1 04 Ofrural and eKt en five Gardening. 



will ia I in a more general and proper Place, 

 by and by ; and, for that Reafon, we return 

 to rhe Front being in fome meafure fatisfy 'd, 

 with what has bat fhortly hinted at, in this 

 Particular. 



And from the Center of this Front, review 

 a Walk of above 1000 Yards long, and a Ca- 

 nal at the End;, of an inderermiate Length; 

 this, as to the genera), but more particularly 

 this method of a plain Parterre? in the firft 

 divifion, and the Lav/n or Bowling-green, 

 "that lies in the feconJ, bounded on each fide 

 by a Ttrrace, planted with Englijh Elm; 

 notwithft^ndsng irs plainnefs, can'c but have 

 a n-'ble tiicd on the Eye. 1 might in this 

 Place have drav/n more Avenues to the 

 Hoafe 5 but that I take to be one way of 

 fpoiling the varieties of any Sciiuation, fince, 

 by that means, all the Beauty thereof is feen 

 M once, and there-s an End. 



But as you proceed down this middle Line, 

 -there is fomethtng New and Noble, at every 

 Center;; as you pafs at the upper End of the 

 firft.divifjon, with a large Statue, or Obelisk 

 .en the Hill, on the Right a crofs the Valley, 

 while the other is bounded, fhut with Wood. 

 At the extremity of the Lawn, at, or near 

 *he Center the ftrikes the fweep : Y'ou view 

 not only the crofs Walk it felP, but the rnid- 

 ldle ; and two DiJgcnal Walks, of thirty, or 

 Jorty Foot wide, that carries the Eye above 

 ^cpp Foot, quite a crofs the Valleys up th 



rifiUL^ 



