judicial. However, this is but a fuppofition,. 

 and it remains in the farmer's breaft to give 

 the whole of his time ; : .whereas it is byjjQ, 

 means at the option of the gentleman to do 

 the fame. ;/ j; ,,; j^ 



. r . .. r . i -., . , Sundry articles. 



Wear and tear I have proportioned to the 

 farm as nearly as I am able ; and houfe- 

 keeping is increafed, that the eftimate may 

 be the nearer to truth. Market ex- 

 pences are added for the firft time ; in like 

 manner, others may hereafter arife ; for it 

 is JTo in real bufinefs : we find expences, in 

 one rank of farmers, unknown^ to others 

 below them. 



It is neceflary upon the .whole of this farm 

 to remark (and the obfervation is applicable 

 to many of the preceding ones) that no good 

 farmer would keep the whole of his farm in 

 tillage, for fear of failure of the clover crop, 

 which, though not common, yet does now 

 and then happen ; he would, for this reafon, 

 have 4 or 5 acres in grafs of his own lay- 

 ing in cafe of fuch an accident, but fo fmall 

 a variation is not of confequence enough to 

 take into this account. And Iknow feve- 

 ral farms that have not one acre, depending 



entirely 



