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with a view of grasping a great extent of salt marsh, the banks or sea wall be pushed farther outwards than where there is a firm and secure foundation for it to stand upon, the bank will blow up, and in both cases great losses and disappointments will ensue.'

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If a throstle sing, he falls strait a capering :
He will fence with his own shadow. Shakspeare.
I'll prove it on his body, if he dare,
Despite his nice fence and his active practice. Id
The' inhabitants each pasture and each plain
Destroyed have, each field to waste is laid;
In fenced towers bestowed is their grain,
Before thou camʼst this kingdom to invade.
Fairfax.

Calmness is great advantage; he that lets
Another chafe, may warm him at his fire,
Mark all his wand'rings, and enjoy his frets;
As cunning fencers suffer heat to tire. Herbert.
the foil will be in your bosom when you thought it a
A nimble fencer will put in a thrust so quick, that
yard off.
Digby.

any

So much of adders' wisdom I have learnt,
To fence my ear against thy sorceries. Milton.
Are not the fences of discipline cast down? Is there
conscience made of violating laws?

Barrow.

A beauteous heifer in the wood is bred;
The stooping warriors aiming head to head,
Engage their clashing horns; with dreadful sound
The forest rattles, and the rocks rebound;
They fence and push, and, pushing, loudly roar,
Their dewlaps and their sides are bath'd in gore.
Dryden.

Shall I mention make

Paring and burning land is every where proved of, and considered the sine qua non of the fen districts, in breaking up turf. Without it corn crops are destroyed by the grub and wire-worm. Colonel Adeane, of Barbraham, has 300 acres of meadows, which have been irrigated from the time of queen Elizabeth. Pallavicino, who was collector of Peter's pence in England, at the death of queen Mary, having £30,000 or £40,000 in his hands, had the art to turn Protestant on the accession of queen Elizabeth, and appropriated the money to his own use; he bought with it an estate at Barbraham. and other lands near Bournbridge; and procuring a grant from the crown, of the river which passes through them, was enabled legally to build a sluice across it, and throw as much of the water as was necessary into a new canal of irrigation, which he dug to receive it in the method so well known, and commonly practised in Italy long before that period. The canals and the sluices are all well designed, and are the work of a man evidently well acquainted with the practice; but, in taking the waters from them for spreading it by small channels over the meadows, there does not seem to be the least intelligence or knowledge of the husbandry of watering. No other art is exerted but that merely of opening in the bank of the river small cuts for letting the water flow on to the meadows always laterally, and never longitudinally, so necessary in works of this kind. The water then finds its own distribution, and so irregularly, that many parts receive too much, and others none at all. From the traces left of small channels in different parts of the meadows, it would appear that the ancient distribution formed under Pallavicino is lost, and If a man be to prepare his son for duels, I had that we see nothing at present but the miserable rather mine should be a good wrestler than an ordipatch-work of workmen ignorant of the business. nary fencer, which is the most a gentleman can attain Irrigation has not spread from this example, but to, unless he will be constantly in the fencingschool, might be extensively practised on the banks of all the rivers.

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or guard: as a neuter verb, to practise the art of fencing; to guard against: fenceful, affording protection: fenceless, exposed; without defence: fencer and fercing-masters, are professors of the art of fencing: fencible, capable of defence: fencing, the art of using weapons for defence and occasional assault: fencing-school, a place where the use of such weapons is taught.

Thou nast clothed me with skin and flesh, and hast fenced me with bones and sinews. Job x. 11.

He went about to make a bridge to a strong city, which was fenced about with walls. 2 Mac. xii. 13.

Of the vast mound that binds the Lucrine lake?
Or the disdainful sea, that, shut from thence,
Roars round the structure, and invades the fence.
Id.

With love to friend, the impatient lover went,
Fenc'd with the thorns, and trod the deep descent.

Id.

There's no fence against inundations, earthquakes, or hurricanes. L'Estrange.

A man that cannot fence will keep out of bullies and gamesters' company. Locke.

