C A6 ] 
pra6lice. It may appear to have perfe6t 
saccess in the particular instances of Lord 
Wrnchelsea, Sir Cecil Wray, and many other 
noblemen and gentlemen who adopt it upon 
good land, at a very moderate rent, and who 
give the cottagers their stock of cattle ; but 
where they must rent the land at a farming 
price, and purchase their own stock, there 
are insuperable reasons why it cannot an- 
swer. 
Does Mr. Young calculate, that in order 
for a cottager to be possessed of a tolerably 
fresh milch cow, tlie year round, (and 
unless he is so provided his family cannot be 
supplied^ or any profit derived from the land) 
he must be at all times provided with three 
head of neat cattle, that is to say, one of the 
above description, a stale one coming in, and 
a young one at least to come in' succession, 
to keep up his stock. Does Mr. Young 
calculate how much pasture land such a man 
must occupy, at the average of twenty shil- 
lings per acre, in order to depasture his 
cattle m summer, and for the purpose of 
1 . 
