844 THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [SEPTEMBER 5, 1:69, 
blessings of agriculture, the taste for horticulture, the | time, the fruite will run out, or rot, more n those Still, in the turning, lay your ғ heape low er { А... ша lower 
usefulness of arboriculture, the ушеу ards and orcha rds | rooms, then in other cóuenient places, Бы that | and your straw vnderneath them very Alwaies 
ofold; I g ery opê, are neither good for winter nor summer : | prouided, that you do not touch yo танаа іп апу 
our fish ponds or о і th specially such as are neere the tyles where no | great frost, and — if they bee in an open roome, 
epicurianism or their 24 tony, asi e ihe Loud idea, | seeling is ouer them. or, in winter, the shar In а cellar or oome, w уз» n e frost cannot 
but because the discipline of their түнө; оп occasions, | windes and fro: wil haue sse through the|come at them, бе may be touched, if there be any 
limited them, and a ; to vege- | chinkes or creuisses of the windowes, although sh t 
T and fish. diet and debarred them at seasons from 
milan 0 
p а mal or flesh food ? era the monks ! | weather will ре: likewise. дах cellars be t toward At ка jaw, th uite is w et and moyst 
4 pa and little M !—how my blood | the spring, they be cold in summer: and are th [шеи е во, they must not be touched, nor any 
tingles to Tai those es and refining tastes turned | good to keep fruite in. irme d vntill that they be dry againe, And so 
against them, and t rceive € even angling-|  Roomes, that seeled ouer head, are good X їс т. in rainy weather, they will be danke and 
e ad wh "sho nd m nothing but * pum. ж! fruite, сао ayre suffi оу н Дыс Зоде X may | moyste, and giue, according to the weather : at which 
wil rds men," must s ro go out of the | be shut and opened, as me d до be touched. For, b ing touched 
way to shoot their goosish shafts at those е, et it will keep away dust, "that ecce pem fallen | in any of "those times afo ayd, they wil turn Мас, 
шеп —“ the monks of o - че heate of the sunne. Alwayes prouided, | апа hauing iim changed colour, they will not last, 
ath.: Stop, stop, my friend. Why ! from Conwa ay | Pres e soeuer, that they be vadesiejei, pa Therefore in what roome soeuer you lay the ‚ Set 
you are wandering wide + A. E. ond Great Orme's | A sm and sweet strawe, eyther — te or open your windows, С Other entrances for 
into the abyss of g JR ee back ” to the|t 
Grayling, РА "introduced 1 У the “ monks of оа; and | 
ing, you are falling 
| Take also the longest of the d and let it A led |a ay 
о the walles, in ing vp as far as the fruite n achet 
not thicke, but onely sufficient = same the fruito from si: 
"For, ке and 
Pisc.: w el well, pardon ше; I was carried a lit 
to sea by the tido of reflection, and T than k you fi 
wall. Whi ch, it it be a stone wall, will giue, at | the morr 2а ng v zntill ab peces 
y nge ofthe w If an any o other sub à wil | after these times, the ayre is too colde,. ep 0 
be ful of dust. Therfo: re the straw is good, boh. to dry | not your windowes at all: for the Mareh win "pond 
Жолы 1 
haf, 
one more; e "Who i Well, were поё the monks the | 
wise тА keep away the dust. When aper and other long lasting Eae begin to 
time, and are not some of those arts which are known 
to hav 
But if с roome bee eyther wayne-scotted ог hriueled : and tÀe reas 
e been. in thei rk eeping, 1 
RAIN o е been kn own to t ria 
again dawning in us? There now, "the wind is 
longer “in the East, Ч во let us get on with the 
Ее: now o A 
no 
subject 
board ed ro there needs no straw, betweene the Lasting fruite, ат that the mid of "Ma ау is past, 
begin to withe y reason that "bet they ware 
How серени of one sort and kinde, are to Бе | dryer. And thô, the moysture being gone, which 
caused them to иер plumpe, they looke withered and 
en 
bec 
t i (doe can) they will rot. For, in the sprin 
Did or did not the monks know all about „pisciculture | 0! 
and introduce the Grayling into Britain, is my ques 
ng, but as far as my Catholic knowled 
u, it shali. Ороп what is the supposition 
Why should E be an imported fish ? 
That the grayling is an 
w almost universally conceded-* The „concession | 
order be 
. | fruite shall be feed, and kept in ШОК e for their | 99У m со 
bes kin of fi 
Be it во; I understand very little е = e тї pn last, па T н! 
вош 
imported fish seems othe 
as the tres: E йн prine ing and buddi 
e the 
E 
® 
un 
29 
gs 
ing. And as there be diu тийе — 
di vd. pom zin will pem Пу last, some but t 
ho lantide, Some till Chri pa some till Candlem P" 
SI But especially, Тїрї, 
John apples, : or as some call = се Реа 
‚ and such о 
Home Co aso Apps e. 
