FRAGMENT XXIX. 



CONCERNING 





THE LUXURIES OF A GARDEN 





Th 



E 



littl 



* 



Fruit or 

 better th 



Kitchen Gard 



plough 



as it is generally cultivated 



a 



e 



field 



where crop 



are sown in 



drills; for this reason, it has frequently by Brown, and always 



by his followers 



een 



no 



long 



anished to a distance, where it might 



er 



e an 



ghtly object 



hav 



e 



ally found 



Gardens so placed, at two miles from the house, and conse- 



quently the choice fruits are 



d 



wi 



th 



as much care and 



'om 



trouble in the package and conveyance, as if they came 

 Brentford to Covent Garden market.* What I have to insert in 

 this fragment is not the result of any single report, but is col- 

 lected from various hints, thrown out at different places, for the 

 rational improvement of a useful Garden, shewing how it may 

 be rendered ornamental; for though I have elsewhere asserted, 





that a Ferme Om 



solecism in 1 



i 



^** 



8 



yet 



J a rdi 



\ 



Orne 



may be made one of the most interesting luxuries of a country 



resid 



d this may be effected 



ways ; the most 



* 



I have noticed this error in the extract from the Report of Woburn Abbey 



2 A 







; 



