A GCOMPLEAT BODY 
planted in Autumn. 
; Soil : 
sorte OO 
Il. 
zi te Gare gad M anagement of the Flower SiRe te the Jeet nd Week rab 
September, ; 
E have mentiontd in 4 preceding Num-— 
ber, the bringing fome Flowers out of the © 
‘Nurfery into the Garden, ‘and’ Preparation muft — 
now be made for all the’ others that’are to be ~ 
For this Purpofe, Jet the - 
Borders be examined as to the Condition ‘of their | 
fome will be found exhaufted ; others only 
\ 
fGff for want of digging. Labour alone is required 
for thefe; but, for the others, Labour and Manure. 
“Let the firft be work’d up thoroughly and care- 
fully, and the others enriched by fome Barrows 
and wrought in Hick them. When thefe are dug 
and enrich’d, let them lie fome Days : they will get - 
“great Advantage from the Sun, the Dews, and — 
Rain; and their Plantation will be a kind of fe. 
cond Tillage. Gardeners do all together, ‘and fo 
they are direéted ; but it is like the reft of their 
- commion Praétice, very ill manag’d: the Advan-_ 
tage of preparing the’ ‘Gtound a Week before-— 
a is equal ‘to that’ of a ‘tolerable Manuring. — 
"There ‘is oreat Pleafure i in feeing early Tulips, 
ain the Gardener has’ a ‘deal’ of Pride in their | 
‘blowing well: Nature has’ alfo provided the Means — 
of a long Succeffion, but they’ are not’ ‘regarded. 
“The Nowéven; and the WINTER Duxz, the | 
Buell and the FLoRIZANTE; the Far ty 
Perrsct, the Morizron; “and the” ‘Pretty 7 
Berry; the APOLLO, the Viczroy, ‘and’ the — 
‘Hariem JEWEL, with ° forne’ others - which we | 
a lr re ne Ne 
SEGTION 
fome of the others : 
fhall ‘name, when we treat of their Seafons of 
flowering, will come very early, if rightly managed. 
‘They fhould be put into the Ground this Week ; 
and, if the Seafon favour them, they may be ex- 
pected 1 in all their Beauty at the End of March. 
They are very handfome Flowérs, and fo dift 
ferent from the others, that they fhould, for that 
Reafon, alfo be kept feparate. 
They are fhort i in the Stalk, and hit Rke look 
irregularly among thofe of a later Seafon. ‘They 
| alfo flower at fo different a Time, that it is very 
of very rotten Dung, which muft be well mix’d — 
improper to mix them. One wifhes to fee’ a Bed 
of Tulips in their Glory all together; but thefe, as 
Matters are commonly manag’d, are decaying, when 
the reft are beginning to be in their Glory. 
~ Let the fame Care be taken for thefe fine Flowers _ 
that we have ordered for the Perennial Plants. 
Let the Borders be dug up and prepar’d for them, 
that they may lie a Week before the Roots art 
planted; and in fome that were dug a Week. ago, 
it will now be:Time to plant early Anemonies. 
They mutt not’ be the fineft Kinds, 
fhould not be expofed to fo much Danger; but 
in Places where they are well 
fhelter’d, will have a Chance of coming at a very 
early Time. peg ee ; 
Laftly, look: ovet the Box- -Edgings repair 
where they are faulty ; ; take up and replant them 
when ‘they are grown too large; and thus clofe, 
in ets seaig the  peias ri the prefent Week. 
/ 
‘ ‘i % * 
. ‘ : . ‘ ‘ 
. ; j 
OTN eee ae ed cue FE 1 ee Sos ie: 
‘ s * er . > 
, 
» 
- 
bhe- 
2 Of the Bufine/s of the Seminary, for the fecond W ual te September. , 
E have obferved, that Plants and T'rees 
_ will require to be remov’d, not only from 
the Seminary i into their Places i in the Garden, but 
‘into different Quarters there, as they encreafe in 
Size, and crowd upon one another. 
certain Time, and go ‘through all the Bufinefs at 
once: but this alfo is wrong. The Seafon for tranf- 
planting with leaft Danger or leaft Damage, is 
juft when the Leaves are decay’d. This happens 
on fome Plants fooner, and on others later; it is 
therefore extremely wrong to remove all at once. 
Let the Labour be divided by the careful Gar- 
dener,; and the feveral Kinds, according to 
their Racks remov’d, as the true Notice of | 
‘The common Cuftom i is, to fet about this at a 
} fhewn, and there is nothing fo deftructive, 
the proper Period, the Fall of At Leaves, di- 
rects, : 
Tree that is tranfplanted, and let the Barth be 
very. well broke in it: this might feem a needlefs 
Caution, becaufe it is fo univerfally. known to be 
right and proper; but it is one of many Inftan- 
ces, that what is very well known, is ill practifed. 
There is nothing in which fo much Neglect is 
the Trees that fail in a Seminary, as well as after- 
terwards, on the Removal to their Places in the 
Garden, are loft by this Carelefsnefs, of not mak- 
ing the Hole large enough, and not breaking the. 
Earth fine: 
SECTION 
for thof : 
Rise 
Let a large Hole be open’d for receiving cach ; 
Half 
