| 
16—1852. | THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 
251 
tly the same uality ye quantity of pro- 
rth me ex ee : I had been in the habit of 
supplying to the persons 330 1 — pre iously emi- 
grated, ooking daily my own provisions, and bein 
otherwise exactly on the same term e inder 
of my fellow-passengers, as detailed in the extracts 
journal, wł pep yen last session by order 
of the House mm I afterwards travelled 
10,500 miles, throughout the United oe and Canada, 
ing much fettered i nts by illness con: 
tracted from 2 mg ass 5 and returned 
to this country on the Ist of —— last. Vere Foster. 
[The es of this communication. shall appear 
next week.] 
AGRICU Al. ee e 
[Tue followi mitted to the Council |^ 
of the her 3 e Society, at their in 
meeting Saturday, the 26th of March, 1852. The 
subject i is 3 receive consideration by ee Council, and 
ill form the matter of future discussion at ano other 
meeting of — Council. } 
y Lords and Gentlemen,—At the request of a 
member of yous 2 Š submit to F thoughtful 
and deliberate consideration the res ts of exte — 
—— paa 1 — — 
ubject 
j an¢ 
an for the ‘sons of the yeomanry of the west 
of England. 
Whatever, ultimat tely, may be the result of that 
which is: bein nga made in reference to the 
expected appeal to the deliberato voice p judgment of 
e “se ge on that subject ; wisdom and 
foresight can doubt, that an prisan —— of agri- 
cultural — is a for, and cannot, with safety 
be withheld or dela 0 pe 
ral inte reason 
d duty, th at r the land capable of oe in the 
British h islands sh ould be cultivated; tha dee 
blessing of God, e — 
to carry into effect improved —- mana — 
should he p aaa sed . i ee th 
force an ring o of See te thei 
a ‘hem ; a that, vf thi e sir vanced 
sake o the 
and 
for the untry an id, the « alt. 
vators of the soil, pue future — of England should 
receiv sui eir pursuits and station 
riptural truth, and administered in a wise 
alarm, and pre- 
sider that ong before the results 
uce, of 
e to bear, — — to the, soil, with 
economy 
— it be right to er the a of a 
aI ita — 
call not a fair claim for full compensati 
8 rag their Salads whether in money, — cat 
Nor does it admit of 3 E it be not the 
solemn duty of those who are gifted with un 3 
to con wealt ag influence to carry ect 
fitting plans, to see that the tenantry of this e — may 
receive the benefits of a sound, practi tical, and seriptural 
education. = 
escaped the notice of the thoughtful 
ical mind, that while the education of the 
e artisan an ha tural labourer has been | lighten the gloom, and conduct us, we trust, to a 
cing (although so-much still remains to be done in | brighter neds Re Be day. I , eee Renens to be, 
te t fi 8 as in y 
—.— Pe nant fa 0 — settling Your willing . — and faithful servant, | di 
and pleasing r viie: 55 rhe the isolation of their posi- ames Ms, LLB. m 
tim—from the want of suitable education within their Hemington Rectory, March 24. 
means — and in some instances, it is to be regretted, — — — 
e 
standing 
than the pauper chil in our union- h 
style of ho gra i is far in atves of the ral edu- 
cation of the working and to provide for the ex- 
l is periodica 
subject of a compulsory rate. A fearful | 
coming on, Nig = cannot be opi 
i eer onerada 
Dommo “tnd occupiers of 
large,” will be re-echoed throughout the kingdom; and 
action aa to the principle involved will follow that | 
solution 
Ww hat shall = the basis of that education ? 2 ae 
co an shall it ad pone, 128 eff. 4 
farmers’ son England be 
east ens the cold, death-gving io iron 8 of the syste 
* ester man nufacture, which has been styled with 
asis a godless education, for the enthroni- 
zation of intellect and the deification of sci a ne 
i pt ample under foot the-wisdom and 
the power of the Most H A system sti 
la nk and 5 growth the a ten- 
Bn — and G unſruitful o 
od ? system whose steps, as traced in 
a e N are 3 by 
and 5 convulsion, e haracter is written 
its deeds of rapin and blood and blas- 
majesty of the God of heaven an 
Shall the sons of the farmers po fo nd 
through stealthy art, the slaves ools of a proud 
and selfish ary ad tyranny, which Aer roll back the 
dark night of ignorance and superstition wherein the 
ts of prey shall roam abroad at will to 
o- | corrupt, and destroy! 1e voice of England, as it has 
rolled along like 2 wa shore to shore, has 
spoken out :—“ We are spurn the Italian 
tyrant’s chain. The — and the religion secured b 
the best heart 
hold ae death for ourselves and ou 
he — —— the yeomanry of England require 
for chen which they will adopt, is = —— 
will jema them * “a their stations on earth an 
e y eriptural edu — whic while 
bas o the rs — of ages, will r e and engraft 
— = that modern science discover, helpful for the 
purposes of their prac 
laid, p vigorously worked, will 
te the — and welfare 
ng n 
of education a for 
f all that i is fair, or | it i 
moral desolation 
I 
p. 
