | D B D 
| 
/ Ce a Cc A 
14 5 2 7 a 17 
D B D 
E G I K 
15 9 10 II 12 18 
F ERY iT; L 
| 
throughout, which are exquisitely inlaid and painted, and have a 
remarkably fine and good effect, are identical with the series of 
etchings which I have just described ; the details of trees, letter- 
"ing, etc., being strictly preserved. 
In the upper of these doors, in each of the panels I have on 
this diagram marked I, 2, 3, and 4, occur (thus four times 
repeated) the third of Vertue’s etchings—the one engraved 
on page 40, with the horseman passing through the tree towards 
the spectator—with the words, “ Zo the Oke!” at A, and “ Zhe 
Green-Dale Oke, near Welbeck, 1727,” at B, as there engraved. 
