He/3ge) j but allowing to do ten, to 

 fence forty Pole, there muft he at 

 leall eight Load of Wood, which 

 cofVs four Pounds, making the 

 whole Expen :e for Ditching, Fence- 

 ing and Setting fforty Pole, to be 

 iix Pounds, reckoning with the 

 leaft; tor Tcarce any will undertake 

 to do it for lefs than three Shillings 

 and fix Pence per Pole, and then the 

 for:y Pole cofts feven Pounds. 



Whereas with double Ditches, 

 both of them Setting and Sets, will 

 be done for eight Pence the Pole, 

 and the Husbandman get as good 

 Wages as with the fingle Ditch, 

 ^for though the Labour about them 

 is more, yet the making the Table 

 is fiv'd) which cofts one Pound 

 fix Shillings and eight Pence; and 

 the Hedges being low, they will 

 make better Wages at Hedging for 

 a Penny a Pole, than at two Pence 

 for common Hedges i which conies 

 to iix Shillings and eight Pence; 

 for hedging forty Pole on both 

 Sides : Thus, one Load of Wood 

 will fence thirty Pole at leaft, and 

 forty hedged with two Thirds of 

 Wood leis than in the other Way, 

 and coft but one Pound Iix Shil- 

 lings and eight Pence, which makes 

 the other whole Ctiarge of Sets, 

 Ditching, Fencing, and Wood but 

 three Pounds. 



(^ICK. BEAM J viJe Sorbus 

 Sylveftris. 



QUINCE TREE; vule Cydonia. 



QUINCUNX ORDER ; is a 

 Plantation of Trees, difpos'd ori- 

 ginally in a Square, conlifting of 

 five Trees, one at each Corner, and 

 a fifth in the Middle; which Dif- 

 pofition repeated again and again, 

 forms a regular Grove, Wood or 

 Wildernefs: and when view'd by 

 an Angle of the Square or Paral- 

 lelogram, prcfents equal or parallel 

 Alleys, 



R A 



Tf;ces planted in ^mcunx, arc 

 fuch as are planted in the following 

 Form : 



* ♦ * * # 



* ♦ * 4t: 



* * * # # 



QUINQUEFOLIUM; Cm» 



quefoil. 



There are many S^pecUs of this 

 Plant which are preferv'd in Beta- 

 nick Gardens, for Variety, (ibme of 

 which grow wild in divers Parts 

 of England) but as they are never 

 propagated either for Uie or Beauty, 

 ib I fhall not trouble the Reader 

 with an Enumeration of their icrc- 

 rai Kamei. 



2J®©0^^^^g 



R A 



RADISH; I'/Ve Raphanus. 

 RADISH, HORSE i -vlds 

 Cochlearia. 



RAMPIONS ; ^Ide Campanula 

 radicc, eiculente. 



RANUNCULUS; Crowfoot. 

 The Characters are j 



The Flower confifts of feveral 

 Leaves, which are placed in /» «r* 

 cHlar Order, and expand in Form of 

 a Kafe; having, fir the mofl part, 

 a many4eav\i Empalement or Flower- 

 cup; out of the Middle of the Flower 

 ri/es the Fointal, which afterwards 

 becomes a Fruit, either round, cylin* 

 drical, cr fpiked ; to the Axis of 

 wkch, as a Placenta, adhere many 

 Seeds, for the moft part naked. 

 The Species are ; 



J. Ranunculus; hcrtenfjs, fr?- 

 iius, flore plena. C. B, P, Com- 

 mon yellow Crowfoot, with a 

 double Flower. 



Y 4 >• RiNyN'- 



