for Gardeners, &c. 115^ 



B S 6 ch. 9311 a little bending, to anfwer 

 SO. 



The Field Book implies the Grounds,which 

 fetch in this Mannour, to be a Common 5 

 wherefore the Word Common may be written 

 in convenient Places accordingly. 



He who would give the Contents of this 

 Mannour in Acres, may reduce the feveral 

 Fields, the Road, and Lane, into Trapezia 

 and Triangles, and work according to the 

 Method I have before plainly laid down 5 

 and the Anfwers of all the Operations, added 

 together, Iball be his grand Anfwer. 



You may, if youpleafe, infert, as I have 

 done, the Scale by which you meafur'd, toge- 

 ther with the Name of the Mannour, in a fair 

 Compartment : It may alfo, for more Beauty^ 

 be adorn'd with tranfparent Water- Colours, 

 painting all Trees and Hedges of a pretty deep 

 green. Fields of a pale green. Waters blue, 

 Rorids^ &c. ydlowj infert alfo each Field's 

 Name. 



A Mannour, fo drawn, may be drawn in a 

 bigger or lefs Compafs, by fquaring your 

 Draught, and making your new Paper of the 

 fame Number of Squares, and then hf put- 

 ting all into one Square, which you fee in 

 the Square correfpondmg with it ^ your new 

 Draft (hall be exad in all Particulars. 



This has been the ufual Method of contra- 

 ding or enlarging any Map or Plott of a Field, 

 or Eftate^ but the quickeft, and, I think, the 

 cafieft Method, is as follows 3 which, for 



I 2 more 



