THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 
FRIMROSE HILL.—THE REGENT’S PARK.— REGENT 
STREET.—MR. NASH.—THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY.— 
SIR THOMAS STAMFORD RAFFLES. 
AS Mrs. Aston walked, with her children, 
the next morning, to make another visit to 
the Garden, she remarked upon the beauty 
of the 1isiug plantation which, to the north- 
ward of the .oad, conceals the canal, and with 
the canal, the adjacent fields and hills. 
*¢ I wish, very much,” continued she, that 
Primrose Hill were taken into the Park. It 
would be a shame to let it be covered with 
houses, as is now daily threatened; and_be- 
sides, I have a plan for making the Hill, and 
all the intervening ground, a better place for 
popular enjoyment, than, as I think, the 
Park, already so called, is ever likely to 
become. I greatly approve of the fences 
which now surround the pastures and young 
