HIGH FARMING. 



" IF good farming will not pay, certainly bad will not," said 

 Lord Stanley (Derby), or at least so his Lordship is reported 

 to have said, at an agricultural meeting at Bury. The 

 phrase was sufficiently expressive, but appears to us not to 

 have been logically accurate ; because, in our estimation, 

 paying is the criterion of goodness in farming. If no sort 

 of farming will pay, there is no good farming. " Cadit 

 questio" Then hurrah ! for the wilderness. Let us with- 



* 1. " The Improvement of Farming. What ought Landlords and 

 Farmers to do ? " By Ph. Pusey, M.P. for Berkshire. London, 1851. 



2. " The Present Prices." By Eev. H. Huxtable, A.M., Rector of Sutton 

 Waldron, Dorset. Seventh Edition. Blandford and London, 1850. 



3. " High Farming, under liberal Covenants, the best Substitute for 

 Protection." By James Caird, Farmer, Baldoon. Seventh Edition. 

 Edinburgh and London, 1850. 



4. " Report of a Visit to the Farms of Mr. Rigden, Sussex, Rev. Mr. 

 Huxtable, Dorset, and Mr. Morton, Gloucestershire." By David Milne, 

 Esq., of Milnegraden. Berwick-on-Tweed, Edinburgh, and London, 

 1850. 



5. " Copy of a Paper on the Subject of British Agriculture read before 

 the Society of Arts, November 27th, 1850." By Mr. J. J. Mechi. London, 

 1850. 



6. " Free Farming to meet Free Trade." By Hugh Smith, Surveyor. 

 London, 1850. 



7. " Mr. Huxtable and his Pigs." By Porcius. Edinburgh and London 

 1850. 



8. "A Letter on Agricultural Education." By Charles Lawrence 

 Esq. London, 1850. 



9. "On the Construction of Farm Buildings in Ireland." Dublin, 

 Liverpool, and London, 1850. 



