CHAP. XX.] FARMING FOR LADIES. 395 



some upon an expensive scale ; which, al- 

 though ill-suited to the views of the general- 

 ity of our readers, may yet afford a correct 

 idea of the mode in which those of an hum- 

 bler class should be constructed. Among the 

 former that of the Duke of Northumberland, 

 at Alnwick, is very elegantly arranged ; but, 

 perhaps, the most accurate published account 

 is that of the great Harleian public dairy at 

 Glasgow — to which we refer. That erected 

 at Windsor, in the reign of George IV., for 

 a large number of cows — and of which we 

 have here the honour to present a view of the 



-^r.t^^/^ f^^^: 





garden fi-ont — is thatched, in the cottage style, 

 with bed-rooms overhead, and will convey a 



