PLATE VII. 
Ground Plan of a Fruiting Pine Stove, sixty feet in length, and worked by two fires. The flue 
from one runs round the front, dips under the entrance, and goes into the back wall without 
returning; but lest the heat should not be sufficiently expended in that length, a damper* is placed 
in the funnel, so high on the outside, as to be reached from the ground, which, by being closed when 
the heavy smoke is past, will prevent the heated air from escaping in any degree, by its being more 
or less closed. That from the other, runs along the back walk (nearly on a level with it), returns 
perpendicularly over this first, both being detached from the back wall, and then into it. At the back 
of the stove, is the gardener's apartments, consisting of a sitting room and bed chamber; to these is 
added a store room, for seeds, flower roots, and the temporary reception of ripe, valuable fruit, such as 
pines, grapes, peaches, &c. therefore must necessarily be placed under his eye; this is separated by a 
passage from the other rooms. The funnel from the fire in the sitting room, does not communicate 
with the flues of the stove. 
A, the bark pit; the path seen surrounding it, and the steps for descending to the front part. 
B, the sitting room. C, bed chamber. D, the store room, and E, the passage. 
Plate XXIII. at H. 
