i on which they have to live and grow wool and mutton. I do not 
_ deny that some improvement may occasionally be effected in a 
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‘Source of failure. JI question whether many of our 
told are able to tell what species of grasses are to be found on 
ts ppd i great number of them, I believe, are even incom- 
. ridin : 
: pes! direction, immediately concludes, perhaps, that there is no 
 & 9 ad food for his sheep, whereas this very abundance ought 
eee him suspect, if he were to think for a moment, that 
: tinvall thing was radically wrong; because, with his flocks con- 
: Ped Superabundance of forage lies in the fact that it is not 
conta, esemial to the animal’s constitution—that it does not 
tistence, those elements which the sheep require for their sub- 
v 
1, worthless weeds are left to 
San Srasses, their suitability for sheep pasture, and their times 
18 and seeding, much of the annual loss of sheep which 
rerely on the flocks and affect so injuriously the yield 
“.,, -© Sound, healthy, and elastic with an insufficiency of 
"©8 for trees to flourish without sap ; and this yolk can 
