434 APPENDIX. 



a fruit room. The fruit is kept partly on shelves, and partly on cupboard 

 trays. 



71, Store place for beer or ale, which is brewed by Mr. Pratt for the use of 

 the family in London, as well as Cheshunt ; here is also a regular stair- 

 case to the fruit-room. 



72, Harness-room, properly fitted up with every convenience, and warmed 

 by a stove. 



73, A lobby or court to a door which opens to the brook, for the purpose of 

 clearing out an excavation made in the bottom of the channel, in order to 

 intercept mud, and thus render the water quite clear where it passes 

 along the pleasure-ground, and is seen from the library window and the 

 grand walk, {fig. 5, in p. 421.) The whole of any mud which may 

 collect in the brook may be wheeled up a plank through this door, with- 

 out dirtying the walk. 



74 74, The brook. 



75, Foot entrance to Mr. Pratt's house, the coachman's house, the dairy, 

 etc. 



76, Carriage entrance to the stable-court, garden offices, farm-yard, etc. 



77, Private entrance to the garden, over the rustic bridge shown in 



78, Masses of vitrified bricks and blocks of stone, distributed among lavim 

 and shrubs ; among which, large plants of agave, and other rock exot- 

 ics, are placed in the summer season. The pots and tubs being con- 

 cealed, by covering them with the stones forming the masses of rockwork. 

 Here the semicircular space surrounded by rock contains a collection of 

 Himalayan rhododendrons, etc., in pots, many of them seedlings which 

 have not yet flowered. 



79 79, American shrubbery, consisting chiefly of rhododendrons, azaleas, 

 magnolias, etc., growing in peat earth kept moist by the brook. 



80, American garden, consisting of choice American shrubs, and American 

 herbaceous plants. In the centre of the circle a handsome tazza vase on 

 a bold pedestal. 



81, Two semicircles for dahlias ; the surrounding compartments containing 

 a collection of roses. 



82, Garden of florist's flowers. 



83 83, Garden of herbaceous plants, chiefly annuals. The walks in all 



