much ; and the grafs will not be fo good as 

 it was when broke up, perhaps for twenty 

 years, when not dunged before being laid 

 down with grafs feeds. Whereas, by follow- 

 ing the method now propofed, of not taking 

 two white crops running, without a fallow 

 or green crop intervening^ and dunging to 

 the green crop, the fame field that was broke 

 up from old grafs is laid down as rich, if not 

 richer than it was at firft ; fo that, in a few 

 years the pafture will be as good as ever, if 

 not better, and the hay crops extraordinary 

 good. 



Thus this very field, befides the large fums 

 of money got for the different crops, will 

 maintain double the number of cattle it did 

 before. And if you take into this account 

 the profits arifing from the dung the ftraw 

 nakes, which improves other fields, it may 

 be averred as a fa6t, that it maintains more 

 than ten times the number of cattle it did 

 before, and the field not exhaufted. The 

 following extradl from Marshal's Rural Eco- 

 nomy, p. 132, will fliew this. 



" Minute 73. February 10. Itfeemsto be 

 " a received idea among the Norfolk far- 



" mers 



