109 ) ■ 



DISTRICT THE FOURTEENTH. 



Temperate mixed foil, upon a gravelly loam, a yellow 

 woodland clay, a brick, and a tile earth, and a 

 chalky clay. 



IJEGINNING at HARLOW, where the land ccnfifk 

 of an intermixture of foils, from a wet heavy tough clay upon 

 a tile earth, to a light tender thin foil upon a gravely between 

 thefe extremes, there are various fhades of temperament 

 and fertility, the mofl: eflecmed of which is that of a deep 

 hazel coloured loam, upon a brown tender clay intermixed 

 with gravel. The tile earth in this neighbourhood is occa- 

 fionally ufed in the manufacluring of coarfe earthen pots. 



Southerly through LATTON, NETTSWELL, LIT- 

 TLE and GREAT PARNDON, ROYDON, NASING 

 and to EPPING, a fimilar charadler of foil, in which there 

 is a large proportion of excellent pafture ground. 



A very choice breed of cows has lately been brought from 

 Devonlhire into this neighbourhood by Mr. Conyers ; they 

 feem to poflefs almofl every requifite to form the mofl perfect 

 of the cow kind. Their excellencies are almofl: univcrfal, 

 being extremely hardy, and requiring but little food, at the 

 fame time are well adapted to the draft, the dairy, to gra- 

 zing and to fuckling ; and fo far as the trial has yet beea 

 made of them, they promife to anfwer moft particularly 



well. 



The 



