144 



NEW E iN G L A N D FARMER 



KOV. 11, 1833 



assssisasAWW. 



HOW OUT YOUR ROW. 



THE FARMBk's song. 



You've ahard row to hoe, noble kniglit of llie sod. 

 But to toil in the earth is the mandate of God; 

 And if by the sweat of your brow you must win 

 Your bread, it is time, it is time to begin ; 



Then go to, go, 

 If your bread by the sweat of your brow you must win, 



Hoe out your row. 



lu the rough row before you though rugged llie soil 

 'Twill repay in due season the culturer's toil; 

 Though wild grass and weeds so piofusely abound. 

 Pel-severance and patience will mellow the ground; 



Apply the hoe, 

 Perseverance and patience will mellow the ground; 



Hoe out your row. 



Though the young tender plant is now feeble and palg 

 Let not faith in the promise of harvest time fail; 

 Nor deem you are tired as a motive to stop, 

 If you would be sure of a plentiful crop; 



Your progress though slow, 

 If you would be sure of a plentiful crop, 



Hoe out your row. 



Let it never be said that you flagged on the way. 

 Or that idly you turned from your labor to play ; 

 Nor heed wind nor weather, nor yet burning sun. 

 But go ahead manfully till you have done; 



Quick wield the hoe, 

 And go ahead manfully till you have done — 



Hoe out your row. 



Soon shall the tender plant broadly expand. 

 And loftily rise 'neath a cherishing hand ; 

 Already niethinks, greener, fairer it looks — 

 Then carefully nurse its young delicate shoots, 



Aud bid it grow, 

 Then carefully nurse its young delicate shoots, — 



Hoe out your row. 



I admit that your row is peculiarly hard. 



But bountiful Heaven insures your reward; 



I ov/n it is long — but believe me, my friend, 



If you hold on your way, you will come to the end ; 



With certainty know. 

 If you hold on your way you will come to the end; 



Hoe out your row. 



When done, you may rest; when with pride and joy, 

 Yon behold the result of your useful employ, 

 And reflect that e'en toil hath a blessing and charm ; 

 It nerves the free spirit, adds strength to the arm; 



Then speed the hoe, — 

 With invincible spirit and vigorous arms. 



Hoe out your row. 



Adtumn evenings. — These, are the true sea- 

 sons for improvement. Tiie weariness and dust 

 and lieat of summer are over. The air is cool ; 

 and Nature puts on her robes of jiensiveness and 

 contemplation, so that mankind have little to di- 

 vert them from the noble duty of storing the mind 

 virith wisdom during the calm and glorious even- 

 ings of Autumn. Sit down, ye young joiirneyers 

 to eternity ; spread before you the bright pages 

 of literature and morality, aud never let pleasure 

 rob your evenings of their innocence, and cloud 

 your mornings witli langor and rc|ientance. 



The miseries or debt. — A most graphic de- 

 scription of the despotism of creditors, is given 

 below, from Frazier's London Magazine; it is 

 et>tit!ed ' A Father's Confession.' 



" Believe me, my son, that of all kinds of ty- 

 ranny by which the spirit of man is bowed down 

 and crushed, and all his energies, moral and phy- | 

 sicnl, paralyzed and withered, there is noi.e so 

 active in its oppression, and so bitter in its tor- 

 ture, as that which a creditor exercises over his 

 del)tor. It is a tyranny which can even quell the 

 springing elasticity of youth's sanguine ambition. 

 Observe, too, that its existence does not mej-ely 

 depend unoii the disposition or acts of the master. 

 The latter may be the mildest and most long 

 suffering man upon earth ; and so far from en- 

 deavoring roughly to enforce his claims, may even 

 refrain from asserting them. Still by the very 

 nature of the relation which subsists between the 

 parties, is the debtor reduced to the condition of 

 his bondman or serf; the real intensity of tlie 

 tyranny consists in this — that the creditor has 

 ever in his servic j an officious and indefatigable 

 a^ent, who acts, not only without his orders, but 

 often in spite of his expressed wishes ; and that 

 agent is, the memory of the indebted jiarty. The 

 master may be willing to give time to his slave — 

 he tnay even desire him not to be disquieted by 

 the apprehensions of ids violence ; but can the 

 latter forget tha existence of an obligation that 

 may be forced upon his memory by the slightest 

 circumstance of the passing moment? Can he 

 forget, too, that however humane his present lord 

 may be, his rights and claims may, after his death, 

 pass to another of an imperious and violent tem- 

 per. Such are some of the considerations which 

 make the existence of a debt, without any other 

 aggravating circumstances, in itself tyranny of the 

 most loathsome description. The parish pauper, 

 despicable as his lot may appear, enjoys a higher 

 degree of liberty and indei>endence, than the man 

 who has put it into the power of another to come 

 np and say, ' pay me what thou ower^t.'. Think 

 not that my description is overcharged. The fool 

 and the profligate would laugh at the picture 

 which I have displayed to you — the one owing 

 to his mental infirmity, not being able to under- 

 stand true liberty — the other, from the baseness 

 of his nature, being dead to the degradation of 

 servitude. But the man of an ingenious and sen- 

 sitive disposition, will readily allow that there are 

 fetters for the mind as well as the body; and that 

 in order to be appraised of a subjection to bond- 

 age, it is not necessary that one should hear the 

 clank of the iron chain. 



Another circumstance which tends to make the 

 debtor's constraint still more intolerable, is, that 

 in most cases the infliction of it iseither occasioned 

 or expedited by his own weakness or folly. A 

 weak submission to the imperious yet trifling 

 mandates of fashion, a vain competition in the 

 race of extravagance with tnore wealthy com- 

 peers, and a shameful compliance with the sug- 

 gestions of unhealthy and artificial appetites: 

 these are some of the principal causes which, 

 sometimes separately, but more frequently in close 

 league together, entangle the young man in the 

 toils of debt." 