The only fence against the world is a thorough knowledge of it; into which a young gentleman should be entered by degrees, as he can bear it; and the earlier the better, so he can be in safe and skilful hands to guide him.

and every day exercising.

Id.

Id.

Each motion of the heart rises to fury,
And love in their weak bosoms is a rage
As terrible as hate, and as destructive:
So the wind roars o'er the wide fenceless ocean,
And heaves the billows of the boiling deep,
Alike from North, from South.

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While a man is learning to fence, he practises both on friend and foe; but when he is a master in the art

he never exerts it but on what he thinks the right side. Id. Spectator.

See that the churchyard be fenced in with a decent
rail or other inclosure.
Ayliffe's Parergon.

Minerva
Taught artists first the carving tool to wield,
Chariots with brass to arm, and form the fenceful
shield.
Congreve.
These, being polemical arts, could no more be
learned alone than fencing or cudgelplaying.
Arbuthnot and Pope.

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FENCE, in gardening and husbandry, wall, ditch, bank, or other enclosure, made round gardens, fields, woods, &c. In hot climates, where they have no occasion for walls to ripen their fruit, their gardens lie open, where they can have a water fence, and prospects; or else they are bounded with groves, which are much more pleasing to the sight than dead walls; but, in cold countries, we are obliged to have walls to shelter and ripen our fruit, although they take away much from the pleasant prospect of the garden. Brick walls are accounted the best and warmest for fruit; and these being built pannel-wise, with pillars at equal distances, save a great deal of expense, as they can be built thinner than if they were made plain without the pannels; and besides, these pannels make the walls look the handsomer. Stone walls, however, on account of their durability, are to be preferred to brick, especially those of square hewn stones. Those that are made of rough stones, though they are very dry and warm, yet, by their unevenness, are inconvenient to nail up trees to, unless pieces of timber be laid in them here and there for that purpose. But, in large gardens, it is better to have the prospect open to the pleasure garden; which should be surrounded with a fosse, that from the garden the adjacent country may be viewed. Where the fosses are made round a garden which is situated in a park, they are extremely proper; because hereby the prospect of the park will be obtained in the garden, which renders those gardens much more agreeable than those that are confined. In making these fosses there have been many inventions: but, Miller, in his Gardener's Dictionary, reckons none preferable to those which have an upright wall next the garden, which (where the soil will admit of a deep trench) should be five or six feet high; and, from the foot of this wall, the ground on the outside should rise with a gradual easy slope, to the distance of eighteen or twenty feet; and, where it can be allowed, if it slopes much farther it will be easier, and less perceptible as a ditch, to the eye, when viewed at a distance; but if the ground is naturally wet, so as not to admit a

deep fosse, then, in order to make a fence against cattle, if the wall be four feet high, and slight posts of three feet high are placed just behind the wall, with a small chain carried on from post to post, no cattle or deer will ever attempt to jump against it; therefore it will be a secure fence against them; and if these are painted green they will not be discerned at a distance, and at the same time the chain will secure persons walking in the garden from falling over. In places where there are no good prospects to be obtained from a garden, it is common to make the enclosure of park-pailing; which, if well performed, will last many years, and has a much better appearance than a wall: and this pale may be hid from the sight within, by plantations of shrubs and evergreens; or there may be a quick hedge planted within the pale, which may be trained up, so as to be an excellent fence by he time the pales begin to decay. Fences round parks are generally of paling; which if well made of winter fallen oak, will last many years. But a principal thing to be observed is, not to make them too heavy, else their own weight will make them decay; therefore the pales should be cleft thin; and the rails should be cut triangular, to prevent the wet lodging upon them; and the posts should be good, and not placed too far asunder. One of these pales will thus last upwards of forty years. The common way of making these fences is, to have every other pale nine or ten inches above the intermediate ones; so that the fence may be six feet and a half high, which is enough for fallow deer; but, where there are red deer, the fence should be one foot higher, otherwise they will leap over. Some enclose their parks with brick walls; and, in countries where stone is cheap, the walls are built with this material; some with, and others without, mortar. A kitchen garden if rightly contrived, will contain walling enough to afford a supply of such fruits as require the assistance of walls, for any family: and being situated on one side, and quite out of sight of the house, may be surrounded with walls which will screen the kitchen garden from the sight of persons in the pleasure garden; and, being locked up, the fruit will be much better preserved than it can be in the public garden. Too great a quantity of walling is often the occasion that so many ill-managed trees are to be seen in large gardens. The height of garden walls should be twelve feet, which is a moderate proportion; and, if the soil be good, it may in time be well furnished with bearing wood in every part, especially that part planted with pears, notwithstanding the branches being trained horizontally from the bottom of the walls. See HORTICULTURE.

