NEW HUSBANDRY EXEMPLIFIED. 145 



\vhich, if applied to other crops that now 

 have not enough, will be a great additional 

 profit to the farmer, and this he will obtain 

 by cultivating his wheat and other corn ac- 

 cording to the New Huibandry. 



The foregoing inftances of the culture of 

 wheat, and fome others, in this Huibandry, 

 it is prefumed, will be acceptable to all who are 

 deiirous to pradtife it : but as there are others 

 mentioned only in general above, and that 

 have been very lately publifhed, which may 

 be acceptable to the reader, I mall give an 

 account of .fome of them here, as a confirma- 

 tion of the others ; to mew that this Huf- 

 bandry gains ground, notwithftanding the un- 

 merited oppoiition made to it by fuperficial 

 reafoners and unikilful cultivators ; thofe, in 

 particular, who draw general conclufions 

 from fuch fmall trials as cannot be depended 

 upon in general practice, nor be juftly made a 

 flandard in any Huibandry, efpecially by thofe 

 who are evidently defective in the principles 

 of cultivation : for this reafon, the above ex- 

 periments were given, not detached experi- 

 ments, but the continued practice of the New 

 Huibandry at large, and in a variety of foils ; 

 which carry an evidence with them, not to be 

 denied, or fet afide, by the partial deductions 

 that are drawn from fmall or (ingle experi- 

 ments, made by biaffed relators, and who 

 omit circumitances that ought to be particu- 

 larly related. 



L I mentioned 



