R R A T A. 



N. 8. SUCH ernta only ai aitefl the fenfe in the following pages, ar* 

 here noticed. The occurrence cf the chief of thcfs errata being explain- 

 ed in the preface, the printer will be fcuni'i to have to anfvver for little ref- 

 pef^ing thcT. The reader who detef^s the exiftence of others ftiU 

 paff^d over in theyf;//^i will refiifyand allow for them, as he proceeds. 



Page r^". line 23 of the note, for raw, read, grain, n. b. This cor- 

 reftion mut^ he made throughout the work ; corn^ in the countries colo- 

 cize^ from Great Britain, meaning in general Indian corn or maize, 



p. 25. 1. 20, read, unwinnowed 



for the end of the I. 22 and for the hft line, read, three 



malters:|: and twelve bufnels of unwinnowed grain, with full thirty bortcs 

 (or bundles.) n. b. Botte is a French word for a bundle (of hay or ftraw.) 



— St the end of the firft note F, add, n, b. Kliyogg at lafl: be- 

 came a ftrorg advocate for clover. E. 



p. 27. I. 8. ffons the bottonn, after feafonf read, facilitates his work by 

 permitting 



p. 28. laft line, for hi him. to thist read, confirmed his 



p. 30. expunge from 1. 23 to 1. 28 ; and in !. 22, after *whfat ; read, 

 and confequently the comparative value of an acre of potatoes, to an acre 

 of wheat, is, as ten to fix : a \ziy cfTential difference 1 The comparifjn is 

 no iefs unfavorable to fpelt ; fince an acre produces but four maLers of 

 fpelt, which are net more in value than fix rauids cf wheat.—-. We may 

 likewife add, that \ht root of the potatoe remains 



p. 64. 1. 5. read, impatience, 



p. 71, for the third fentence in the fecond paragraph, beginning thus, 

 His animated ejesf &c, fubftitute what will be found in the fentence tow- 

 ards (the bottom 'of p. 172, beginning with the words, His eyes ; print- 

 ing the paffage in Roman letters. 



p. 89. laft line of the note, after except^ infert, in the fecond fe6\icn of 

 the third p^rf, and 



p. no. for the lad fentence in the note fubflftute what follows. By 



this adl cf Kliycgg, the purpofes alfo of the Sunday, as a day of reft^ arc 

 violated ; in which view the Sunday is valuable in the eyes of the mere 

 philanthrapift. Sure!/ then the preparation for the Monday's work 

 might either have taken place on the Saturday night or on the Monday 

 morning, without giving the example of premedirated bhor on the Sun- 

 day ; the weight of which labor ra^y not fall upon raan, but upon cat- 

 tle. E. 



p. 123. in the note after j^Z/ooy and before the femicolon, infert, refift- 

 ing the adionof fire and of the chetrical acids, and coaiiiionly more of 

 Iefs tranfparent 



p. 129. 