Dr. Anderson, in his Essays on Agriculture, &c., observes, that, The fences that are most universally employed, are either stone dikes or hedges. Dikes, if well built, as effectually preserve a field from the intrusion of domestic animals, as any other kind of fence whatever; but they afford little warmth or shelter to the fields: whereas hedges, if good, answer both these purposes equally well. But the most material distinction between dikes and bedges is, that dikes are in the highest degree of perfection as soon as

they are reared, and from that moment begin to tend towards decay; so that the person who builds this kind of fence immediately receives the full benefit thereof: whereas hedges, being at first weak and tender, stand in need of attention and care, and do not become a fence for several years after they are planted; and, as they continue to increase in strength, and gradually acquire a higher and higher degree of perfection, it is long before they begin to fall towards decay; so that they are, in general, infinitely more durable than dikes, although they are longer in becoming of use to the person who plants them. Which of these two kinds of fences may, upon the whole, be most eligible, must, in general, be determined by the circumstances and views of the possessor of the ground to be enclosed. If he is a tenant who has a short lease, without a prospect of getting it renewed; or, if he has immediate occasion for a complete fence; it will be, in general, most prudent in him to make choice of dikes, if the materials for rearing these are at hand; but, if there is any probability that his posterity may reap any advantage from these enclosures, it will be almost always more for his advantage to make choice of hedges. A dike built of freestone and lime will be almost as durable as a hedge; although, in general, it will neither be so cheap nor agreeable. But dry stone dikes, unless built of the finest quarried stone, are of such a perishable nature, as to be hardly ever worth the expense of rearing; and never, excepting where the field that you would wish to enclose has plenty of stones upon its surface, which you are under a necessity of carrying away before the field can be improved. In this situation a man may, in some measure, be excused, if he should be tempted to put them into dikes; because the carriage of these stones may be said to cost him nothing and he may, perhaps, be at some loss how to dispose of them in any other manner. But, in all other circumstances, it is very bad economy to rear fences of this kind, as feal (sod) dikes can always be built at one fourth of the expense that these would cost, and will answer all purposes equally well, and, if carefully built, will be kept in repair for any number of years at as small an expense as they could be. The want of durability generally complained of in these dikes is owing to their bad construction. The greatest part of them are made of a considerable thickness, with a ditch on each side; the heart of the dike being made up with the earth that is taken from these ditches; and only a thin wall, on each side, is built of solid feal from top to bottom; the consequence of which is, that as the loose earth that is thrown into the middle of the dike subsides much more than the seal on each side, the top of the dike sinks down; and, of course, the two side walls are pressed too much upon the inside, so as to bilge (or swell) out about the middle, and quickly crumble down to dust. To avoid this inconvenience, I have always chosen to build my dikes of this sort thinner than usual: they being only three feet and half thick at the bottom; one foot, or a very little more, at top; and five feet high: taking care to have them built in such a manner, as that every sod (or feal), from top to bottom binds the join

