



110 



will 



adverted to their respective views or landscapes ; but 



speak further on that towards the south-east, to which all th 

 others 



e 



may b 



ficed 



considered as subordinate, although not sacri- 



is very common for admirers of landscape or natural 



scenery, to overlook the difference betwixt 



tree and a pole 



betwixt a grove of old trees and a plantation of young ones 



We fancy that time will reconcile the difference 



but, alas! we 



grow old as fast as the trees; and while we dot and clump a 



few starving 



pling 



s on an open lawn, we indulg 



pes 



of 



ng trees, when in fact we only live to see the clumsy fences 

 which for many years they must 



1 herefi 



e protected 



ppy 



that proprietor of the soil, who becomes possessed 



of large trees, already growing on the land he purch 



since 



price can buy the effect of years 



wood 



or create a full grown 



d without that, we may possess a garden, or a shrub 



deration alon 



e is 



ffi 



bery, but not a landscape. This 



cient to attach us to the vicinity of that venerable avenue, which 



it would be a sort of sacrilege to desert, and whose age and 



beauty will give an immediat 



de 



house 



of the estate 



which could never be expected in any more 



of importance to the 



open part 





The view towards the south-east will consist of a glade into 



the forest, where the distant woods of Wanstead 



twixt the 



purple 



are 



stems of large trees in the foreground 

 tone of colouring, so much studied by 



be 



producing a 



admirers of picturesq 



effect 



painters 



To this may be added 



th 





