Of rural and exten five Gardening^ P3 



5as near as they can be, and will, in a few 

 Years, make a Shade; the thirty or forty 

 Foot, I have been fpeaking of, is, for the 

 fake of Shade, that the Gentleman that walks 

 along, may not be too long, nor too much, 

 exposed to the Sun ^ for, as for the View 

 from the Garden, if, they were farther, they 

 would do as well ; and it is an Ob/ervation of 

 all frugal Planters, in refped to a View from 

 the End of any Walk. You may plant them, 

 one, two, or three hundred Foot afunder, 

 and they fhew full enough fi-otn the Place of 

 your Station. And this I particularly re- 

 commend to theObfervation of all my Readers, 

 in as much, as that in many Cafes, Half the 

 Expence, I might fay, five parts in fix of 

 what is generally laid out in Pianting will 

 do. 



And this (lands good, as well in the Dwarfs 

 and Bufhes, I fpoke of before, as in the 

 Standards now: And the Reader may fi'om 

 hence, gather how icw of each Sort in re- 

 fpeftofView, will plant a Walk of a quar- 

 ter of a Mile long, even, not above thirty Foot 

 of each, as i have often try*d on the Ground 3 

 and, the narrower the Walk, the better. And 

 tlius may a Planter have all the Walks ex- 

 tending from the interior Parts of his De- 

 fign plow'd, fbw'd, and planted, at the Ex- 

 pence of about 10/. or ly/. /?er Acre: And 

 he has at the fam.e time Lawns, and Corn- 

 fields lying between, that add much to the 



natural 



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