habe 
imi 3, 1858.) _ 
bat that « 
Sits aod ovr Bag r to this “extent. 
roduce 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
275 
able, | inasmuch as: as it impedes the advancement of “agriculture, 
subjects the tenant farmer to serious losses and inconv pnt 
pr ra many cases is the cause of disagreement «nd ill-fe 
nant. And 
, | successiv. vely and everlastingly, 
ne fallow of the hoe.” 
T 
, under the perpetual 
eultural so ml y "the between landlord and ten whilst we do not i a he very sensible manner in which the writer of 
? Iti syw that rabbits are not | repeal of the game Saws, in any way fringe the rights | this volume speaks of those restrictions upon trade, im 
t is unfair to noens Pia the damage | of property, Wa, res ta ai ie atonik “yr gat PeU oer originally it was believed in the interests of agri- 
ot sportin, ver 
Ae | finer that, in pre- re eA thoteyould i insure P ° he sis nao ; cee nal amount euch still rand intl commends him ito our zard as a 
bbits is almost a certain | of sport to that which he ae most cases the 
m is an offen unishabl lichief cause of complaint wou aa be oved,” irable t 
laws, and which would displease a game- c tse on the ane and, ‘the means a pra piete 
y be said :—“ It will caly | prog hen it was writte 
bit, ig eae and Revirws, The volume consists of 500 pareng pages, 118 of 
o great.” Coul which are occupied by a statement of the ane 
n cna cause them The New Torati TEIR dar, a Monthly Remem- | calendar of operations, a series 0 4 s 
ld choose, rancer, ĝe. a Farm and Br sei Fourth | on geo ama stocking, ma a and m manures, on irrig 
go may be IN Edit H: Ds Sym 6 Palernoster * gn 1802. | tio “| arpin g, drai ining, Er e ere on vermin, 
Sw to tine the Me ke | t has bedi Fenty erat th a reissue of a wa impl T = big is ad 
n . “ 
at a hoary outlay, and intended |"°™° of the old Farn mer’! s Cale ndars ” ger be not PRE ERA iaaa 
in the 
e 
lation 
d agriculture a 2 
f 
only a userul hterary 
ture. 
If during the interval, 1814-36, when works 
comparatively limited Areia 
ough 20 editions ; sur ely the 
new 
ae is hardly arrin in a ps notice to describe so 
full a manner. We must 
be satisfied mith. havi ing r our — of its 
moat ct 
poni either to ate Arthur Youn ng” as he would 
hav written now, or to bring out the ne we edition « of 
mand circulation 
P> cate 
almi 
fitted than 
merits, and w that some r ma tlemen who 
be i to = 
eat 
, if you 
‘on y onr land, you svn on that lan only 
quantit y of manure which wi Levy 
Il later volume of the kind sieht 
tay sie “ge i jane oe “The se ork whose title we have 
given above went through fi 
totter its first ae arance. 
(1802) has been kindly sent us by a corre 
subsequent publicati ons of it pt probably ave been 
fad professed to have c cau ght 
s i 
he drill-hus! been probably kn 
practised by prone of this — for ag 
was first essayed w regula: haat lan 
about a century aes ar — learned Jethro Tull 
the mechanism of an diments 
I aed porn | 
$ will y the effect on your next E 
of the present day oit very well “take it and the 
y Ar th ur Young as the models ofa 
is and ere | h 
n 
n sugg 
of an gy! for r the delivery = seed in drills. In 
the course f his own grounds, 
i sit Barley ; and, as of so lar 
=. 
uar 
Wye 
e los 
“eas nip a sd ond eas unable ay cond 
Bi yonr co rn crop grows sparingly, » and the 
is that 
immense yidan of nowt si since their foe Even 
xisting feeling and existing | 
PA to a system, 
phil se pa pool 
| 
may venture to predict no 
ba 
i 
Beni viatbors 5 andl at h wih war bo wha 5n need oat little alteration. Take the fol- = is p me will be able to pargar o Eoee ara 
fak dahon that yo ex u wou Bates ha oes had but tot th — movements u upon the inyention of Tull; anki his book, 
next inquire, wha which theory and practice are Seje blended, 
; ancient and ill- ‘er wled paro es and customs 
of fs ett eo om cop? N nA re pina are gradually wearing away, and that there is at ws Pi evn the labour at an acute and it re er mind, 
A cite wf prle orth skal con- | Sent scarcely any part the country in which m at La a Ky Bane Ee 
g t be found men in-the nents line thorou ily 
fbar E. the quantity to gaga inpo NOY oaa ; : gay sete gp rg te ene ntain- owe 
r land again, "which yor ought every rational inquiry but and extremely oe nad a error of Tull has not always been fairly or accurately 
Men acct Parley, hie is, a n e bea Th ay atai abouring of Tan A Dut wh ioe sation a oraa p00 
do bette under tb oa prejudic ce i mer ponerse AAN ome x 
Gane and, Grasses 
or wrong, from. books; a ion pees 
is your | 2 uch self-sufficie ney, and amie those who entertain 
it to the most manifest disadvantages: for it mus 
to | Clear to ev ho will allow himself ment? 
