316 



A HISTORY OF GARDE XING IN ENGLAND. 



The 



Oringe 



Garden. 



Oringe 

 trees. 



Lemon 

 tree. 



Pome- 

 citron 

 tree. 



Pome- 

 granet 



tree(s). 



one handsome Fountain of white marble, which, with the pipes 

 of lead and cocks thereunto belonging, we value to be worth £20. 



Unto which Fountain one pavement of Flanders brick, six 

 foot broad, extends itself from the East of the said Manor or 

 Mansion House, up the middle of the said Oringe Garden, which 

 we value to be worth . 



The other three alleys or little walks betwixt the said four 

 knotts are paved with pebble stone, worth in both £2. 



The middle of which said three allies leadeth from the said 

 Fountain unto a garden or Shadow house, paved with Flanders 

 brick, and handsomely benched, standing in the middle of the 

 East wall of the said Oringe Garden ; the materials of which 

 house are worth ^5. 10s. 



There are four large and handsome gravelled walks inclosing 

 the said four knotts ; the value whereof we include in the 

 foresaid yearly value of the said Oringe garden. 



In the side of which said Oringe Garden there stands one 

 large Garden House ; the out walls of brick ; fitted for the keeping 

 of Oringe trees; neatly covered with blue slate, and ridged and 

 guttered with lead ; the materials of which house, with the great 

 doors and the iron thereof, with a certain stone pavement lying 

 before those doors, in nature of a little walk 4 foot broad and 

 seventy-nine foot long, we value to be worth £66. 13s. 4d. 



In which said Garden House there are now standing in square 

 boxes, fitted for that purpose, forty-two Oringe trees bearing fair 

 and large oringes ; which trees, with the boxes and the earth and 

 materials therein feeding the same, we value at ten pounds a tree, 

 one tree with another, in toto amounting unto p^420. 



In the said Garden House there now also is one Lemon tree 

 bearing great and very large lemons, which, together with the 

 box that it grows in, and the earth and materials therein feeding 

 the same, we value at £20. 



In the said Garden House there now also is one Pomecitron 

 tree, which, together with the box that it grows in, and the earth 

 and materials feeding the same, we value at £io. 



There are also belonging to the said Oringe Garden 6 

 Pomegranet trees, bearing fair and large fruits, which, together 

 with the square boxes they grow in, and the earth and materials 

 therein feeding the same, we value at three j^ounds a tree, one 

 with another, in toto ^18. 



