328 A HISTORY OF GARDENING IN ENGLAND. 



Pheasant garden, w ch conteynes one Roode ten poles and 

 4 primes, and is excellentlie well planted with wall trees, (viz 1 ) 

 7 Figg trees, 4 Cherrie trees, and one Roase marie tree, 2 Vines, 

 fower Peach trees, 5 Apricock trees, one Peare tree, six Damas 

 and Damson Plumme trees, one Currant tree, and one Bay tree, 

 planted in y e middle with Gooseberrie trees, and other younge 

 fruite trees, and a bricke wall aboute y e same, abuttinge North on 

 y e passage leadinge east from y e Laundrie," (&c.) Value of 

 the house, court, and garden, 9. IDS. 



The Laundrie house, rooms, barn, stables, &c. Alsoe one 

 passage or way now used as a Garden, lyinge on y e West parte of the 

 afforesayd house called the Laundrie house, and leadeth from the 

 house to y e said garden, called y. e Laundrie Garden, conteyninge in 

 length 1 1 perches and a halfe, and in breadth on y e East parte two 

 perches and a halfe of land, and on the West parte one pearch ; 

 and there is planted on y e North side of the walls, fower Vine 

 trees, one Almond tree, 3 Plumme trees, 5 Barberrie trees, and 

 on y e other side Rose trees, and y e middle dugg up for Inions, 

 lettice, and y e like. And at y e west end of y e same one Doore 

 way goeinge into another garden called by y e name of the 

 Laundrie garden, conteyninge 3 roodes and fower pole, 

 compassed aboute with a high brick wall, consistinge of one 

 streight gravelled walke, betweene the Bricke wall and the hedge 

 or Rainge of Gooseberrie trees and Rose trees, with two stepps 

 discendinge into y e middle of y e garden ; and round y e garden 

 are several wall trees planted, (viz*) 5 aprecock trees, J i peach 

 trees, 28 vines, 55 cherrie trees, bearinge choyce and rare cherries ; 

 also 1 2 bay trees, with divers other trees ; as also a summer or 

 shaddow house standinge in y e middle of the affores 11 garden, 

 seated round, and built turratt fashion, and covered with slatt, 

 with a nurcerie in y e middle of y e garden, and some apple and 

 peare trees, w th divers other small stockes and younge plantes, 

 moted round. 



The Privie Garden. One other Garden called the Privie 

 Garden, alias Kitchen Garden, conteyninge 17 pole, lyinge 

 betweene y e affors' 1 Garden on the east and Theobaldes Parke on 

 y e west, w th a pleasant gravelie walke lyinge betweene the wall 

 and a hansome quicksett hedge cutt into formes, planted in the 

 middle of the hedges with 28 cherrie trees, goeinge East, West, 

 and North of y e s (1 garden, lyinge 8 stepps high in ascent from 



