282 THE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. я 
| APRIL 30, 
peers ed prpdlablenees o of its — inm. sThose will 
nstitut the ultimate test; and if in the meantime 
the — n iei n which — 
with the instinets of many minds, in many places, 
and attracts experiment not ls in every county 
4 1 апа 
Australia, and 
bold to prejudge ag an raf its gene 2 ifi idee 
that be n some sort past adjudicating. 
fitab mply nonsen: Hands 
there's wo sin for hands " — else, how did they 
gather round Manchester and Leeds, or turn a desert 
heath into the w Ops о It is not 
surprising that people should be found — 4 k- 
ward if they re Алак} 1 j 
nature of things, that a times when the |1 
— is „ and — "-— — na D get them 
a must г them мра 
. and pigeon- 
a canvass tent on the 
Winron’s fork can bei here from acres without 
hearths and * Home" without iios ses. 
Whether the rus ard-seeming recurren 
Wie spade or fork is the m —— from the a 
0 
King 8 5 in Ham 
r|is now 
talking on the subject that was wanted, but бред 
and persevering labour in individual loc aliti 
rinciple insisted upon b 2а 
г. SLANEY, was c 
y v 
half of the general labouring уар ано, 
of this — is confined not by the limited mean 
at his command, but by the limits of that n 
portion or their circumstances on Which h 
usefully bring those means to bear. The two cad 
nts on which сап operate believe, 
cottages and schools; and vet th there is the 
liability to do mischief by interfering with that in- 
[| depende h must be léft untouched. Hence 
advantage of all such suggestions as Mr. Staney 
urged, by 5 5 cir es may be 
cumstanc ay 
and BEN with but little 
w 
have copied its маз г become self-sup- 
— secret " this мео -— result is, as m 
well known, that m ef.classes in 
these schools, by which the pem . claimed 
from the sons of farmers and tradesmen are made 
to supplement the lower payments received from 
the children of labourers. In addition to n 
mercies there is the payment claimed e 
ае er mata —— uya drin fail - these latter than is g nerally oto and no 
have 688 itself to an agricultural philosopher * ble oe 8: orla 5 rah rT 
ho is so philosophical Ж чу чыны - Pié ушы an that whic proves e "асе 
Author of ten editions of ved “А ason. „ la — even prefer to pay this — sum rather 
It may be that than e education as a chari 
n bro ught about p nch 
In the den steel -chase of human 
harriere 
The sind against that . — of classes of 
Strabo tells 
e 
invention, as in every other, it is the stiffest barriers 
that те occasioned — most Rr repe leaps. 
Whoev the e to compar a few 
thoughtfal — най: k of Winton’ s fork. wit 
that of the common plough on a stiff clay soil, is 
struck by a contrast so entire betw 
of action, that in ba 
E RE ыл Ihosi at 
And we believe that to very great f 
tent this prejudice — - ound — i 
ngland, too, where ‘shall be fairly — — 
batted with that patient aient which must 
brought „4 — on - —.— of education if it is 
to be su ully ac ted at all; and which has 
80 strikingly characterised the efforts hitherto of the 41 ds manu 
Dean of Her 
choi 
he to attempt. the problem of — the steam- 
е фен, an agent he has already be, 
account, oe e clays? or 
wine into 
is he to st "his new 
havi mode 
L4 pre ; 
treating clay which leaves it really cultivated. -and | * 
ospheric 
open to the atm influences, shall he try 
1 ishec B l у steam 
point in 
iun considered it, it may 
? but there is an old 
that objection 
“the longest wa 
proverb де үүт Олен 
ег understood. 
Кот: of both t 
ee leasure 
e latter the Very Rev. 
a Harton related a number of M 
rl of 
w bottles, and, 
of a of Societies 
ore. And the ways in ic. 
A good | gra 
— was given lst 
facts ba urged а | of dr Saroi 
We hope eek t 
33 дрон - the Dean ject 
at present has 
nated af rd of the in 8 
as well as on self, 2 9 
excites. 
q 
‘HISTORY OF T E AGRICULTURE. 
{For the following i DERS 
kindness of its — 
also to — good offices of the Presiden 
Mr. Mec 15 
are indebted to th 
t of this inst "тунш 
€ 
ermitte cul 
ils, were they to 
little 215 on the wee or progress of hus 
pe 
test test deta: 
bandry in our 
try. 
The. earliest _inthenti description of our island is 
found in the entarie 
own coun 
la 
found the country rather thickly inhabited by a people 
in a state of ii ень pand describes it as a waste of 
uninelosed pasture, with immense tracts of forest and 
and especial ' 
кее it was instructive m observe — far from 
or ok абе doctrines was the stat — at that each s 
had to make. The former confined himself- 
details connected with the supp 
cottag e removal of water 
nothing was more реи атарын 
by the latter, than that —— 
ppi me hat e had been 
introduced on the south-eastern coast, about 100 years 
previously, by a colony from Belgium; and we learn 
incidentally that at least some portion near the co 
| was then cultivated, for we have an account of a furious 
onslaught by the natives, in a Roman detach- 
ment hile attempting to secure 
ppt d As 
event rise week in August, we find | 
dale рне ќо present а 2 
, gran 
The 
lish | advance was made in the — — ре егу rince 
obles visited Ro 
was | others as suitors or „„ 
thither 
t the 
Jivéd an hae 
ку arts, ignorant of all tillag B 
parts, EE m age, lived on berries, 
= e h, a 
ue n writers, a few 
strag d glimpses are obtained of the sta; 
culture a among th 
of so primitive an im 
8 рор carried agricultur 
Mar. , even in Italy Е E ey held re 
high esteem st illustrious of their 
æsar’s stay in 
sed, that was 
and it was not till 
peror 
near ury later, during "wk reign 25 the Em 
Claudius v3 dos o vel was perman 
One of the t points 
8 Was “directed нё е 
bread-corn for. the supply of their legions. 
soldier at $ "i iime was ever th 
ab ee ion: the leg 
onally in ds til of е 
her 
oc 
ren — a of the 
ly of 
ore corn t 
Roman ga бете! 
The first 2 founded in Britain by the m 
tha ч i трчала, was situate at the 1 
tow and another flourishing s à 
чуй 10 Ped damit: before the founding. et de 
3 а 
a distinction which they have in som 
through all subsequent time, and may, I thi 
a whole, be fairly held to exhibit even at the present 
ds 
Jr an evidence that re used 
to increase the fer ar nios uil, T шау wee from 
Pliny, who says, voe 1 was 
ployed as a man 
€ although it does not seem to ave been so used in 
rough some — sw the : 
ved swith white petes P ui is s not. at 
improbable that many of ry pits and. ponds exi 
elds at this day were thus dug out by our fore: 
from ene 5 ‘produco ‘that "Britain was 
of the w 
m eror 
granaries to receive an 
a fleet of 800 ships, — as “ larger 
А „to convey it we the mouth of the Rhine, 
for the support of hed 
no account either of the. modes 
of increase obtain i 
be inferred that | 
sent up ее 
dered Dreis 
ave, Wer, 
of tillage or of the amount 
may for vario 
nobles me, 2 
cé Eu 0 
higher classes extensively fa for edu 
where they must have. become familiar w the 
Dalladias n. 
lights of n literature, 
A armies mee 
them through t 
wn world, acquainted with the f: g processes | 1 
scam far. in advance об dam native ve geal * 10 
to time 
i season of harvest me 
de 
