The Tragical Kitchen Gardiner. 



S E C T. IX. CHAP. LXXVIL 

 jin account of the adjoining plan. 



I Cannot finifh this treatife better 

 than by the annexion of the fol- 

 lowing plan 5 which is not only a hand- 

 fome, but a very convenient figure, as 

 to the difpofition of the feveral afpeft- 

 cd walls, quarters for fruit, legumes, ^c. 

 fince there is not a pofition of the 

 whole thirty two, (that of the North 

 only excepted,) but has the equal and 

 proportionate fhare of the fun. 



The hint I firfl: met with, that gave 

 rife to all that I have thought on this 

 fubjed, was taken out of a garden of 

 this kind in the North, where going 

 from the beft front of the houfe to- 

 wards the precipice of a fteep hill, you 

 are prefented with a fine fruit garden 

 of this form. I muft confefs I was not 

 a little furpriz'd with the elegance and 

 beauty that this figure firft ftruck me 

 with ; tho' upon perufal I found it was 

 not in the center of the building, and 



wanted 



