APPENDIX. 



437 



trees which are trained against it ; and for strength, being only one brick 

 in thickness for lessening the expense. 



9, Pond in the largest kitchen-garden, supplied from the brook by pipes, 

 with waste pipe to the pond on the lawn. 



10, Filbert plantation. 



11, Orchard and boundary plantation. 



12, Covered seat; of which a view is shown in^^o-. 12. In front of this 

 seat there is a mulberry tree of large dimensions, which was transplanted 



[Fig. 12. Covered Seal, of grotesque and rustic Masoai*y.J 



by Mr. Harrison when it was upwards of 80 years of age. The instru- 

 ments with which a number of large plants, particularly shrubs, were 

 transplanted under Mr. Harrison's directions, when the grounds were 

 being altered and enlarged, were described for us by Mr. Pratt. (See 

 Gardener^s Magazine, vol. xi. p. 134.) Mr. Pratt kept for many years 

 large plants which had suffered from any causes, or which were not im- 

 mediately wanted, in what he called an hospital for these purposes. 



13, A flower-garden, in which for several years a large Araucaria brasi- 

 liensis stood out in the centre bed ; but it was killed to the ground in the 

 winter of 1837-8. 



14, The rustic covered seat, shown in Jig. 14, in p. 441, and of which fg. 

 15, is an elevation of the back ; showing the mamier in which the 

 barked poles are arranged. 



15, Basin of water for aquatics. 



