-1849.] 



THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



"^jSTfamily connected with-with Agricullurt 



:-,ience on the face of the speal 

 -with the aomewbat puzzled a 

 . -Ine^expressedbytljeotherpa, 



together ouce or twice, apparently 

 jUwmplete the purgation, he walked up and quietly 



*U«AI Vhy, it's Greek or Latin or something !'' 



t, air, really ! I couldn't read a word of it if 



:-•- 



phnstus It 's all about Wheat, Beans — Egyptian 

 Beans too-the same you buy at Mark Lane kiln diied, 

 tod ail sorts of other plants and vegetables. Surely 



J say, feeding d« 



- 



Now, do you not 



airies, e. g., its ajptta 



application, in conjunction with ron 



igs, horses, &c. If yo 

 jheme, to be filled up b 



of that! Tiie task you see before j 



»jli s ht and candlelight — 



a ^ «J»je. over both. 



can farm without having learnt how ; that agricul- 

 re (if you like that word best) is an exception to 

 ...... 



Natural Law, and will bring a livelihood without 

 udy, cost or apprenticeship : that to be able to gabble 

 erthe pet jargon about the ignorance of our fore- 



The old Chronicler was warming up— and beginning 



irt'n h H.ut m Ins chair like a Grain-laden JDutch- 



ingra the other's face just happened to catch his eye* 



go rights 



«d makes it /all Hat on its face 



ight quiver about the moutr 



Kbot" life at Ms fa - rm ' and make him tel1 you 

 S eSf U g a little bit : she,[{ be con8tant if y° u are : 



.' ; ' " > ^ ce. I'U look out something by that time 



«*"l suit )0U better than this." 

 sides ■ Th *? g of banda - A P romise on both 



^"aih f II ° r closed : and tne momentary flush of 



8UnC " d " ^ thTSen ey^habkudT Xa^pa^ 



Thir ^° me Correspondence. 



wSTt^-T^ advocates of thm-seeding for 



».% ' «*, The preccdini crop was Cabbage, 



^p^'tof t Tbe Whea ' was ye *y thin in the 



^ **H in s * 8ea80n » DUt tillwed greatly, and looked 



Philosophers have given us the theory 



Analysis of several sorts of 1 



■ i. . ' 



iTMft and very 

 white Wheat, the produce of 1842. 4 . M 

 ■ Poland. 5. Very soft Wl> 

 March, 1842. 6. Wheat of a somewhat gt 

 ance, produced in 1840 in the Department . 

 : 



produce of 1844. 9. D.ito, from the 

 mmaam«k Avignon. 10. Very hard Wheat, the grains 



:, finally from Western ifcfrim, 

 at Verrieresin 1844. 11. Wheat from Bm 

 gary, the produce of 1845. 12. Egyptian Wheat of 

 small red grain. . 13. Spanish 



and hard Wheat. 14. Ditto, very hard 

 Wheat (Tangarock). M. IV:.; i ;i .•'-•<.,! 



, definitive. These 



NkrogenOTrMatters/'insolubie 



he outlay made. The Wheat upon 1 

 and is good, the Oats in general very si 



, for Potatoes. The 



icularly applicable to Ireland at tbe _ present time, 

 .'here is no material building on the moss, except a 

 woden one, erected more for temporary convenience 



Sccleston, about two miles distant, where all the oceu- 

 iers reside. These go from thence every day to their 



onsrant toil, tailing pieces of moss land accoiding to 



ig it. They chiefly keep only one horse apiece, and 



carrying out his planting v 



Ireland ? Should i 



it ion 1 Thtee years ago a million 





Ti linjr.— Amongst the different operations <1 

 hjmdry,' mir • i the '"ost important is tillage ; yet 

 sense of the word, it is little undergo, d, and, tlnoui 



; tillage), and ti 



