among farmers es will lead to a tg te — of the 
d ö 
eg 3 to be observed fi tually ad- — the elde, hallot, and Nerds bed, to the This blue clay, after mae e — aat 
for ming aasan $ mi; * leran drudgery of A, B, C, but when to the pleasure of air time to the air, crumbles down, It wo ea? 
wil be only to be hai had on rms, and, stake and li wages are added, the preference of the spread and mixed with the sandy soil, £o, > 
are more — e eve * “te Lineolnshire urchins for field work over school work N solidify, nt invigorate it AS tp 
— wil l only make work for the — hain who | is not at all surprisin parents, too, see no‘advan- | nips, ted by a course 
yg ch out of the Jend en ; ways will tageineducation, but consider it a sortof complimentpaid perhaps next * 23 may ha apres “te see 
render communica ion og ore counties | totheclergyman, ding off the Turnip field where sen 
i ered opinion will act on 4 parties with advan- | very little money value, at a distance from I arge towns, scanty herbage of the waste would not N 
tage. The absurd restrictions of old leases will be put towns omen to decipher the placards, the play-bills, | a single h 
in ‘the wei re) no man o sense and capital will eee not to ment ny periodicals with cuts of dre * 4 the least en d of field 
will - | ful murders, the demand for errand boys that can read, e temptations they hold o ravelling cut re 
I on. Bat i in agriculture, a in every the pleasure of a w room, the attraction of kindness * 
thing else, any legal meddling “that impairs foresight from a superior, fill “the ragged schools“ with is covert to covert, traversing field after field 
and reli is injurio very reduce | starved intelligences, ral districts, .. if a r sh der a Se 
tenant right to a personal agreement s to the | learn to read well, there are seareely any b 2 for hin scenes and incidents present themse 
farm, before a farm, much better dain a general | to read, eed rar ecasions for him to writ of facts x 
statute. ` ur chamber philosophers are always m — ng the and ru 
Tt seems to me that the Royal Agricultural Associa- | mistake of judging mankind by the very eg ig tion of 
tion might with great propriety and utility collect and | specimens to be f wit -5 — se walk e Tem- | took the 
ublish a report of the vari en nder which | ple e educationary syst ich onld d- | somethin t 
and is farmed in this country. It would be well, too, mirable in a town, would utterly fail in the rural coun- | all Englishmen, vp 
if they eng me thoroughly competent party or | ties. Hence the re necessity of securing the zealous | period or otl 
practical farmer, of sufficient scientific and literary | services of the rur recti 5 8 
ability, to collect and edit, with notes, the sketches off A great deal of the harvest work is done by contract n ag 
agricultural progress in different counties which have, | with tlre labourers, the married ones bringieg in their | ments have been propagated b 
from time to time, appea in the“ Journal of Trans. wives and children to help in the bargain ; which great fa 3, a 
actions, so that we might learn t vantages and — settled as to details by the labourers them- that without the attraction of fiel 
deficiencies of culture ht gtd the kingdom. 8 The practice, in ate em- ou cers 
a work would be a — ter of time and expense, but of lying women and 8 to — the decnes brought of living aristoeratie a 
greatest possi 3 wd, especially if sold on the land with e and convey them to the r oads, have followed the exa 
at a reasonable as very — —— ei the demand for pe unskilled | of th ti 
The custom of h fring servants at annual statute fairs —— Roads which were formerly mended with chalk | theat „ and 
stil preva in Lincolnshire. Many ae people | and stones —_ the pit, are now mended with weeded It is sai 0 ays 
wish to put an end to these fairs, but t asantry | stones alon which did not attain the perfection which distingui 
insist upon them, well knowi that t are not too} The fashion of Enigi $ in agricultural science, which | it until th i ut an end to the four-hotee 
many holidays in The lst of May is the fortunately so s, occasionally produces ae wid ers in — „ and ier 
st day, and being on that day at a farmer’ ; boch lan 
è op 5 get 92 85 
it was a beautiful warm day: a favourable season had as M 
along the rs from oats lane and path, the lads a 
tripping along in their best attire, ively 
healthy, and comely, fit rates for a Wilkie or Mulread 
T 
which in such scenery pleases the eye better than the 
unive ts of a town The 
men, 
— round erowned black felt hat, a coloured a 
es a 
8 
the fel 
San plump, sunburned, and freckled, with fair oe 
— of the men seemed rather above average, 
and their walk less lounging than i in strong clay countries, 
peculi 
I should Nes . — one of the ld seiret cloaks, 
The village, -which stands e shadow of 
eo cepa 0 to 141. 
* 1 d engaged 
ghman, at 14 
turne 
On a 
ack visites; | T 
half-a-dozen orange 
fiddle. | i 
whic 
* e 
— boar 
5 
All the imptovedionts: Ar 
4 | earths, an TE of manures 
rla 
owner — magistra Ar — del ith ho the waste, 
pulled and said, 5 man, stop; do not do 
that ! you knoy at you are doing?’ “I be 
me e road: 
authority he ott ted off, a 
Brock cklesby estate D 
possible, the labourer 
0 
putting the im 
pa rs 
rong backed hind the father of a race 
— lodging a 
. n the course ee one of my rides 
oes of heath in i 
> 
ve to view a = i 
—— Bari CH bes ksa eta 9 tender sand, so dry aud 
leaped across, Ii 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
Seotchmen like, and Irishmen an 
e Four-in-hand Club 
` having s a this with an air that carried 
anure or not 
the road until some 3 — 
. that, where 
should h 
eat P 
itry, as well as to the 
— 
the railwa. stem offers for 
demand toe labour eud i laws are 
h made parish in every 
e of claimants 
at the expence nsf the union 
county mo 
conveyance than North Lincolnshire. 
ounded transfer 
es, and an exportation 
8 
rogress of e The 
d and 
It was a 
4 Bacähmen and 
„That 
à the — 5 the timber, 
ms | effects 1 f railway transit R the e 
barel; 
e greatest — niri in t 
H 
can never enjoy the full 
0 remember a age — arrived from * 
to assume the dignities of a coun 
liar me how it one field 
r horses’ feet, w r parallel to it wis 
scarcely touched. The question enabled me 
vise a short discourse on a he 
posi by nature and "education, pte a om eee 
s an — in g levelle 
t was in these eros country rides that I found 
— illustrations _ the 
ce of h Lincolus hir 
5 Thos 
tan 
suc se obs servations as x 
„ allo è 
market ?’ “ Those shep ar f 9 M 
t Wheat : must be t — out, to go 
ter ;” “ That 3 wil jams suit the Sheffield ee 
i — — pae front South 
eed, aE bones from the 
altie ports ; Beaus and cilia pulse from the Levant, 
Indian corn and mea m the United Staten AEE 
oal, i 
rags, pan = be bro 
— of the —— nds mm 
rm (even ir thè briska cre found on or! 
stone 
imported seawards, 4: 
oe ong as the rest of England eye only ail at 
s of com munication, the se 1 
tho r 
bitants, it has be 
— philanth i 
Aich this m arch of solemn oxen and bl f she ie t 
along the dusty roads bet ly ena 
dependent ‘on a the 
T came sah : the 
vated, Oats have given way to 
The Wolds Railw ays commence 
