198 PREFACE TO THE SECOND PART. 



Part with a fulfilment of that promise, parti 

 cularly with regard to the procuring of manure 

 by the burning of earth into ashes. 



161. I then proceed with the other matters 

 named in the title ; and the Third Part I shall 

 make to consist of art account of the Western 



' Countries, furnished in the Notes of Mr. HULME, 

 together with a view of the advantages and 

 disadvantages of preferring, as a place to farm 

 in, those Countries to the Countries bordering 

 on the Atlantic; in which view I shall include 

 such remarks as appear to me likely to be 

 useful to those English Farmers, who can no 

 longer bear the lash of Borough mo ngering op 

 pression and insolence. 



162. Multifariousness is a great fault in a 

 written work of any kind. I feel the consci 

 ousness 6{ this fault upon this occasion. The 

 facts and opinions relative to Swedish Turnips 

 and Cabbages will be very apt to be enfeebled 

 in their effect by those relating to manners, 

 laws and religion. Matters so heterogeneous, 

 the one class treated of in the detail and the 

 other in the great, ought not to be squeezed to 

 gether between the boards of the same small 

 volume. But, the fault is committed and it is 

 too late to repine. There are, however, two 

 subjects which I will treat of distinctly hereaf 

 ter. The first is that of Fencing, a subject 



