The TraBical Kitchen Gardiner. 421 



What I have to add, to complcat this 

 Supplement, is to obfcrve, that the plans 

 bcforegoing have been chiefly calculated 

 for kitchen gardens that are enclosed or 

 wall'd in ; but to finifn this Treatife en- 

 tirely, I have added one plan more of a 

 villa or kitchen garden where its produce 

 is rais'd promifcuoufly up and down in 

 fields, where there is a choice of ground 

 proper for all kinds of vegetables, fome- 

 times by plowing only. 

 , Thefe fields are fuppos'd to be enclosed 

 (as they are often found) with hedges and 

 hedge-rows ready grown, of great ufe in 

 the breaking of thofe cold winds and 

 frofts that retard and often fpoil the early 

 produce of the fpring. 



It will be impoffible, in fo fmall a 

 plate, to fet the following defign in fo 

 perlpicuous a light as it might have been 

 in a folio or large quarto edition; but 

 the greateft and bed recommendation I 

 can give of it is, that it is a faint copy 

 of a very handfome and noble defign of 

 this kind, beloneins; to a '^^ nobleman 

 who has been pleas'd to honour this trea- 

 tife in the beginning of it ; and much it 



* The Lord Bathnrfty at Riskins, near Colebrook. 



E e 3 



is 



