Book If. 



ARRANGEMENT OF FARMERIES. 



607 



CiM 



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are, in the dwelling-house, a lobby and stair (a), dining-room (b), drawing-room and 

 green-house (c), a housekeeper's room, nursery or butler's pantry (d), dairy (e), kitchen 

 \f j, back kitchen and brew-house (g), gig-house or coach-house (A), small stable (2), 

 harness-room and stair to men's room and hay-loft (k). In the economical buildings 

 are a granary (/), pigs (w)> c arts or odd articles («), water-closet (o), poultry (/>), litter 

 for the stable (q), stable for twelve horses (r), chaft'-rocm (s), litter (I), room for cutting 

 hay into chaff («), places for horse food, or straw, hay, &c. (v), cattle-sheds (w), open 

 colonade for loaded hay-carts (j), straw end of barn (y), corn-floor (z), unthreshed corn 

 and corn-floor (<£), machine (1), mill course (2), cows (3), cow-food (4), calves (5), 

 bailiff's house (6), implements (7), wood-house, coals, &c. (8), kitchen-court to master's 

 house (9), garden (10), poultry-yard (11), bailiff's garden (12), lawn, shrubbery, and 

 sheep-walk (13), pond (14), rickyard (15), stack-stands (16), urinarium (17). 



4171. In the elevations of this farmery {fig. 608.), some attention has been paid to 

 effect, by intermingling trees, chiefly oaks, with thorns and honeysuckles. 



608 