ings of the others below it, with as much accuracy as the bricks in a well built wall. The uppermost course of feal is cut a little longer than those that are immediately below it, and placed with the grassy side uppermost, so as to project a little on each side; which not only helps to throw the water a little off the dike, but also to prevent sheep or cattle from attempting to jump over it so readily as they otherwise might do. At the foot of the dike, on each side, is dug a small ditch, about one foot and a half or two feet deep; leaving a ledget of a few inches broad on each side, that the dike may not be undermined by the crumbling down of the loose earth into the ditch. These ditches not only help to give the dike an additional height, and keep its foundation dry; but are also of use to prevent cattle from coming close to it and rubbing upon it, or tearing it down with their horns, which they are very apt to do if this precaution be omitted. The earth that is taken out of the ditches may be thrown outwards, into the place that was occupied by the feal that has been taken to build the dike; and, if the field is in grass, a few seeds may he sowed upon it, and it will soon be covered as well as the rest of the field. By having the joints bound in every direction, the fabric is rendered much firmer than it could be by any irregular manner of working, while it is at the same time more easily reared. If the ground is soft, and the feal rise well, I get a fence of this kind done for one halfpenny per yard; but, if it is not good to work, a little more must be allowed. As to the time that a fence of this kind may stand without needing any repair, the oldest has now stood ten years, and seems to be nearly as firm as when first built. I have seen some walls of poor cottages which have been built somewhat after this manuer, that have been good after standing forty or fifty years: but their durability depends greatly upon the nature of the feal of which they are formed. The best is that which is taken from poor ground of a spongy quality, which is generally covered with a strong sward of coarse benty grass. And, in situations where this can be had, I would recommend this as the cheapest and best temporary fence that could be reared. The greatest inconvenience that attends this species of fence is, the danger it runs of being torn down by the horns, or wasted away by the rubbing of cattle upon it; which they will sometimes do notwithstanding the ditches. This may be effectually prevented by planting a row of sweet briar (or eglantine) plants between the first and second course of feal when the dike is built, which will not fail to grow with luxuriance, and in a short time defend the dike from every attack of this kind. But if sheep are to be kept in the enclosures, this plant ought not, on any account, to be employed; for, as that animal naturally flies to the fences for shelter in stormy weather, the prickles of the straggling branches of the briar will catch hold of the wool, and tear it off in great quantities, to the great detriment of the flock and loss of the proprietor. In these cases, if the possessor of the ground is not afraid of the bad consequences that may be dreaded from the spreading of whins (furze), it would be much better to scatter a few of the seeds of this

plant along the ledget at the foot of the dike, which would quickly become a preservative for it, and be otherwise of use as a green food for his sheep during the winter season. But, before he ventures to sow this plant, let him remember, that where it is once established it will hardly fail to spread through the adjoining fields, and can hardly be ever afterwards thoroughly rooted out. I have often imagined, that this kind of fence might be greatly improved both in beauty and strength, by planting a row of ivy plants beneath the first course of feal in building the dike; which would, in a short time, climb up the sides of the dike and cover the whole with a close and beautiful net-work of woody fibres, covered with leaves of the most beautiful verdure; which would tend to preserve the dike from being eaten away by frost, and other vicissitudes of weather. And when it is arrived at the top, it would there send out a number of strong woody branches, forming a sort of hedge, that would afford some shelter to the fields, and break the force of the wind considerably. I have seen a garden wall that had been built of stone and clay, ornamented and strengthened in this way. I have had the experience of ivy growing well upon a dry stone dike; and have likewise seen it growing up the walls, and covering whole cottages built of feal; which have by this means been preserved entire, long after the walls that had been naked have fallen to decay. But, not having had plants of this kind at hand, I have not had an opportunity of trying it in the manner proposed; although, I think, there is the greatest reason to hope for success. Whins have been often employed as a fence when sowed upon the top of a bank. They are attended with the convenience of coming very quickly to perfection, and of growing upon a soil on which few other plants could be made to thrive: but, in the way that they are commonly employed, they are neither a strong nor a lasting fence. See HEDGE. The fences hitherto mentioned are only intended to preserve fields from the intrusion of cattle; but, on some occasions, it is necessary to have a fence that would even resist the efforts of men to break through it: as around bleaching fields, orchards, &c. the want of which often subjects the proprietor of such fields to very disagreeable accidents. To effectuate this, it is necessary to begin by trenching up or ploughing a large belt all around the field you mean to enclose, of forty or fifty feet or more in breadth, if you find it convenient; the outer edge of which should be enclosed by a good dike, or a ditch and hedge. This belt should be kept in culture one year, and well manured, if your situation will admit of it; and laid up before winter in such a manner that no water may be allowed to lodge upon it; and planted in winter all over with plants of eglantine so thick as not to be above two feet from one another; and between these put a good number of young birch plants not above two years old, interspersed with hazels, oak, ash, rawn (wild service), and other trees that will thrive upon your soil: together with thorns, hollies, brambles, and wood-bine (honeysuckle); and having then fenced it from cattle, and kept down the weeds that may rise upon its surface by VOL. IX.

