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trenchments, not only with more outwafd 

 fteWj but more apparent coftly right pro- 

 claim the property of that kind therein 

 to belong to the land-owner of fuch colo- 

 nies. 



Another advantage therefrom^ is, that 

 poachers and f72arers cannot go in and out 

 from thence^ but they will be in danger of 

 being heard, or feen. And whoever firft 

 has thefe fanftuaries, will have all the near 

 adjoining game, which likewife will take 

 to them when the enclofures are never fo 

 young. 



And on fmall eftates thefe fjhulce tend 

 to make a great {hew of timber with a lit- 

 tle; as the feveral cantonments, in content 

 of the whole, of no more than fix or eight 

 acres of land, would infallibly do. 



In fmall fields, if the acute angles a- 

 mounted to no more than a quarter of an 

 acre, they would have a proportionate ef- 

 fed: ; and when the Oaks were well grown 

 the new made fence, on their account, might 

 at pleafure be beaten down, and lie in com- 

 mon with the proper field again : Where- 

 fore 



