The Tragical Kitchen Gardiner. 26 j 



are pluck'd out into beds made of the 

 mowings of grafs, ofFage herbs, greens, 

 or long light dung, whereby there may 

 be a little heat communicated to the 

 roots, to make them ftrike and grow the 

 better : fome plant them under the me- 

 lon glalTes, the bed being made under 

 fome warm wall, or reed hedge, which 

 they keep cover'd in all extreme wea- 

 ther. A frame or two ordered after this 

 manner is certainly right 5 but moft of 

 thefe kinds are fo hardy that in all mild 

 feafons they will ftand the feverity of the 

 weather, being pomed or cabbaged be- 

 fore it comes in. 



Thofe that are fowed to come in ear- 

 ly in the fpring, and for the fore-part 

 of the fummer, are ty'd up and blanch'd, 

 as the cofs, Silejia, Imperial, &c, be- 

 ing fow'd towards the latter end of Au- 

 gufi, or beginning of September^ and 

 are to be fow*d and planted out in a 

 bed moderately heated, and under a good 

 warm hedge or wall, with glalTes, frames, 

 bells, mats, and other conveniencies to 

 preferve them all the winter 5 and thefe 

 both require and deferve our care. 



What is elfewhere obferv'd in the dig- 

 ging in of long dung, thatch;, (ire, in 



the 



