oe 
Peer ree Oi ee ag ee ee eee ee ee eae eRe SLL Ds Ait ae 
eile siti wcll is 
a cll 
, eee 
eomea| L THO our fhady Walks, Avenues, Groves, Wilderneffes, 
Grotto’s, Fountains, Canals, @c. (of avbich I bave en- 
Bai) deavourd to gratify the Curious with great Variety of 
Plans, after aGrand and move Ruval Manner than has been done before, in 
my New Principles of Gardening Jately publifo'd) may be guftly pro- 
portion d, and truly executed in all their Parts, yet sf they ave not em~ 
bellifh’d with the beft Kinds of Fruits now extant in England, it cannot 
be faid but that they are vaftly fhort of thofe Beauties which make 
them truly Grand and Noble, as well as Profitable and Delightful. 
LE we do — nis a. the 1 various Forms and Colours of the Lids 
of Fruite Tees, ¢ and compare vith Fore, oft-Trees, it el be s jeunes 
that thofe of Fruit-Trees are —— < beat | 
their beautiful Bloffoms, with avhich they are aillien’ d in the Spring, 
their Fruits which fucceed, and their Leaves alfo, with the bare Leaves 
of Foreft-Trees only, “tis evident that there's no manner of Comparifon 
between them. 
BUT it is not to be underftood, that becaufe the Beauties of Fruit 
Trees ave fuperior to thofe of Foreft- Trees, that therefore Foreft-Trees 
are to be rejetted, and not veceiv'd in our Gardens. And fince that 
| Fruit-Trees ave known to be beautiful as well as profitable, ‘tis therefore 
that I advife the Planting of them qwith Foreft-Tr rees, in Wilderneffes, 
and other Rural Parts of Gardens, that their various agreeable Mix- 
tures of Leaves and Fruits, may not only delightfully entertain the Eyes 
of the Bebolders, as they pafs thre the feveral Meanders thereof, 
but their Tafte alfo. 
[b] _ BESIDES, 
* 