For sale a F, 

 from Itoslon and 10 from Lowi 

 ding about 15 acres covered w 

 which lias been preserved will) 

 the garileu contains about 3 at 

 tion and 



FARM FOB, SAIiE. 



11 Kedford, Couniy of Middlesex, 17 i 



tatning 104 acres inrlu 



valuable growth of woO' 



It care for ihelasi 20 years 



under the highest cultiva 



great variety of fli 



hich have been collecied at much laltor and expens' 

 at ached lo the garden is a Green House filled with ihiit 

 hearing Giape Vines, aud rhnice and valuable plants whic 

 will I.e sdl.l or iioi MS the piirrliBscr may choose. The F^ri 

 isunder gomi cultivation and l(»gelher with the Garden 

 slocked wiih the choicest Fruits, such as Apples, Pear: 

 Peaches, Quinces, t'lums, Strawberries of various kind 

 Raspberries, Gooseberries &c &c., which ihe present ow in 

 has spared no expense in i»htainiiig. The Farm is bouni-le 

 on the west by Concord Kivi-r. which is well supplied wii 

 fish, and th. country around abounds with game, ii aking it 

 desirable retreat to the gentleman who is fond of fishing i 

 sh- oting. 



Possession will be given on the Isl April next — for term 

 which will be liberal, apply to the subscribe in Boston or 

 the Farm. JAMt-S VILA. 



Oct. 1, 1335, 2m 



MULBERRY TREES ANU SEEDS. 



100,000 Chinese Mulberry, or Morus Multicaulis, of variou 

 sizes, at reduced prices. 



150,000 While Italian Mulberry, at very low rates by th 

 1000 or larger quantities. 

 'iOO lbs White Italian Mulberry seeds. 



Alsolhe following suprrior large sized trees which now fori 

 a Mulberry orchard, but must be removed. 

 2000 Chinese Mulberry, 3 years old, 1^ to 8 feel high, 

 do do 2 do 5J lo G feel high, 



do do 3 do and budded on Ih 



White Mulberry, which have proved to be much more hard 

 than those from cuttings. 



These 6000 trees are the greatest acquisition that any sil 

 cullurist can possibly obtain, and there is not another equall 

 valuable collection for sale in the Union, as those who hav 

 such will not part with them. 



50,000 cultings of the Chinese Mulberry at a reasonabl 

 rale by 1000, &.c. 



The New Catalogues of Garden and Flower Seeds ai 

 just published, comprising the largest assortment ever oflere 

 tor sale, and including all the choice new varieties. Vendei 

 will he supplied in any quantities at very low rates and a liben 

 credit 



The subscribers will enter into contracts to supply an 

 number of Chinese or White Italian Mulberries on very rcasoi 

 able terms. 



Fruit and Ornamental Trees of all kinds, Bulbou* Root 

 Green House Plants and every other article promptly su[ 

 plied and at verv moderate prices 



N. U, Pear Trees of large size,— Catalogues will be sei 

 to every applicant. 



Flushing, L, I. Oct. 7. WM. PRINCE & SO.^S. 



FOR SAI/E AT THOMAS MASON'S GARDEN, 

 EDEN STREET, CHARLESTOWN. 



Raspberries, &c„ While Antwerp, Red Antwerp, Re 

 garnet — Also a few doz. Mason's new seedling Grape, Rasj 

 berries of a superior qualiiv lor size and flavor. 



Also— Red and White Dutch Currants, a very large fru 

 by Ihe doz. or hundred,— also Grape Vines of all kinds. 



Also— Trained Peach Trees, do. Nectarines and Apricot: 

 trained for walls and fences, from one lo three year old. 



Also English Gooseberrv Rushes.— All orders left \ 



GEO C. BARRETT, will' be duly altended lo. 



Pythagoras, exacted of all his disciples, as an 

 initiatory exercise, a silence of five years. 



Preserve your conscience always soft and sen- 

 sible. If hut one sin force its way to that tender 

 part of tne soul, and dwell easy there, the road is 

 paved for a thousand iniquities. 



THE NEAV ENGLAND PARMER 



Is published every Wednesday Evening, at $3 per annuli 

 pavahle al the end of the year — but those who pay wi ' ' 



xtv dryys from the time of subscribing, are entitled to a 

 duclion of fifty cents, 



\m= No paper will be sent to a distance without paymei 

 being made in advance, 



AGENTS. 



New York—G C. Thoreurn, llJnhn-streel. 

 Albany— Wm. Thorburn, 347 Market-street, 

 PhitaMphia—'O. »S- C. Landbkth, 85 Chesnut-street. 

 Buttimore — Publisher of American Farmer. 

 Cincimiali—S. C. Pabkhcrst, 23 Lower Market-street, 

 Flushimr, N K— Wm, Prince iV Sons, Prop. Lin. Bot.Gai 

 West Dmilford.—HM.F. &. Co, Booksellers. 

 Middlehunj, Vt. — Wight Chapman, Slerchant. 

 Hartford — Goodwin Sf Co, Booksellers. 

 Newburyport — Erenf.zer Stf.dman', Bookseller. 

 Portsmouth, N. //.— .Iohn W, Foster, Bookseller. 

 Woodstock, Vt—}.X. Pratt. 

 Baniror, Me.—W'M. Mann, Druggist. 

 Hulifax, N. S.—P. J. Holland, Esq. Editor of Recordef. 

 ,S(. Loms— Geo. Holton 



PRINTED BY TUTTLE AND WEEKS, 



No. 8, Sclicol Street. 



ORDERS FOR ?RINTIl(a RECEIVED EY THE PHBtlSHBll 



