5 8 Of rural and extenfive Gardening. 

 race Walks, where the Method of doing it 

 is likevvife handled. 



It is fufficient here to intimate, that at the 

 Letters OO, a dead Level be carry ed on as far 

 as the Peers on each End at B B, thus far 

 however is reqaifice fhould be dead Level ^ 

 but afterwards, we ihall fall into our Woody 

 Scenes, as will befeen in a ftquent Plate, and 

 then we {hall follow the natural Fall and Rife 

 of the Ground 5 and this wiil let us likewife into 

 a Confideration, how long we iliould make 

 our great Terrace of a Level, which we may 

 venture to fix at 600 or 700 Feet, or 1000 

 at moft, and thus long are the two beft Ter- 

 races in their relpe&ive Kinds, that we have 

 in E^igUnd. 



Whether the End of this Terrace fhould be 

 ftopp'd by a Grafs or Grill, will be argued by 

 andby, iho' a Grafs is certainly the beft, as ly- 

 ing muft open. As for the Side Divifions of 

 Wood on each Side the Parterre, let them be 

 according as the Ground is too, it v/ill not 

 be a Fault in them, if one of them lies one 

 Foot or two higher than the other, it is 

 nor ^QQn in a Wood-, tho' it may be a Blemifli in 

 an open Terrace, Lawn or Parterre. And hence 

 forward we (hall follow Nature, and think 

 no more of levelling any other wife than a 

 crofs the Walk,which ought not to be fideling 5 

 bccaufe it will be an Inconvenience to the Per- 

 fons that walks in it, and as for the lining 

 this and the lower part of the Wood out, the 



De. 



