

80 



and including the house and yards, will be about two acres ; 

 there will then remain about two acres and a half to the north, 



which is too much to be all pleasure-ground, and either the 

 whole may be fed with cattle as a lawn, or the part near the 



house, including the gravel roads, may be fenced with a wire 

 or trellis fence, which will give neatness and comfort, without 

 waste of land. 



All rabbit beds and burrows within the fence should of 

 course be levelled and destroyed. 



REPORT CONCERNING EALING PARK. 



This is one of the few places which still retain the importance 

 of the last century in the blended scenery of Landscap 



e an 



e same 



Gardening: but the trees have outgrown their original inten- 

 tion. Brown (whose work this appears to have been) sur- 

 rounded the whole place by a narrow belt or skreen of planta- 

 tion; and in conformity doubtless with the wish of its proprietor 

 he made a gravel-walk through the whole length of th 

 notwithstanding it every where runs parallel to a high road 

 from which it is only separated by a pale: this was hid while 

 the plantation was young but now the trees are grown so naked 

 and open at bottom, that the proximity of the boundary is every 



where felt : and since it would be impossible to remedy til 



