350 A HISTORY OF GARDENING IN ENGLAND 



1715. Stephen Switzer {continued). A Dissertation on the true Cythisus 



of the Ancients, &c. London, 173 1. 8vo. 

 Second edition, 1735. 



C. J. Wolfe and James Gandon. Vitruvius Britannicus, or British 

 Architect, containing plans, &c. of buildings and Gardens, public 

 and private, in Great Britain ; 200 copper-plates. London, 171 5. 



1716. Rev. Henry Stevenson. The Young Gardener's Director. London, 



printed for Anthony Barker. 17 16. i2mo. 



The Gentleman Gardener instructed. London, 1716. i2mo. 



Mentioned by Johnson with this title, and he says the sixth edition is dated 1769. What 

 I believe to be the second edition is entitled " The Gentleman's Gard'ner's Director," second 

 edition, London, 1744. 8v0 - The seventh edition I have seen is dated 1766. 



1717. Joseph Carpenter. The Retir'd Gardener. London, 1717. 8vo. 



Samuel Collins. Paradise Retrieved, or the Method of managing and 

 improving Fruit Trees, with a Treatise on Melons and Cucumbers ; 

 12 plates. London, i7i7.-j|i8vo. 



George Andrew Agricola. The Artificial Gardener. London, 1717. 

 The Experimental Husbandman and Gardener, translated from the 



original with remarks and adorned with cuts. 2nd edition. 



London, 1726. 4to. [Probably second edition of the above.] 



Philosophical Treatise of Husbandry and Gardening. Translated 



by Bradley. London, 1721 [see Bradley, 1706]. 



On Planting. Edin., 1777. 



These works, 1717, 1721, 1777, described by Watt as translated from the German. He is 

 correct as regards the two first, but the third work is evidently the following, and Agricola is 

 the pseudonym of another writer, James Anderson (see 1777). 



" Miscellaneous observations on planting and training Timber Trees particularly calcu- 

 lated for the climate of Scotland. In a series of letters by Agricola. Edinburgh. Printed 

 for Charles Elliott, Edinburgh ; and Thomas Cadell, London, 1777." 



" Advertisement the following letters were first published in the Edinburgh Weekly 

 Amusement." 



Giles Jacob. The Country Gentleman's Vade-Mecum. 1717. i2mo. 



1718. Rev. James Gardiner. Rapin of Gardens : a Latin Poem in 4 books, 



Englished by J. G. London, 1718. 

 See also Evelyn, 1658. 



1719. Tournefort — . The Compleat Herbal : or the Botanical Institutions 



of Mr. Tournefort .... carefully translated from the original 

 Latin, with large Additions from Ray, Gerarde, Parkinson, and 

 others, .... with a short Account of the Life and Writing of the 

 Author. J^ondon, 1719. 4to., with plates. 



1720. Patrick Blair, m.d. Botanick Essays. London, 1720. 8vo. 



Pharmaco-Botanologia, or an alphabetical and classical Disser- 

 tation on all the British Indigenous and Garden Plants of the New 

 London Dispensatory. London, 1723-28. 4to. 



1722. Thomas Fairchild. The City Gardener, &c. London, 1722. 8vo. 



The different and sometimes contrary motion of the sap in plants. 



Phil. Trans. 1724. 



Catalogus Plantarum. See Society of Gardeners, 1730. 



Joseph Miller. Botanicum Officinale, or A Compendious Herbal 

 (dedicated to Sir Hans Sloane). London, 1722. 8vo. 



