( 6 ) 
an Estate, to be of much use to the latter; ancl is 
too minute in the description of certain useful im¬ 
plements which stand in need of no description. I 
shall, on the contrary, not conduct my Reader to 
the forest clothed in its native umbrageous vesture, 
but set him down upon a settled plantation, and 
give him some plain and simple directions for con¬ 
ducting it. 
In the course of so doing I shall, of course, treat 
of that part, of extending the cultivation, and en- 
creasing the revenue ; which will bring me, of ne¬ 
cessity, to lay down nearly the same Rules as Mr. 
Laborie gives for making or forming a Planta¬ 
tion. 
THE 
