button to main menu   West's Guide to the Lakes, 1778/1821

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Page 288:-
[in]difference. Do then, ye affluent and prosperous landholders, pay some attention to this particular. Study the subject, through the medium of books and pictures; and sometimes spare, and sometimes plant a tree for ornament's sake. And (if you think them reasonable ones) observe all the following remarks, humbly offered to your consideration. They shall be made as brief as possible.
The greatest nicety and perfection in the art of planting trees, lies in the use of exotics, and an ingenious mixture of foliage, in order to decorate, for near inspection, the marginal views of a lawn, walk, &c. But if ever a fondness for agriculture, built upon a love of simple nature and sober piety (of which there are too, too few indications in our present manners) shall turn the general taste of the kingdom towards ornamented farms, such an event cannot be supposed to be suddenly brought about: hence the precepts that relate to this elegant part of gardening, will in this place be wholly unnecessary, and our attention must be confined to the management of larger trees, which are already found in these regions.
Scotch firs, though a favourite tree with many people, seem to require a good deal of judgment in their use; for they may be so planted as to injure a landscape more perhaps than they are generally seen to adorn it. In hanging woods (with which this country abounds) they frequently appear to disadvantage, however disposed. A single tree in this case often looks like a blot, and a plantation like a daub; especially in winter, when the most is expected from their verdure. The reason of this seems to be the darkness of their colour, and the obviousness of their whole form and outline: from the first particular they always attract the eye more than any thing else; and form the second, hurt the imagination with presenting to it only a parcel of small limited streaks or patches, awkwardly inclined to the horizon. When slightly and irregularly interspersed with woods of this kind, they
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