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A50005 The manner of ordering fruit-trees by the Sieur Le Gendre ... ; wherein is treated of nurseries, wall-fruits, hedges of fruit-trees, dwarf-trees, high-standers, &c. ; written originally in French and translated faithfully into English at the request of severall persons of honour.; Manière de cultiver les arbres fruitiers. English Arnauld d'Andilly, Monsieur (Robert), 1588-1674.; Evelyn, John, 1620-1706. 1660 (1660) Wing L943A; ESTC R21095 73,508 218

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The Manner of ORDERING Fruit-Trees London Printed for Hamphrey Mosesey The Manner OF ORDERING Fruit-Trees By the SIEUR LE GENDRE Curate of HENONVILLE Wherein is treated of Nurseries Wall-Fruits Hedges of Fruit-Trees Dwarf-Trees High-Standers c. Written originally in French and translated faithfully into English at the request of severall Persons of Honour A Piece so highly approved of in France that it hath been divers times printed there LONDON Printed for Humphrey Moseley at the Prince's Armes in S. Paul's Church-yard 1660. To the RIGHT HONOURABLE John Lewis de Faucon KNIGHT Lord of Ris Marquess of Charlevalle Counsellor in Ordinary to the King in all His Councils and first President in His Parliament of Normandy My LORD WEre you not so great a Lover of Gardens and Gardening as you are yet such are my obligations to You that I could not without extream injustice grant a dispensation to my self should I not dedicate this work unto you 'T is unto you I owe all that I am and that honest leisure which hath given me the means of informing my self in the knowledge of ordering Trees I should be truly ingrateful if upon this occasion I gave you no mark of my Respects and Acknowledgements Be pleased then My Lord to receive this Book as a Homage which I owe unto you the payment whereof gives me very great contentment If at any time your Great and Noble Employments permit you to give your self the Recreation of your Orchards you will find nothing there I confess which is new to you yet there you will see at least some shadow of this pleasant Art the secrets whereof you are so perfectly acquainted with You know how many Charms this lovely part of Agriculture hath that it affords us Joyes which are altogether pure and Hopes as sweet as innocent I have my self been taken with them from my tender years but when I consider that this Love hath found a place in your Heart and that the same Hand which so worthily holds the Ballance of Justice disdaines not sometimes to cultivate Trees so noble an Example redoubles my passion The glory of imitating you is a new spur unto me and binds me more strongly to this dear entertainment of my dayes Indeed my Lord if one consider the wonders of your Life he that sees those eminent Qualities which render you admirable unto all France that invincible Fidelity to the service of your King that high Prudence which in the midst of so many Tempests knew how to preserve a Calm in our Province will doubtlesse have wherewithall to flatter himself when he finds that he followes in the paths of so excellent a Person that he loves at least what so Great a Man hath an affection for and that he hath some inclinations common with him I know my Lord that I take up too much of your time thus to entertain you with our rustick Divertisements But expect not that a Gardiner should entertain you with any other discourse than that of his owne Art I leave the whole Field of your Prayses to be tilled by those great Spirits whereof our Age is so fruitfull Posterity will read in their works all that which our eyes have seen And like us will wonder how one single person in such difficult Conjunctures could manage so many Spirits and dis-entangle so many and so different Interests As for me I can discourse of nothing but our Wall-trees and those benefits which I have received from your hand Assuredly when I think upon your Goodnesses and all those Favours which you have so liberally heaped upon me I ought methinks to have nothing in my mouth but Thanks and nothing but thoughts of Gratitude in my heart This my Lord is my thought and this is what I am able to do to acquit my self towards you This is that which this Book shall publish in every place where it shall have the fortune to arrive It is an Infant which now I dare to present unto you hitherto it appeared not without trembling and shewed it self in publick onely to try whether the World would judge it worthy of you now that it hath found amongst good men more approbation than it could hope for I present it unto You wholly and without reservation Suffer it My Lord to call it self Yours that under so powerfull a protection it may pass through all those Climates where our French Muses are known to instruct or recreate all those that love Gardens and Gardening I am in all sorts of Respect MY LORD Your very Humble Obedient and Faithfull Servant LE GENDRE Curate of Henonville The Preface IT is now a long while that some of my Friends have solicited me to publish the principall Observations I have made concerning Fruit-trees by endeavoucing to perswade me that the Curious would be very glad to have by this means communicated unto them that which I have been able to learn upon this subject by an experience of almost fifty years During which I have employed all the time that I believed I might justly take for my Divertisement about them At the last I have yielded to what they desired of me performing that design with the most exact order that it was possible for me to do wherein I am rather obliged to excuse my self if any thing be faulty in my Observations either for the substance or manner of writing them than to recommend the matter of my work for I am well assured that will of it self be agreeable enough And were I so happy to have as many Approvers of my small labour as there are persons which love Plants I might safely boast of the approbation of the greatest part of good men Indeed never did men so much employ themselves about this noblest and most pleasant part of Agriculture as they have done of late There is scarce a person which talks not of Fruit-trees nor is there any but such as lack land that do not plant and even those too are pleased with the discourse of it and with the divertisment they take in seeing Fruits and Trees well ordered in the Gardens All imaginable Curiosities tending thereunto are sought after men ran even to excess and superfluity and our Age and Countrey have now no less improved themselves in this agreeable Recreation than in those high Speculations and great Employments of the most eminent Professions for which it is at present as famous as any other that ever was which gives me occasion to say that If this Art deserve not to be put in the number of the best Sciences and principall occupations of the mind it hath nevertheless this advantage that it hath alwayes kept some proportion with them and hath almost inseparably followed them throughout the world All Antiquity gives us assured proofs of this Truth for not to insist upon the times of the ancient Patriarchs who were the first in cultivating Trees as well as in forming the Manners of men It is certain that the politeness of understanding the
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