ae 
= ee 
236 ON THE INFLUENCE OF THE AUSTRALIAN CLIMATE 
convinced, has undergone no material change since 1828, and why 
should not our wool present the same remarkable qualities now- 
a-days as then; for surely the influences which produ ese 
in time either entirely eradicated or becom a 
hemical composition as to be utterly unfitted © 
main animal in the healthy thriving condition 0 
then look at the scanty juiceless roots and grasses that are to be 
found on the majority of our runs now-a-days, a little 
a to make it clear even to the most sceptical that the su! is 
policy SO unremittingly pursued in our system of sheep sree a : 
sh : 
duce good wool when they are badly or insufliciently fed! ©? a 
such conditions scurvy or a cachectic state of constitution el 
i i as in man. Stinted eae 
e@; or : 
r . . one * . ure, ci 
Be ee nah ening orzoeity of he OE Te 
condition unless proper attention is paid to the nature | 
to think that sheep can ever be maintained in the S8M@ i tog 