M old Pollard geri {тее mea 
da 
or Irelan 
asting загс ае 
latter countries, а very scarce fish, limited to 
rivers or parts of rivers, and becomin 
ex 
only in dita а us the pun is, even in de. | 
certain 
à Dien E 
the 
t | fruite, with goo ood v. vsage, м. last till =z fruite come in. 
It is the order in Kent, and in most fruite y; and 
h no extravagant surmise, when we conten т 
its present appearance, and think of the many years 
thak must have me mM "ini period of its renova- 
е to take vp t hose they see | tion ; for, at some g gone it must have 
еч , Lapland, and Norway, | à 
e existed, and а apparently 
th, : oes their decrease prove 
exotic ? 
here by Nature and be dyin ng out of creation in certain 
elsew 
Nes T "Their decrease is 
supposit; ion; and why, let me ask, are n not gray- 
ling in ing out" in the other foreign localities I 
men 
by, 
decapitated 
Ae they ғу Я and іп the heart о the ] heape: | en ‘truncated by thel hand of Ped И ре у 
er some SR e them, but en 
But d o thom to be | sion to use thê, må hen IH them vp, 
May they not have been originally planted — the 1 
English оган as the Dodo is supposed to have т reserue, 
her 
only a link in the chain of | there ы вееп 
uo 18 more ед. in tbe ou . And 
P haue occa- 
and throwing |" 
will. 
the rut Men. tempest, yis 4 feet from the 
rond. о-да 
AE 
where its "mutilation 1 "has occurred, 
shoo 
| 16 once possesse dim s hav 
siderably by the swelling ‹ ofi the: robot И parts. Th 
parts now Du six stately trees, nearly equidistanf, one 
i aller than its 
rotten on 
t you meane to kee 
as long as р к чч their есы bk 
« Оу vsed in another sort. When 
risht fruite, eyther vpon the 
d, its d 
kin des, уга 
toppe 
же Totten i in tho agams Therfore, hauing a trey, — 
h the same en; take them ур, ps d carefull 
vh que rivers are not in the t 
as when 
ise. veg which ре нее 
1 neces eape, 
the {геу ега to 
wit nd your nayles touch them d heere и that | dis 
not “dyin 
by are 
ourishing in "be same rivers which the онш fat n 
deserting ; which - least te: — — that the hand 
of Nature, whose works 
Ib 
although the fruite Pa: your iie þe all of o 
taking vp of them 
аьаа us ey grew all vpon me Au 
foy 
: forthey M not keep Чд 
OUT | sup 
trey being filled set it befo re y 
say, a link in the 
gether 
me nd our power of solution z 
onks—and the author of the 
for the questions of 
mp step iil 
bara ni = ме imported, | 
“(то 5 етина) 
Mie epe ug VII. 
reseruin 
there must be great "eade taken, what place or 
roome Шук pus Jared in : forit must be neyther too 
hot nor too rd neither too E зо, too open. For, | 
close he room thé in t| 
mako them бе, апа | 
time of yeare, the frost will 
ust also s t 
о 
s you 
о оз ; much still | 
Е я to the 
r keeping of winter-fruite, | — 
- | peruse them well, апа lay tha forie or eot that 
- without ir which will last lon 
wood 
would bu ild up p itid 
ted well wi! 
long. *e 
ET or sende же third sort ME your dm 
у. are those that are already perisht, or w All thi 
Dti ius of hand those that are 
rotten, to Ee which will ven Sepe a ivi if 
rall: and TT as they a Te fami р 
with fresh and sweet 
р д ы iru i 
they | in to rights again, by her own 
ү, 
1 
d 
d 
^ 
re to be wished that the eet timber in о " 
I pea t home just now four convalescent trees, t 
wd of f which — give o satisfaction to every beholde 
1 
lost an enormo! 
second is also a Риё 
whé these other begin to perish, 
epum y care, 
т boarded. 
strawe, 
— а long lasting fruite, e not to „bee turned, 
ascend to t| pt that th 
The times when long MÀ Vire 
a Willow. These are all n 
Pippins, John- petes ЧЇ, and other such | improvement, well worthy the. ренин of the 
n pi 
pec 
vntill the | and showing what can be done 
Charles Waterton, еи Пе, 
f fruite майдо ні h them rien must e| Hotel, Bellevue. 
latter end of March : which will both Кее tinm fom 
NM id Kum: the i ltr ad the Mei wii 
мктб rds May (being the 
: and, in that 
LE 
VERTU ET NU d em 
lant is 
The second time, that yona should turne these | lasting | онко, 
kindes P nm is about Shrouetide, or the latter end | the plant measured 15 
of M; r the beginning. of Aprill. Miren 7 feet in height. "The ее 
е cies all kinds of fruite Жыт feet 6 inches in P 13 inches in 
other times, And so 22 feet in- 
vntill Whitso them|at the base; 16 is 
ond irte a montb, e afterwards once 1 growing, there are are beim ween 4000 and 
noble 
take out) or that the e filings. haue not been taken o americana.—A fine of this T F 
now showing эшет in the Ta egit n of T. £. 
Claughton жы, — ier 
stem was п 
© 
= a 
is still - 
