GA R 
- more t tranfitncy, as sk potatoes: “ee.” here aré va- 
rious other circumftances that are deferving of attention 
on this fubject, as ane) a feen by confulting the articles 
‘Croppinc and Cours E of Crops. 
—There are fearcely any oy plants that 
ans in the whole of their culti- 
er 
require exattly 1e fame 
’ Sak in many inftances the di Terences s are but very 
‘ the annual and biennial “kinds, the fimilarity in 
amany cafes i is very confiderable; but in that of the perennial 
fallad and pot-herb forts it mottly differs in ahigh degree. 
“The neceflary culture in each may be under the names of the 
particular pia hi egeiel ee nature of the culture that 
8 requifite m any fort of plant or vegetable, it 
aia le. be execute : ae feafon, and under proper 
rcumftances in refpe e ftate of the ground, There 
“are feel other ma aie hae in fae performance of this bufinefs 
that r eat uire the oo of the a as will be feen 
‘ble of bei 
8 ae more Se or ve in con- 
fequence of their natural qualities. As the great or final 
purpofe of every individual ve etable is = of 
tion of its flower, fruit, and feed, it na 
om 
ace, they may be continued for feveral years. And 
crops at un- 
The fame thing happens to fome fruit trecs 
and fhrubs Maries denudated of their leaves and flowers in the 
late bei fea 
ifferent fut-teees that do not ufually afford any pro- 
ce of time, as the walnut and apes 
0 
e practical operations of this branch of gardening 
jc eae under a variety of different heads, as con- 
a tae hot-honle, hot- 
conry. OTS lee a hawk, is to put 
her on a turf o Sars te cheat 
e 
er Jetting her fly at lar 
GARDENSEE, in » Geography 
a town of Pruffia, in 
Oberland; 2 5 miles N.N.E. of Culm. N. lat. 53° 35’. 
E. long. 18° 
Oa RDENSK, a town of Samogitia ; 25 miles S. W. 
ef Miedniki. 
GARDENSTOWN, a {mall town of Scotland, i in the 
county of Bamff, fituated in a bay at the entrance into the 
frith of Murray wath an sapieicher etl ig tears to Mung 
57° 37's W. long. 2” 
the 
GAR 
CARDICCHI, a town on the weft coaft of the ifland 
of Corfu; feven miles S.W orfu. 
GARDIE, Poxtus pE a. in Biography, who fourifhed 
in the middle of the 16th century, was fon of a gentleman 
of Gardie, near Carcaffone, i Trance. e ferved firft 
ni in Piedmont, and afterwards in the 
enry II i 
ie] 
who immediately gave him a commifion in his ar 
was _ ards knighted and created hae of Eckholm, 
s fent 
portant 
I sas 35 he was unf ere oa at the entrance of the 
port of Revel. He had married a natural daughter of the king, 
a from this union are defcended the counts de la Gar dic. 
O area ae the iat nobles of Sweden. 
oreri. 
GA ARDINER, Sre ifh prelate and flatef- 
the part which he tock in the 
name tran{mitted with infamy to ci rerity. He wasa native 
of St. Edmunds Bury, and born about the year 1483. 
is fuppofed to have been the natural fon of Dr. Lionel 
Woddvill, bifhop of Salifbury, and herald to Elizabeth, 
queen confort to Edward IV. He 
- Res father, a menial es e 
ried his mother with a view of preventing the 
aie ces which would have refulted, had the real ftate of the 
cafe been known. Ofthe early years of this remarkable 
man we have no account ; but at the proper age he was fent 
to Trinity-Hall, Cambridge, where he purfued his fludies 
with uncommon diligence, an a d 
igh degree a reputation for the brillianey of his talents, 
for correétne 1 i i i 
clal- 
imitated his ity le fo sll as to draw down the feverity of 
criticilm on that account. He applied himfelf to the ftudy 
of the civil and canon law, and took his degree of doctor 
in the year 1520. Different rae are made refpecting 
his firft patron: according to fome, it was Thomas Howard, 
. ‘e of Norfolk, though others ve ibe the notice taken 
him to cardinal Wo sife . To the latter it is known 
ae Gardiner acted as a private fecretary, and was for 
time one of the cardinal’s oa In this fituation an inci- 
d dge of 
the king. Cardin 
w i oyed to 
wo ie the 
made by the fecretary, an d being weil pleafed = the per- 
formance, and {till more with bi on hi 
eng = — he not’ only expreffed his Tatisfadtion of 
talents, but admitted him into a confi- 
s period fia any ftate 
dential Soa and from this 
ileal moment was concluded without the advice of Gar- 
diner. In fe e year I a sor 1528, he was oe naa in con- 
junétion w ox, to an emba ome, to ne- 
vith Edwa y to 
gociate oes bufinefs of the king’s divorce from queen Cathe- 
Although Fox would naturally rank higher than 
hie 