the hoe, as long as you can conveniently get access into it, leave it afterwards to nature. If this is done, and your soil be not extremely bad, the belt in a very few years will be entirely filled with a close bush of trees, so intermixed with the bending branches of the eglantine, and bound together by the trailing shoots of the bramble and wood-bine, that no animal above the size of a cat could penetrate; especially when it is of such a depth as I have recommended.—But as all kinds of trees and shrubs, if planted very close upon one another, become naked at the root when they arrive at any considerable size, care should be taken to prevent it from ever coming to that state, by cutting it down whenever it becomes in danger of being open at the root. And as it would be improper ever to leave the field entirely defenceless, it is a great advantage to have the belt as broad as it conveniently may be, so that the one-half of it may be a sufficient fence; by which means, we shall have it in our power to cut down the inside and the outside of the best alternately, so as still to keep the thicket young, and never to want at any time a sufficient fence; and the brush wood that this afforded at each cutting would, in almost every situation, yield such a revenue as would do much more than indemnify the proprietor for the rent of the ground that was occupied by this fence. And, if the field was in such a situation as required shelter, some trees might be allowed to grow to their full size about the middle without any inconvenience, if the belt were of a sufficient breadth.'

'There is one other species of fencing (continues Dr. Anderson), as useful as any of those already mentioned, which is in general much less understood, and more difficult to execute properly, viz. the method of securing the banks of rivers from being washed away by the violence of the stream, and of preventing the damages that may otherwise be occasioned by the swelling of the waters. It frequently happens that, when a river runs in a bed of rich vegetable mould, the least accident that may chance to divert the stream towards any particular part of the bank, causes it to sweep away large tracts of fine ground, to the very great detriment of the proprietor, as well as the public; as this fine mould is usually carried to the sea, and the place that the water leaves, to occupy the new bed that it thus forms for itself, is generally of a much worse quality, consisting chiefly of stones, sand, and gravel. In some cases, where the whole force of the current is quite close to the bank, and the materials necessary for fencing it are not to be found, it may perhaps be impossible or very difficult totally to prevent this evil; but for the most part it admits of a cure that can be obtained at a pretty moderate expense. These ravages are always greatest where the bank rises perpendicularly to a pretty considerable height above the ordinary surface of the water, and never at those places where the banks shelve down gradually towards the water's edge; for when the river is swelled to a great height by rains, and runs with a force and rapidity greater than usual, it strikes violently against these perpendicular banks that directly oppose its course, which, being composed of earth quite bare and uncovered, are easily soft