| time to refiect that written documents must neces- 
sarily eres, in all respects, those of the most reten- 
y n emory ma ia the experience of one mag how- 
possibly compass all which is or 
3 
ly any corn in your | 
oF most inferior qua- 
to the pore edition of the ee 4 om 
ue 
illustrations of the existence t 
— feelings as are urged wit 
hare well as eshness now. The aang 
that it | Words might es gag for instance, be suy ed to have 
the | been extracted from Professor Buckman’s last lecture 
upon w weeds :— 
“A far greater part of the lands, both arable and 
rejudices, ae weakly 
atte: ae igs to support the fn or sa Eek 
ithout being in as 
which pine oas he attributes exclu- 
ely to earth—as if dung, go no , Was 
patently oe Baani oe convertible to > earth. It is 
extremely Probable this notion of T 
as the pure 
Like too many ther cultivators 
he had Ro knowledge at all of cattle, His ide took 
not sharpsighted enough to | pen 
the Pama of a igen 
ALT 
faae: argumen agni 
the ill success affairs 
ceive any pee ins 
Snch things are hobby- 
ore par 
pas remains sl oa Ser to the 
ry 
pasture, th 
ticu in the north, the west, and in 
‘ossest errors of the 
be Sym as one would be tempted to think, 
he production of useless vegetation, in 
Wales |g 
heed 
y, t 
nseq idan 
have ans we ed the aon splendid rewards, Jethro Tull, 
whose honest rs were to contri to the feedi 
and employment of ponti papa ili as suffered 
Be but 
"i is, T a 
to curtail the rights 
I would be the ws 
mage is less a: a 
amont, i we, re th, 
to their- 
which i is dist so precious s for the use of ma 
a man afl Be Sas and mae of mind 
totally to me hisa ar less expense than 
E 
ine out his days in misery and distress: his reward 
consists in the glory of being hailed ai din pokeri as the 
illustrious father of the horse-hoe 
iy ts him 
ave, from m 
eh inowicdee. like rih grown 
p lovingly 1 gathers destroy the one, and the other 
be 2 wi ttm the present a B 
a the land- 
amos of a tiie among 
will die 
And a 
“In nay the leading objects of instruction to 
he epi of 
casting lions etn sums we the advan- 
tx 3 of the former practice as follows 
. Su at and quality of PANA with consider- 
p= of seed. 
Portes comand of the land under culture forany needful 
of hocing, weeding, dressing, YEE gather- 
resent mmon far “poset hip: to me to be — se: choice of live 
nee nome a Wem to ste gorge nd w ion, and t e keeping their | “ 3. The eco precious opportunity of a total eradication of 
ù ad say, AE sro the weeds, of applying the whole ppt e of the soil 
tenan ck ower hisown farm; “ow se = lind entirely thee rom. weeds, of ‘the es of to the growthof useful vegeta itin 
to kill rabbits : and which dequate ae stanit heart and wre go ae of prs pag 
Ts a farme: mead this pS ae aware, re, whilst reise > change, or of particular courses 
noo ing of tythes, of which he cannot possibly get rid, that | “+ re as of F iepositing the emea iiz proper, depth 
good | his wee, of which h gern be both fairly fai cheaply P aii raviti; 
eservation of | Tid, charge him Somer rent? The more I c “5. The bonot of tillage, while the erop Sia eter 
ect | this subject, the more I am convinced that its Sig con- wns is e aiia for a future erop crop; orar i = aa 
res. He | Sequence has never yet been fully appreciated. I put ary pa aiae paa paeent Sipen ee ae moisture ea 
by hares rather it to th o are fi such speculations to calcu- ending from the atmosphere in dews, which in such 
= ate how much solid corn and good Grass Britain might | canons aro ae-very anin _— san ge falling, the 
nav ly substitute for ee tal flowers es 6. nerd Wort re peg Bi ort iy p ot strengt and 
shrubs ya which surely e shortness of the straw, whic further strengthened 
t as fon > DAUAN: is of off at pe Inr to (y arthi ingu m 
an interest im the | fallows, the real cause equally with the remedy of a et a t 
Fie responsi its preser- | foul tik, woke they are irah Prhe for hoe-culture, it “seh a ees e blighted 
; ROS Jealous over it as over his | is a joke cate ees that the soil, which eyes <8 aon ess danger, there being no 
Z resolution was t destined to can ever require any other | _ ae $ 
ire as then adopted ‘data tas wing weeds. The K 1 = grow | “9: The ote ee: othe cai 
iS preg Pinion of rass for ever; it s uced Hemp thro more | cand ill-tilled districts. 
Preserved in ome ae, that Soren? ba than 50 s: nadan ve aeo oad and will grow m mixed e crops’! “10. A delightful garden-like neatness, which must be highly 
