THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
179 
* 
two in its place. Thus in ereation 
ma = for extending the 8 — 2 
a e have good re to be- 
re is extension can only take pai sido rey side 
bere t of the human mi = n 
viih the limits of that i improv a re we Ses 
mankind. In both.we 
and erecting the cities 
s of a former. 
it in sa. Pa 
i th, 
x = will of the Divine * that life 
chat this world, so long as it lasts 
7 
fallin which the 
‘the world of matter affords an analogy of the | versed hundreds 
also accompanied by more nenin pinoi what 
does it matter; they must have an extra allowa of | 
er, or, it ma — ve tein though | 
e no thought of 
to- 
raid of putting his carr iage or s 
ask, can be the motive which in 
by Thomas H. T. heron carrie 
with acclamation ; — the Shani aF — 
bo tendered to Mr. Warnes, as ng the person who 
nly emo? but pans at- 
“ : are y 
r experience this — — the results 
5 Krieg lised, and may 
carried out, with ev ros 
ae calm fa b. 3, 1848. . e 
L could pa a long list 2 similar — 
but of what use be the attempt to co 
who “ refuse * the wiles a the — 
he . so wisely.” 
I should, — ala have n 
t descended to 
ials ; 
ce you, 
charm 
cause to complain, if 
erred — to myself, but to 
But whether — ‘unphilesophical eree 
lans,’ upon whieh Mr. Wilkins is even 
also ‘cruel, unnatural, „and unprofit- 
ve 
ield her i i 
inunitely -r 3 governor of the world. t last allow im to console himself in such offensive ess animadversions.“ 
Man, in these circumstances, resembles the steward of | 4 hi se of two small rooms, with six of a family, the iginator of what, if not of those plans which you 
a „who should give himself up to drinking or | Maj whom had reached the age of maturity, | call “ bedless,” and deno ing 
rely. or have his mind absorbed in his own petty | his friable furniture almost rendered useless from ing mine? The inventor, you know, was the Rev. A 
 gneerns at a time when he should be aking provi- | 50 © aded and u ed? what sympathy can | Huxtable, and that k Baton * p s 
sion against meal time, when the family come home, or à landlord feel for his ee la rs — 1 ee amara to that gentleman. or e; nothing- is 
| pisi from th Diddan, er nothing eels him to live in a where, wh s to w left ycu, but asa good Christian . confession 
est his we ary limbs, es ean see the stars —.— his of your error, and to sign an honourable recantation, 
„ e n f. t e . 
ith history has given grea 
7 the mission of ex 3 with whieh 
— of Jacob were charged against the in- 
habitants o. 
t viewing it in this light, the 
i Canaan ; but 
command of 8 becomes a behest of merey.— 
woo 
aol or listen t 
it by his bedside. 
Again, what idea 
And form 
en d- Á lass being consid eae unnecessary in edition of my book — exem . and w trust, 
= rm wea 1 any unbiassed man, be he what received as a sufficient refutation of your ungenerous 
ON THE 1 LABOURER. ne may, if glass has not been necessary withi ese | charge. “I have no intention of edad g he merit 
2 5 Paper of the : h ult., a correspondent, last few weeks? necessary or not they are still in the of invention or of originality in — < the experiments 
again calls pian to this much neglected same sta If the inmates wish to enter the rooms, that I have made. Were 1 I should put 
das, being connected with that class, I they must do so with the aid of a lighted candle, at eee a a level with those rae Hl who, ha 
my b n e fi o say few uday rue it i btained patents for their discoveries, e the real 
their behalt, trusting you will favour me with Man's inhumanity to man, re oin * the credit and the profit of their 
of your earliest number. our correspondent | It may be ae W. 3 ‘these $ dlords d 
SP RE — Well, but per a ese landlords do 
Migr ee Boshi Aster dend few | not know of such being tho The gan 3 
lathe: Sateh — es knowledge of the facts. I am sab at to state that in . yet . b Plan 1 ee Ti E 3 e The 
1 labourers are better remunerate Pro hanger a 1028 fo g fact is otherwise, — a of 2 wich Mae es wa in full operation by 
are more industrious as a FF n the Hin 0 years ago, a 
m more 
| these things consequently ma —.— 
t in their circumstances. In —— able 
? men can earn as much, nay, more in many 
rried men, and the „ care- 
far to give i e 
agri- 
urer. 0 other hand — men 
— kept on very tiie wages, hay- 
in many cases tha 
ke the 
Paying, of course, a heavy per centage 
ence, among agricultural 
as not a due weight with employers, 
given to en courage it, as among other | 
As 3 the Scoteh 
publie 
en ei respective villages es (ite — : eon- 
ment of huts), idlin Piar 
oralini > ae et their time in 
= vain, and renderin, 
e g t su ject to 
; rey a the workhouse or the — when 
only, a fe oo 
trict men on ill suffice ; it Iw 
in 
. “And 3, ‘They are: mone economical i in their 28 iti 
pposin 
peu b as well as from my own, I find that I 
ve been rightly deed - would, therefore, be a 
senseless w time to e pon a lengthened 
those disgus' 
he 
‘ment and good ta 
H 
w | are never 
Seer eam work very frequently 
ee and harvest sie 
Scho 
. | com 
ir perm Secre mrar of the * Flax Assoc ciation. 
