Of rural and extenfive Gardening. 9^ 



The Woods on the other Side the Canal, 

 tho'they are not in the Garden, will, how- 

 ever, appear as a Part of it, and need little 

 Expence in keeping, and there may be the 

 Pheafant Houfe, being amongft the Corn- 

 fields. BistheK/7/^, or Farm-hoafe, which 

 one M^ould always place at fome Pittance 

 from the main Houfe, and the Walks and 

 Avenues being kept neat and well, the Owne!* 

 will not I am perfwaded think it too far to 

 go to it* In fhort, what muft be the Beauty 

 of this, and all other D^figns of this kind ; 

 here is a thorough Communication thro' the 

 whole Eftate, without Styles, Gates, or atiy 

 other Inconveniences 5 and, what keep the 

 Profped open and undetermined, are the Ri* 

 vulets or Rills of Water, which one would 

 always make ufe of, in as much as no Cattle 

 care to go thro' them out of their own Bounds^ 

 nor even Deer except they be forc'd. * C is 

 the Potagery, or Kitchen Garden^ which 

 ought to be as near the VilU as poffible. 





V- 





-Ui' ^^ ^^^ '>5?' 



I s Chap; 