phemy, — with the atis rene of the outraged | 
become, | I 
to enslave, and | 8 fi 
s blood of our fathers we grasi and will | i 
r child 
Stood when I state that 1 keep 30 to 40 oe be cattler 
eer are housed wholly during the winter, duri 
out of the 24 hours re during $ summer 0 d nese I 
20 to 30 which who omar in the pastures during 
mer). Not wap indiferen to the comfort and 
3 of my cattle, I i 
0 ding, for whic 
ton. Could I have t by so doing 
I was enrichin y ss land, I might have continued 
Gra: 
satisfied with this mode but entertaining a di — 
into 8 L * 
y experiment and prac HH was 
repar ider and try any feasible — * ement 
which i offer itself, and I have now to state that 
channel or gutter, which is sunk 4 to 5 
boarded platform on which the cattle — and li 
ith a level with 
The — . standing, place: thal 
feet — the 2 and 
— on oe our double 
cattle de, tank will be be 28 feet in 
Eer fe will * — to * eean 3 
the far sons of the Wes of Englan Because, ass o cube m and 
although “ieee are other e siablishments 15 merit and leng g 1 36 to 48 stone each 3 at I have» 
value, those establishments are out of the reach of the | found that waitin oe 
I our 3 — an ait ir present require- | described the purpose of — a the —— 
nts. e n economic, simple, and peculiarly and solid excrements into the tank ; — 
e adapted system, to meet cuniary resources—t acd at ter edge of the te into the gutter or 
infancy of 1 * * gp op a system I but none eee inwards on to the close 
ited to mers for the the * ate, the — which sine and clean. I have 
method of —.— and the * small farm-hold- 
pr ha in the West of Engl co 
of rivalry : there is room for us all, and the efforts of 
all are required, May I be al „ as the 
result of extensive intercourse arge experience 
among the ye mea id that the nate a amg and 
—— of the farmers of the t of England op 
e | test this mode, I find i 
ve groundl a most —.— field for 2 A plan and | effecte 
— for j judging of this question on its merits, to con- $ 
n dry 
hat after a having — sufficient time to 
y purpose in 2 
dairy co on or feedi ing: stock appear 
much milk, and fatten as ak. 
now to state, t 
eir decision. 
not the peaceful ee ea 
school, its ne mange = 32 
de emed * 
blishmen 
an agricultural 
del farin, honi i be 
h a small farm to the esta- 
The cultivation at the soil, megs an empirio art, | e 
from its application to Grass land, 
of Wheat in North 
mdent “ Draining Tile,” is a 
o, on a “simmer’s afternoon— 
the sun gae’d doon,“ might have been 
throug Ade of | 2 Wheat, 
— a load to the acre at the sate d every now 
need | and then, between the whiffs of his H — — 
complacently to “ Mrs. Draining Tile” oe remark that, 
“but for those villainous birds there would have been a 
quarter more.” Draining Tile” is — unac- 
scare. i 
will take ong t the m = lted and most 
useful. of 1. —— ting e principles and | “ that 
ascertained results, and the title “of agriculturist be 
ekoned one of honour, The b 
at honest and faithful efforts to do our best 
that which G The of Hope will en- 
ſore- 
ar hind-fect upon 
f 
b 