“ Vice-Adm 
b of their charity. ould 
were atten ded Jog “ let not thy left hand know what thy | occa 
+ ght peh as been Jo for the labour- 
ing m f giving allo 
Verily, no. present we ee gener ally speaking, 
is very little in advance of their progenitors, and the 
succeedi 5 one is making but 1 — 8 1 
would say, in 55 sion, cultivate the soil na ie 
pay you PAi bourer commensurately, and this will ¢ 
paratively free you from the 8 of 3 
f you deem this worth a place in your 2 
wll have a word to the labouring 1 shortly.— 
rer. 
3 FEEDIN 
E REv. ee WirxI 
to . that 
refutation of the rodom pric — have offered in reply 
to my letter of the 12th ult. 
provo you 
usting peanya which, I repea 
truth as they are to that —— 
which — become the columns 
of the Gardeners’ wah icle and Agricultural Gazette. 
2 it suffice, that the injunctions ar the inspired Moses 
violated upon my premises ; nor the still more 
n of our Lord, ee, the econo- 
ifts of Providen ther 
to a ee of 
totally at 8 
— admonitio 
use of — 
— —— ts that remain that ing be lost.” 
Nor have I — unmindful 
3 — made them the objects of m 
founda my advocacy. 
n Thus, I ar sie: at 3 conelusions; and, in 
promulgating m —. disco acon 
ee — pe erdire while the prè 
us propositions dern th 
. 
by rank, wealth, and eloquence, are daily sink- 
livion. 
en nforced 
u have advanced, it is Spa 
coverbly prostrate. 
rred against — your 
levelled at trath, a erefore must recoil upon you 
self. As a lively — 1 oe in ba 1 
munication from Henry C. Esq., the 
al the Hon. D. P. Bouverie in the chair 
t was e by aeons Brown, Esgos and seconded i 
many erops, 
other ttle’ icon ger is their condita improved! from 
as 
— N of many eminent 
res 
r up — 
of t 93 of the Creator, 
research Na 
A 
eorists, though Law 
a 
used at one tote | more than | i 
my system 
e La Mancha’s knight, | annexed 
“pi 
iB: 
A 
En — elle in N orfoll,” repen sted — 
were made by the mest 3 5 to establish th 
use of Linseed, —— su mer- n 
in stalls or houses has ein — mg much Sa es — the 
2 and in Irela — ckers valuable 
pate in the clan 
3 mall farms by eet feeding catile 
I ae the great benefits to 
that.s syste eke 
“On Mr. Baker’ s premises, at _ I first saw ‘bullocks 
and sheep fattened in 3 o the . tne. > 
of es patriotic Sir 4 Ste trac * in 
I added the Linseed — and thus ‘prea the 
incomparable cattle com 1 ely claim 
myself 2 merit of embodying the useful ideas and 
plans of others, in such a as to render them a 
3 support to every ec tenant. farmer, 
an effectual protection to the inte the landlord, 
and a remedy for the present eee arising from the 
want of employment. 
You admonish me that, “ Cattle, as z as ourselves, 
are the ereatures of. that Great Be eing to whom we must 
account for 2 treatment.“ aan I fully a admit; — 
crave e bserve, that we moreo 
sible for “the treaiment of ou = "dependant fellow- 
no 
ance uty n 
“The wolf, ithe rat, and the peg 
thy, can 
Every year increases the n 
To meet this grow- 
of Flax, to which 
mame 
upon us for work in vain. 
ing evil, I propose an extended culture 
ou also 3 and have thus incurre 
responsibilit 
h — circumstances, or 
from 
row 
rth provoke e each poner to ioe 
to good. 
orks alone.— rnes, Trimingham, March =. 
RECORD OF WEATHE 
most e 
— een x yea 
a e * as s suficient fom a 
Wer si ain gauge ; to gaa is 
added a column sa ing t the dir npn a 
the v ind, whilst the Evitan of the 24 ho 
enable: 
1 have e filled up the sheet sent herewith with a a copy 
