TATTON PARK. It has often been asserted by authors on gardening, that all pieces of fresh water must come under one of these descriptions,-a lake, a pool, a river, or a rivulet: but since my acquaintance with Cheshire, I am inclined to add the meer, as an intermediate term between the lake and the pool; it being, frequently, too large to be deemed a pool, and too small, as well as too round in its form, to deserve the name of a lake: for the beauty of a lake consists not so much in its size, as in those deep bays and bold promontories which prevent the eye from ranging over its whole surface. What is best respecting the two large meers in Tatton Park, is a question of some difficulty, and on which there has been a variety of opinions. I shall now proceed to deliver mine, and endeavour to explain the reasons on which it is founded.