?o MANAGEMENT OF ESTATES. ;i.^ 



V. No department of the' management of ai^ 

 ellatc gives more uneafinefs to both landlord 

 and tenant than do i^emoyals, or exchanges of 

 tenants; and every covenant vvhi^h facilitates 

 this u.nplealdnt bufinefs is valuable. The fhift- 

 ing of tenants is no where condudled with 

 greater eafe than in Norfolk ; where, it is pro- 

 bable, leafes have been long in ufe ; and where 

 removals from farm to farm are become fa- 

 miliar. 



VJ. The time of receiving rents, in Nor- 

 folk, is, pretty generally, Chriftmas and Mid- 

 iummer ; landlords giving their tenants three 

 months credit. Chriftmas, however, is of all 

 others the woifl time of the year for this pur- 

 pofe : many ferious evils arife from it (fee 

 MiN. 47, on this fubjecft). The firft of March 

 and the firfl of June appear to be the moft 

 eligible rent-days in Norfolk. 



VII. The following heads of a lease will 

 place the general management of a Norfolk 

 eftate in a clear and comprehenlive point of 

 view. 



They are not, either in form or fubftance, 

 copied, prccifely, from the leafe in ufe upon 

 any p.irticular eftate ; but exhibit, I believe, ^ 



pretty 



