The Temple of Concord and Victory. 2. The Gothic Temple 3. The Temple of British Worthies, 4 The Temple of Venus. 5. The Temple of Friendship. 6. The Temple of Ancient Virtue. 7. The Rotundo. 8. The Temple of Bacchus. 9 One of the Paviilions at the Entrance. 10. The Boycott Pavillion. N. B.-The Scales are of Feet. IJescrtptton OF THE GARDENS. WHERE Order in Variety we see, And where, tho' all Things differ, all agree,-Nature shall join you, Time shall make it grow, A Work to wonder at,-perhaps a Stowe. Pope. IN the road from London to Stowe are the Towns of Uxbridge, Chalfont, Amersham, Great Missenden, Wendover, Aylesbury, Winslow, and Buckingham, which last is distant from London 57, from Oxford 25 miles-The principal Inn at Aylesbury is the George, and at Buckingham the Cobham Arms.-A straight road, of two miles in length, leads through an avenue of trees from Buckingham, through two Lodges, to A LARGE CORINTHIAN ARCH, OR GATEWAY , 60 feet high, and 60 feet wide, from whence appears the garden front of the House, proudly standing on the summit B 2 of a verdant slope, and encompassed by the Garden and Park.-The road turns to the right to the New Inn, where Travellers are accommodated who come to see the place, and to the entrance into the Gardens by which Strangers are admitted.-The road to the House leads through the Arch, (in which are dwelling rooms for the keeper,) into the Park, and is beautifully diversified with hill, valley, lawn, river, and a perpetual change of scene, arising from the numerous buildings intermixed with wood, and " bosomed high in tufted trees," which strike the eye with a most picturesque and ever-varying magnificence. At the south entrance of the Gardens are TWO PAVILLIONS, supported by Doric Pillars, originally designed by Kent, and altered by Signor Borra, Architect to the late King of Sardinia. The view is very striking at first entrance, of the House, crowning the brow of the opposite hill, and rising from the woods which bound the two extremities of it ; of the Gothic building placed on the summit of another hill on the right hand, sloping to two rivers, which meeting in one stream surround an Island, and form a bay or small lake in front of the House.