/ 
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to demand nine, on the Puinonian principle 
for dividing the whole of the landed pro- 
perty in the kingdom. 
Although Mr. Young, in his Lincolnshire 
Report, recently published, condemns the 
payment of tythes in kind as a great national 
burthen, yet, strange to remark, he, in the 
pamphlet under our present review, recom- 
mends that mode as altogether unobjec- 
tionable 1 Theorists like this worthy Secre- 
tary frequently change -their hypotheses! 
We entirely disapprove of the plan Mr. 
Young recommends for converting the Board 
of Agriculture into a Court of Inquisition, for 
the purpose of regulating the price of corn ; 
nor can we think the Board of Agriculture, 
which is chiefly composed of noblemen and 
gentlemen of landed property, would, in point 
of decency, take upon them the office ; a 
quality of which we do not accuse the versatile 
Pffendi of the Board. We conceive that regu- 
lations on this po ut will be best to remain, 
for obvious reasons, where they now reside. 
Mr. Young recommends a prohibition of 
