XIV 
The INTRODUCTION. 
luftrate the great Beauty thereof, without any Regard had te 
the Wilderneffes, Labyrinths, é&c. which are very fine in their 
Kindalfo. The other Parts being plainly exhibited, need no fur- 
ther Explanation. 
e having thus paffed through all the moft pleafant Parts 
of a delightful rural Garden, we mu now {uppofe, that we 
are entering from X Y, of Plate Ill, at Z of Plate XIII, where 
we furprizingly behold a pleafant femi-circular Lawn, from 
which the grand Avenue V, V, of Plate Ill. is conginued to H, 
ge. throughout the whole Eftate. 
And we are here again in every of its Parts entertain’d with 
different Views, open Plains, Groves, Thickets , open and pri- 
vate Fifh Ponds, and in brief every Thing that’s pleafant. - 
From Plantations of this Kind, time would produce vaft 
Quantities of Timber to the great Service of our Country and 
Improvement of Eftates. 
Plate XIV. is another Specimen of a Park, after a different, 
but grand and noble Manner, where its Mand is laid out in 
rural Walks and Cabinets, and the other Parts embellifh’d af- 
ter Nature's own Rules, which is difcoverable at firft View. 
Plate XV. is the Defign of a Garden and Wilderne{s in an 
Ifland, \ying before the View of 2 Houfe, Terrace, &c. B is 
a Temple of View ere&ed on a double Mount, called (tho’ im- 
properly by Gardeners, an Amphitheatre) where tis to be ob- 
ferved, that altho’ the Slopes thereof are broke by the Angles, 
yet ‘tis in fuch an agreeable grand Manner, that they have a 
noble Afpecé. 
The other Parts being eafily underftood at View, need no 
further Explanation. : 
Plate XVI. contains great Variety of Lawns, or Openings, 
before a grand Front of a Building, intoa Park, Foreft, Com- 
mon, rc. with an elegant Cabinet in the middle of a Thicket, 
on the top of a Hill, in whofe Center at A, is fuppofed to 
be erected a {pacious Building after the Form of a Temple, from 
whence fine Views may be feen about the Horizon. 
Plate XVII. contains the Defign of a Fountain and Cafcade 
after the-grand Manner at Verfailles. From whence we pafs 
thro’ thote pleafant thady Walks B B, to other Parts of our 
Gardens. 
When 
