[ ^99 I 



. As I publilhcd a large edition of my book, the 

 firft having gone off very foon, I have lome quan- 

 tity on hand, and I think it will be of great fervicc 

 to dairying to have them difperfcd. I fhail not 

 publilh another editions as I am convinced that 

 dairy- women and farmers are not people to write 

 for. I think twenty or thirty years hence the work 

 will be better known, and more fet by, 



I am, with due efteem, your's, &c. 



JOSIAH TWAMLEY, 

 ff^arwick, July 1 6, 1791, 



Article XXXIII. 

 Remarks en planting Inclojures^ &?r. 

 . In a Letter to a Friend. 



DEAR SIR, 



YOU faid the other day, you Ihould fhortly be 

 concerned in fome inclofure bills. Will you 

 permit me to fay a word or two refpedling the ge- 

 neral mode of inclofing? The modern inclofures 

 that I liave obferved, have univerfally been made 

 with white-thorn, an article pretty and neat, that 

 will thrive in mod foils, and foon make a fence 

 Ycry dcfireable near a dwelling-houfe, being of all 



live 



