Essai sur l'économie rurale de l'Angleterre, de l'Écosse et de l'Irlande |
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Side 4
... scarcely more than the former . It is a country famous for its picturesque scenery , studded with lakes and water- falls ; but , like most picturesque countries , offering few resources for cultivation . Wherever the ground is not hilly ...
... scarcely more than the former . It is a country famous for its picturesque scenery , studded with lakes and water- falls ; but , like most picturesque countries , offering few resources for cultivation . Wherever the ground is not hilly ...
Side 6
... Scarcely any mountains ; few natural marshes ; extensive plains , sound almost throughout ; a soil sufficiently deep , and of a nature most favourable to production ; rich deposits in the broad valleys of the Loire and Seine , with ...
... Scarcely any mountains ; few natural marshes ; extensive plains , sound almost throughout ; a soil sufficiently deep , and of a nature most favourable to production ; rich deposits in the broad valleys of the Loire and Seine , with ...
Side 14
... rich manure for fertilising the land . His first object consequently is , to keep a great many sheep . In Great Britain there are immense farms which have scarcely any other stock . While our farmers have had II SHEEP,
... rich manure for fertilising the land . His first object consequently is , to keep a great many sheep . In Great Britain there are immense farms which have scarcely any other stock . While our farmers have had II SHEEP,
Side 15
Louis Gabriel Léonce Guilhaud de Lavergne. scarcely any other stock . While our farmers have had their attention distracted by many other things , the rear- ing of the sheep tribe has from time immemorial been considered by our ...
Louis Gabriel Léonce Guilhaud de Lavergne. scarcely any other stock . While our farmers have had their attention distracted by many other things , the rear- ing of the sheep tribe has from time immemorial been considered by our ...
Side 16
... of the Revolution many years elapsed before any important results were obtained . It was scarcely before the establishment of the Empire that the advantages of the new race began to be understood . The movement 16 RURAL ECONOMY OF ENGLAND .
... of the Revolution many years elapsed before any important results were obtained . It was scarcely before the establishment of the Empire that the advantages of the new race began to be understood . The movement 16 RURAL ECONOMY OF ENGLAND .
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acres agriculture agriculturists amount animals Arthur Young average Bakewell barley breed British British Isles capital cattle cause cent cereals CHAPTER corn cows crops cultivation Dishley districts divided Duke Edition England proper equal expense extent farmers fattening favourable Fcap FELICIA HEMANS fertile fifty five Foolscap 8vo forest francs per hectare French gardens give grass greater hectolitres Highlands horses immense improved increase Ireland Irish island KEITH JOHNSTON kind labour Lancashire land large farming large property leases least less Lord Lowlands manufactures manure means meat milk millions of hectares mountains natural nearly neighbours oats owing pasture population portion possess present produce profit proprietors prosperity quantity race reckoned rent revolution rural economy scarcely Scotch Scotland sheep SIR ARCHIBALD ALISON superior Sutherlandshire Sutton Waldron tenant thousand acres tion towns turnips United Kingdom vegetable vols wages wealth wheat whole wool
Populære avsnitt
Side 13 - OF ALISON'S HISTORY OF EUROPE, From the Fall of Napoleon to the Accession of Louis Napoleon.
Side 4 - CLASSICAL GEOGRAPHY, comprising, in Twenty Plates, Maps and Plans of all the important Countries and Localities referred to by Classical Authors, constructed from the best Materials, and embodying the Results of the most Recent Investigations.
Side 211 - Thy streams unfailing in the summer's drought: Unmatch'd thy guardian oaks ; thy valleys float With golden waves ; and on thy mountains flocks Bleat numberless ; while roving round their sides, Bellow the blackening herds in lusty droves.
Side 7 - PAUL. Analysis and Critical Interpretation of the Hebrew Text of the Book of Genesis. Preceded by a Hebrew Grammar, and Dissertations on the Genuineness of the Pentateuch, and on the Structure of the Hebrew Language.
Side 11 - PEOPLE'S EDITION, 31s. 6d. Life of John Duke of Marlborough. With some Account of his Contemporaries, and of the War of the Succession.
Side 6 - Life of Andrew Melville. Containing Illustrations of the Ecclesiastical and Literary History of Scotland in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Crown 8vo, 6s.
Side 5 - Illustrated with Portraits of Animals painted from the life ; and with 557 Engravings on Wood, representing the principal Field Operations, Implements, and Animals treated of in the Work. A New and Revised Edition, the third, in great part Rewritten. 2 vols. large 8vo, £-2, IDS. The Book of Farm-Buildings ; their Arrangement and Construction. By HENRY STEPHENS, FRSE, Author of 'The Book of the Farm ;
Side 398 - Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers" — a volume of verse which shows that Scotland has yet a poet. Full of the true fire, it now stirs and swells like a trumpet-note — now sinks in cadences sad and wild as the wail of a Highland dirge.— Quarterly Review.
Side 398 - Humour of a kind most rare at all times, and especially in the present day. runs through every page, and passages of true poetry and delicious versification prevent the continual play of sarcasm from becoming tedious."— Literary Gasette.
Side 7 - The best book I have ever met with." — Professor Johnston. " We have thoroughly examined these volumes ; but to give a full notice of their varied and valuabla contents would occupy a larger space than we can conveniently devote to their discussion ; we therefore, in general terms, commend them to the careful study of every young man who wishes to become a good practical farmer."— Times.