/ Of rural and extenfive Gardening. 6j 



the matter have no Stuff either wanting or 

 to fpare* 



When your Terrace Walks, and your other 

 Divifions, are therefore levell'd in your Par- 

 terre, Court Yards, and Terraces, and fo 

 much of it turfF'd as you think convenient, 

 on Account of its finking, thus let it remain 

 a Month or two, only beating en it well^ and 

 fometimes rowling it V and be not over-fond 

 of mowing it, till 'tis well fettled •, for 'tis 

 that that often makes it bare in many Places, 

 efpecially if the Weather be dry, and hottifh* 

 And now let us proceed to the Side Quarters 

 of Wood, leaving the TurfBng of the Ter- 

 race Walks, 'till a longer Seafon, and the 

 gravelling the Intervals^ (for i fuppoft no- 

 thing but Grafs and Gravel, Statues, and Fo- 

 reft Trees in all my Defign) ftill longer, even 

 till the laft Thing of all be done in iiniihing 

 the Garden. 



Coming now into the Side Quarters 1 1, 

 &c. already ftak*d out (as before) you 

 are to examine the Nature of your Levels, 

 and what Gauge you can beft go to make 

 your Stuff hold out. Which done, fuppofe it 

 fix, eight, ten, or twelve Inches Gauge below 

 the Heads of them, ftrain your Line to that 

 Depth, and while fome are digging, or trench- 

 ing in the Quarters, let others be digging 

 on in the Walks, and throwing thence what 

 good Earth lies there, in order to fill the 

 Infide, and make them fo much the deeper. 

 , G at And 



