93 



om the other windows of the house, those 

 with the entrance could command only a 

 walls or buildings. 



on the same sid 

 view surrounded 



As th 



e 



• 



gloomy confined view into a quadrangl 



paved 



court, forms a great contrast to the cheerful landscape of a park 



more distant prospects, it is no wonder that fasliio 



n .should 



open the views 



y direction; forgettin 



that 



one 



de al 



least of every house must be appropriated to useful rather th 

 ornamental purposes. In the original plan of Uppark, it 



dent, by the little attention 



the Architect intended th 



gn 



to its appearance, that 



north front should not 



e seeti 



? 



but when the buildings, which formed the 



th 



import 



e east or entrance front, were taken down, the entrance still 



continued as before. 



is difficult to gi\ 



e an adequate idea of the improvement 

 which has been actually executed, without inserting the whole 



plans by which the report is illustrated, 



of sketch 



an 



and which consists of nine distinct drawings. 



The annexed sketch shews the entrance from the park to 

 the pleasure-ground and flower-garden, which is defended by 

 a wall of flint-work; and after passing through the iron gates, 

 the road continues in the highly-dressed pleasure-ground, till 

 it enters the quadrangle to the north of the house, in which a 

 corridor and portico of Doric columns mark the entrance. 



