100 



free flowing connection between the pasture and dress- grounds which that 

 writer considers so objectionable, and to break which he would employ this 

 kind of wall, seems to me (if it be well managed) cpuite accordant with true 

 taste. But, if the grass in the park adjoining the lawn be of a coarse rough 

 quality, it will necessarily require improving, by breaking up the ground, 

 levelling and sowing it down again with proper seeds, and afterwards closely 

 grazing it with sheep ; and any rough parts the sheep may leave should be 

 mown. The difference then, between the two grasses, will be so trifling as 

 to be unobjectionable. 



