The Vraiiieal Kitchen Gardiner, 



in fo many different feafons as other- 

 wife he might. 



I have made diagonal alleys, in order 

 to make thofe many fubdivifions I have 

 been naming, but if any gardiner pleafes, 

 he may omit thofe, and let them be all 

 fquares, or he may divide them into 

 ftrait beds of four foot wide, efpecially 

 the two middle divifion quarters, which 

 I recommend for that purpofe, efpecially 

 for afparagus, artichokes, c^r. 



The model ! have here laid down is 

 perhaps as ufeful as any extant, and 

 will, as I have before obferv'd, ferve 

 fourteen or fifteen people in family 

 well enough, provided it be kept well 

 aung'd and well employ'd s for the mak- 

 ing kitchen gardens fo large as they ge- 

 nerally are, is the occafion of their be- 

 ing too often too much uncultivated, 

 and negleded. But if a model of this 

 kind fhouid be required for a larger fa- 

 mily than I have been mentioning, the 

 jproportion may be doubled or trebled, 

 tad the proportion will, I mufl con- 

 fefs, be fliil the better. 



I have defign d a row of limes, or 

 clnis, round the garden, at about ten or 

 twelve foot diitance from each other, 



and 



