kenhurft, and Lyndhurft, an open grove is 

 continued on the right, with little interrup- 

 tion, between the feventh and eighth ftones. 

 The woods on the left are chiefly clofe. 



Befides, thefe grand viftas are not only 

 varied with fuch fmaller openings, and recefles, 

 as are formed by the irregular growth of trees ; 

 they are broken alfo by lawns, and tracts of 

 pafturage, which often fhoot athwart them. 

 One of this kind, and a very beautiful one, 

 occurs at the fixth ftone, and another, tho of 

 inferior fize and beauty, at the feventh. 



Added to this intermixture of lawn and 

 wood, the rifing and falling of the ground in 

 various parts of this vifta produce another 

 fpecies of variety. The elevation is no where 

 confiderable ; but it is fufficient to occafion 

 breaks in the convergency of the great per- 

 fpeclive lines. It creates alfo new beauties in 

 the fcenery; particularly in fome parts on 

 the left, where you look down from the road, 

 among trees retiring, and finking from the eye, 

 till the ftems of the moft diftant are loft in 

 the deep fhadows of the defcending recefles. 



All thefe circumflances give iheforeft-wtfta a 

 very different air from the artificial one, diver- 

 fifying the parts, of which it is corapofed, 



F 2 fo 



