PART II. 



INTRODUCTION. 



Having executed the first part of my 

 promise, and considered Agriculture in a ge- 

 neral, and in some sort in a scientific point 

 of view, I shall now proceed to the remaining 

 parts of my engagement, and describe the 

 different fields upon which, with a view to their 

 improvement, I propose to employ the in- 

 dustrious and unoccupied poor, whose present 

 situation has so properly excited the attention 

 of the Board of Agriculture. 



The theatre upon which the labour and in- 

 genuity of man may be exerted in the agri- 

 cultural line, I consider as of two descriptions : 

 The former, that which he has already broken 

 up, and from w^hich, by the due course of 



