4-1847-] 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



Jtf»t!T!l^^- — — — 



•, M irHFlELD CLUB, 18 f --T^ Annu^ Sliowol 





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»sB^ 



Ete agricultural C£ajette 



•^'^.Ii; OCTOBER 30, 1847. 



of any of our readers 



oper to be given to cattle and 

 * not many who can speak to 

 re. Comparatively lew know 

 ts upon the soil. The few, 



Mt a very hij, character ; and 



therefore, be exceedingly obliged to 

 "lent who will kindly state what he 

 ' subject. Any experience, too, of the 

 ' aung-heaps, as well as on land, or for 



■unded by the Earl of Clarendon 

 * tl V- fdr ™ i; »-' Masses in Ireland, 

 little doubt that the improvement 

 question to be determined by those 

 ; on the mind, far more than by 

 merely material remedies to sug- 

 ■* ailt .' { capit .! so much as of cha- 



-« its sources are dry. No doubt 

 >« ol youth that we must look lor 

 e Q Ua hty of mind which impels it 

 s,, Pportuuiiio. ; but til.' VMM lhu< 

 useless without the ability which 

 *N and while the former must 



»*J so efficiently* J by that which 

 j£t has suggested. And it mav 



» d «dto C ?eoioyo ri the e re" udlcewd 

 ^hness which unde* othe" circum- 



stances might be expected to lender it 



he following letter, which appeared lately in the | practicable iook U altogeTh 



t, and its probabilities of a successful issue ^ I take iL 



le efforts of the Earl of Clarendon to diffuse I | seemed like acrilege 



i few wealthj ; 



e Lord connected with the Land ( omrni-i ■; , when Squire " 



be appropriated to the same object ; and it "Ah ! well-never mi, 

 been suggested by some of ti. ' o& : "but what 



icy. Additional j 

 md up to 1000/. 

 r such an object 



ng them. The 





V^ lVM.pio ".r! 







tion, and founded on principle, 



nd that it is the 



precursor only of a system of pr 









in Ireland. It 





ron 1 ,e roads and oiik als last 



year, and applied 



■ ii this nenefioial and reproduc 













" But I am delighted to bear 









I .sofCorkandKer 



ry, Clare, Galway, 



and Mayo, and ti 









The D ike ol Leixster, ever 







radical ana useiui mea-ure. is unceasing in u,s vu- \ so— they nre equally an obi 

 eavoursto carry out his Etcelle for bread, and the ey 



is to the unbounded respect and confidence in his j Far be it from the old I 



. ~ ..:;- i • ', ■ - >■■':■ .- ■:■■... ■ ' ' ' . ' 



bat have been already receive i 

 ,:■!.. ;= -;■■: ■::_"• ' - : - ~ ■ 



love now might do "„> a g reat crooked i 



dnd, and rousing ge » -« be by a dead fence serrated in 



oped that this atten -• hogged into dree 



■ . ■ 



-ricult'urists of the • l 3 -" e tht ' &**"*! 





bandry to the farming classes on the spot." 



man six feet high has 

 to a panoramic honz 



CHRONICLES OF A CLAY FARM.-No. XII. 



Amon<;?t the various changes upon the aspect of a 

 isi rated by modern practice, diere is none 



- 

 five feet high,;. . -.th the running 

 the plough- land alongside. I 



..'.■; '.' . ' ' • 



Farm spread out before you, and its hedgerows reduced 



, 10 or 12 large square c. 



shaped rhomb. hardest h ° ok °J 

 then to go and dream the r 



comes over the spirit of the dream, wt»B 



- 



^Xe sure tliere is 

 tion-the hedge-phe 



,,7/^-that pleasant 



up for Railroads all 

 scarcely a vestige o 



hu*e "banks* »d hw 



tied 4! he might p 



discoven 1 as each I 



Thorn crows much l>« 



No ! let the 1 »rk 



varied and pictures* 



fe D afy screen and deep 

 and shade ; but let th 



■ 

 le ! the waving and extensive Corn-field, the deep r 



