[ H6 ] 



land, ufc three or four in a plough, and do 

 three rood a day. The annual expence of 

 keeping a horfe they reckon 6 /. They 

 break up their ftubbles for a fallow in 

 March ; plough in general about five or 

 fix inches deep ; the common price 8 s. an 

 acre. 



Two millings a day the hire of a cart and 

 horfe. 



One hundred pounds they reckon fuffi- 

 cient for flocking a firm of 50 /. a year. 



fpread with hanging woods -, and the eaftern one 

 cultivated hills, waving to the eye in the nneft 

 inequalities of furface. The diftant hills are alfo 

 feen in a bold itile over the low inclofures of 

 Rawlinfon's Nab, a promontory to the fouth. 



Landing on the point of that promon- 

 tory the view is very noble ; it commands two 

 fheets of water, north and fouth, each of four 

 or five miles in length. That to the fouth is 

 bounded in general by rough woody hills, broken 

 in a few fpots by little inclofures : In front of the 

 promontory, feveral very beautiful ones, cut by ir- 

 regular wood, and hanging to the water's edge in 

 the fineif. manner •, the whole crowned with crag- 

 gy tops of hills. 



But the view to the north is much the mofl 

 beautiful. Berk/bire I (land breaks the fheet of 

 water in one place, and adds to the variety of the 

 fcene without injuring its noble fimplicity. Com- 

 mon Nab, a promontory from the eaft fhore, 

 projects into it in another place, variegated with 

 wood and inclofures, waving over Hoping hills, 

 and crowned with rough uncultivated ground. 



One 



