[ 7 5 <* ] 
And this is done by imitating the Geography of 
the World, which firft gives the Whole, then the 
feveral Kingdoms, Countries, Provinces, and minuter 
Parts and Divifions, feverally and more at large. 
Fird, It will be highly neceffary, that a General 
Map of the whole Lordfhip (Country, &c.) be drawn 
in one Sheet of Paper or Velnmn, to give the Form, 
Idea, and Proportion, that the Parts bear to the 
Whole, and one another; by which Situations, Bear- 
ings of the Towns, Villages, Roads, and remarkable 
Places, will be feen at one View : And this rauft be 
reduced to fo fmall a Scale, as the intended Sheet 
may comprehend the Whole. A Scale of about n 
or 12 Chains in an Inch, will plot a Lordfhip of 
more than 2000 Acres, in the Compafs of 1 6 Inches 
and One quarter Square ; which may be a convenient 
Size to make Two Leaves, and open in a Folio Book. 
This Map may exprefs the Roads, Rivers, Streets, 
Boundaries, Inclofures, and common Field Lands 
fingly, in cafe they be not lefs than 40 or 50 Links in 
Breadth : The Pieces that contain not lefs than about 1 o 
Acres, will admit of Room to write the Owners 
Names and Quantities in Statute Meafure, as in Fig. 
4. But for all the fmall Parts, there will not be 
room to explain them : Therefore 
I divide the general Map into as many Geome- 
trical Squares, as it took Charts in furveying by the 
Table, by red Lines, as in Fig. 3. horizontally and 
perpendicularly, as noted by 0,0, 0,0, &c. which, by a 
Scale of 32 per Inch, may take about 15 Charts in 
Number: In the opened: Place near the Middle of 
each Square, in a fmall Circle, I number them with 
red Figures 1,2, 3 corrcfponding to the original 
Charts : 
