358 Principles of Landscape- Gardening 



reduced scale of this plan, several of the letters of reference have been of 

 necessity omitted.] 



A, Principal entrance lodge and gates, opening into the Histon Road. 



B, Carriage road. 



c, Chapel, standing on a platform ascended by a flight of steps. 



D, Entrance from the New Huntingdon Road. * 



E, Reserve ground for spare earth, for bricks, stones, mortar, and various 

 articles required in digging graves, building brick graves, vaults, &c. 



F, Garden to the New Huntingdon Road Lodge. This lodge not being 

 essential, no plan or estimate of it is given. It is thought that it might let 

 sufficiently well as a cottage, to render it worth building on that account. 



G G, Reserve ground fronting the Histon Road, which may be used as 

 garden ground, added to the cemetery, or let for building on, as may ulti- 

 mately be found most desirable. 



H H, &c., Terrace walk surrounding the cemetery, and 3 ft. above the 

 general level. 



I I, &c., Holly hedges, forming the outer boundary, and also the separa- 

 tion fences between the cemetery and the reserve grounds. 



K K, &c., Seats or benches, for the use of persons walking round the 

 cemetery. 



L L, &c.. Borders for graves with monuments, or otherwise rendered 

 ornamental. 



M M, &c., Beds where the graves may either be plain or turf graves, or 

 graves with head-stones, or may be rendered otherwise ornamental at pleasure. 



N N, &c.. Space along the centre of these beds, on which alone head- 

 stones are to be placed on foundations of brickwork or masonry. Brick 

 graves or catacombs may have the monuments, ledger-stones, or whatever is 

 used as a covering or finish, resting on their side and end walls. 



o o, &c.. Single grass graves. 



r p, &c., Brick graves occupying exactly the space of two single ones. 



Q Q, &c.. Vaults descended to by stairs, and occupying exactly the space 

 of four single graves. 



R R, &c.. Tile drains for carrying oiF surface water, all terminating in the 

 public drain in the New Huntingdon Road. 



s s, &c., Cedars of Lebanon. 



T T, &c.. Deodar cedars. 



u u, &c.. Lines of Taurian pines. 



V V, &c., Lines of L'ish yews. 



w, Workshed for masons, and repository for planks, wheelbarrows, earth- 

 box, &c., not to be built till after the cemetery is in full operation. 

 X X, Histon Road. 



Y Y, Public drain along the New Huntingdon Road. 



z, Archway to be formed in the holly hedge as it grows ; or, if the funds 

 permit, an architectural archway may be here formed at the time the hedge is 

 planted. 



No. 2. [omitted] is an elevation of that side of the cemetery which lies 

 along the Histon Road. 



No. 3. [omitted] is a cross section on the line cc dd, showing a rise 

 of one foot in the centre of the compartment at a, in order to throw the water 

 to the sides at b b. 



No. 4. [omitted] is a longitudinal section on the line aa bb. 



Noc 5. [omitted]. Elevation of the south side of the cemetery fence, in- 

 cluding the entrance from the New Huntingdon Road. 



No. 6. [omitted] is a section across the lodge and the chapel, in the di- 

 rection of A B c z. 



No. 7. [omitted] is a section along the middle road, to show the fall of 

 the ground from west to east, and the consequent power of surface drainage. 



No. 8. [omitted]. A similar section to No. 6., but on a scale four times larger. 



No. 9. Section across the terrace on the line ii kk, to the same scale 

 as Nos. 7. and 8. 



