SECTION VI. 



What are the moft probable means of reducing 

 the price of provifions> fo as to ferve all 

 traders and manufacturers at a much cheaper 

 rate than at prefent, and likeivife to be able 

 to export great quantities annually ? 



FROM the foregoing view of the ftate of 

 Britiih agriculture, it is impoflible to 

 doubt, that the produce of this ifland, what- 

 ever we may eftimate it at prefent, might, in 

 lefs than forty years, be encreafed to more 

 than ten times its prefent value. 



Let any perfon, in the leaft converfant with 

 the prefent ftate of the country, confider how 

 very fmall a part is improved in proportion 

 to what is capable of being fo, and he muft 

 inftantly aflent to the following propofition, 

 which, in the courfe of converfation, I have 

 often aflerted, viz, That the produce of Bri- 

 tain 



