[ Ho ] 

 Of wheat they fow two bufliels, about 

 Michaelmas, and reap from twelve to fifteen. 

 For barley they plow twice, fow not quite 

 three bufliels, about the end of April or the 

 beginning of May, and reckon the average 

 produce at twenty. They plow but once 

 for oats, faw four bufliels about the time of 

 barley lowing; the crop twenty-four. They 

 cultivate fome beans, plow once, fow two 

 bufliels in March or April, never hoe, but 

 gain on an average twenty-three bufliels. 

 They plow once for peafe, fow a bufhel and 



Here you fee flips of land running into the lake, 

 and covered with trees which feem to rife from 

 the water : There, a boldly indented fhore, 

 (welling into bays, and fldrted with fpreading 

 trees •, edgings as elegant as ever fancied by Claud 

 hhnfelf. The village is caught among fome 

 fcattered trees, in a fweet fituation, on the bank 

 of a bay, formed by a promontory of wood, the 

 back ground a fweep of inclofures, rifing one 

 above another. 



j illowing this line of fhoar towards the north, 

 you command Bannerig and Oarejl Head, two hills 

 all cut into inclofures to the very top ; to the 

 north you look upon a noble range of irregu- 

 lar" mountains, which contrail finely with the 

 other more beautiful ihores. The weftern is a 

 fweep of craggy rocks, here and there fringed 

 \ ith wood. Advancing to the very farther! point 

 of land, tVxC objects are varied, and new ones 

 .ir that are truly beautiful. The Lancafhire 

 , point and the woody ifland join, and ieem 

 •ne prodigious promontory of wood -, the ferry 



ho ufe 



