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fhallower ploughing, to which particular 

 crops may be fuited. And there is no 

 neceflity for bringing the rough, or foul, 

 part up again, till it be entirely rotten. 

 Sometimes two crops may firft be taken. 

 This method is prad:ifed much among 

 the gardeners and farmers, in the neigh- 

 bourhood of London ; and might be 

 every-where adopted, except where the 

 land is flony, or remarkably {hallow. 

 Nor is this plough at all difficult to 

 manage, or much harder to draw than, 

 one of an ordinary conilrudion. The 

 inventor, whoever he Vv-as, may juflly 

 pride himfelf upon his difcovcry. 



Deep ploughing has been greatly re- 

 commended, by fome modern writers. 

 Upon particular land, where the bottom 

 and top are of two oppolite qualities, and 

 neither of them right good, a mixture is 

 fometimes very beneficial ; and here this 



experiment. 



