Of Fruit-Gardens. 23^ 



contain the moft delicate Fruits 5 and fquare 

 Plats of Ground are the nooft commodious, 

 as uniform Beds of Strawberries, Articlioaks, 

 Afparagus, Sallading, &c. to fill up the 

 Spaces, cannot be well laid out in Ground of 

 irregular DimenGons. 



When the Situation and Expofition of a 

 Garden are fix'd, and the Extent laid out, 

 the next Thing we come to is the beft Fruits 5 

 of which I Ihall give a (hort but ufeful Cara- 

 logae for all Expofitions. 



For a South Afpeft, inclining to the Eaft 

 or Weft, the beft Peaches are the Red and 

 White MagdfAene^ the Mwion^ the Royal 

 Peach, the Old Newhigtoji^ the White Peachy 

 the Purple^ the Admirable^ the Chevreux^xhc 

 Vivet^ the Bourdtne^ the R.ed Roman ISeBa- 

 rine. Apricots for Eaft and Weft W^ails, are 

 the Orange Apricot and Mafcul'me Apricot. 

 Figs againft a South- Eaft or South- Weft Wall, 

 the White Fig^ and Lo?ig Purple. Pears for 

 the South-Eaft or South- Weft Afpeft, are the 

 Puree dii Rojy^ the Summer Bon Cretien^ the 

 Orange^ the Verte Longue, the St Germain^ 

 the Magdalene, the Anihret^ the Cclmar^ the 

 Mitjcat, the Ambret, the SpanijI) Bon Cretien^ 

 the Chrjfan, the Winter Bon Cretien: For 

 North-Eaft or North- Weft Walls, the Kathe^- 

 fine Pear^ the Orange Bergamot^ the Rorifeliet^ 

 WorceHer Black Pear^ are the moft proper 5 

 and for Dwarfs, the Bergamot^ Windfor^ 

 Swans Egg, CttiJJe Madam^ &ic. Of FJums 

 there are few fit for the beft Walls befides 



the 