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ened by the water, and quickly washed away; so that the upper part of the bank, being thus undermined, falls by its own weight into the river, and is carried off in prodigious quantities: whereas at those parts of the bank that shelve gradually downwards to the water's edge, when the river rises to any considerable height, it gently glides along its surface; which, being defended by the matted roots of the grass with which it is covered, scarcely sustains any damage at all; and is nearly the same after the water has retired within its banks as before the inundation. These facts, which no one who has bestowed the least attention to this subject can fail to have observed, clearly point out, that the first and most necessary step towards a cure, is to level down the edge of the bank that is next to the water, so as to make it slope gradually down towards the river. If the bank is very high, and you have no other particular use for the earth that must be taken from it, the easiest method of disposing of it, will be to throw it into the river; but, in whatever manner you may dispose of the earth, the slope of the bank must be continued until the inner edge of it is as low as the surface of the water at the driest time of the year, and be made to ascend gradually upwards from the water with an easy slope, till it comes to the level of the ground, or at least rises to such a height as the water never exceeds. This operation ought to be performed as early in summer as possible, and should be either immediately covered with turf, pared from the surface of some field that has a very strong sward upon it, taking care to lay these in such a manner as to be in as little danger as possible of being washed away by any accidental flood that might happen before they had grown together; or, if turf of this kind cannot be easily had, it should be sowed very thick with the seeds of some small matt-rooted grass (such as the poa repens, or creeping meadow grass), 'that should be kept in readiness for this purpose. If the stream has not been extremely rapid at the foot of the bank, some of the earth that was thrown into the water will be allowed to subside to the bottom, and will there form a bank of loose soft earth, which will be of great use afterwards in preventing the face of the bank under water from being washed away; but, in order to secure this bulwark effectually for the future, the surface of this soft earth ought to be instantly stuck full of the roots of bog reeds, flags, water spider-wort, rushes, and other matt-rooted aquatic plants; which, if allowed to remain till they have once struck root, will afterwards form a barrier that nothing will ever be able to destroy. But if the stream be too rapid to admit of this, and the bank of soft earth is much deeper than the surface of the water, it will be of use to fill up the breast of the bank with loose stones carelessly thrown in, till they rise near the surface of the water; which would most effectually secure it against any future encroachments, if the bank is sloped away above. If stones cannot be easily got for this purpose, the only resource is to dig the bank so low, that, at the undermost edge, it may be always below the surface of the water; and to carry it out in this way for a considerable distance, and thus stick the whole surface that is

below the water full of matt-rooted aquatic plants; which will in a great measure, if not entirely, defend it from any future encroachments. This bank ought to continue to shelve downwards even where it is below water, and those aquatics that will grow in the greatest depth of water should be planted on the innermost brink, and the others behind them. The water spiderwort will grow in four feet deep of water, and the roots of the common yellow-flowered water iris form such a strong and compact covering upon the surface of the soil on which it grows, as would defend it from being affected by the water almost as well as a rock. It is likewise an advantage attending this plant, that it grows upon a firm bottom, and chiefly delights in running water. If the stratum of soft earth is not so deep as to reach to the surface of the water, and lies upon a stratum of rock or hard gravel, there will be no occasion for throwing in stones of any kind. But, as it is difficult to unite the vegetable mould to any of these strata, there will always be some danger of its separating from these in violent inundations; and, if the water once get an entry, it will not fail to grow larger and larger by every future inundation. To prevent this inconvenience, it will be necessary, after you have sloped the earth away till you reach the gravel or rock, to cover the place where the edge of the earth joins the inferior stratum with a good many small stones, if they can be found; sowing between them the seeds of any kind of plants that you think are most likely to thrive, which have strong matted roots with as small and flexible tops as possible. From the impossibility of ever making earth adhere firmly to stone of any kind, it must always be an improper practice to face the banks of rivers to a certain height with stones which is coped at top with earth.'

Mr. Arthur Young, in his Annals of Agriculture, vol. XIII. has supplied us with the following method of fencing, from the pen of W. Erskine, Esq. The importance of good fences is universally acknowledged by every lover of husbandry, although there are various opinions about the kinds of them, every one being naturally prejudiced in favor of those he has been most accustomed to see, or by the opinion of others whose judgment he relies on. An intelligent correspondent, in the second volume of the Bath Papers on Agriculture, is so warm an advocate for quickset hedges, as to make him totally condemn the dead walls which are to be seen on the road between Bath and Cirencester, and in many other parts of England. I hope he will not take it amiss, if I cannot absolutely assent to his assertion, that quickset hedges are more useful and profitable.' That they are more ornamental cannot be denied, and they are generally allowed to afford more shelter; but the length of time, the constant attention, and continual expense of defending them until they bear even a resemblance of a fence, induces many people, in those places where the materials are easily procured, to prefer the dry stone walls; for though the first cost is considerable, yet as the farmer reaps the immediate benefit of the fence (which is undoubtedly the most secure one), they are thought on the whole to be the least expensive;

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