The Whistler at the Plough: Containing Travels, Statistics, and Descriptions of Scenery & Agricultural Customs in Most Parts of England: with Letters from Ireland: Also "Free Trade and the League;" a Biographical History, Volumen1J. Ainsworth, 1852 |
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Página 10
... stands at the bottom of the park , three or four hundred yards from the churchyard , and is altogether , in situation , style , and adorn- ments , so out of keeping with the place where the body lies , ( so I thought , ) that I hastened ...
... stands at the bottom of the park , three or four hundred yards from the churchyard , and is altogether , in situation , style , and adorn- ments , so out of keeping with the place where the body lies , ( so I thought , ) that I hastened ...
Página 14
... standing on the identical spot where that most heart - swelling of national melodies - Rule Britannia - was first sung . James Thomson , its author , was one of those eminent visitors whom Frederick drew around him ; and in this ...
... standing on the identical spot where that most heart - swelling of national melodies - Rule Britannia - was first sung . James Thomson , its author , was one of those eminent visitors whom Frederick drew around him ; and in this ...
Página 17
... stand , we have these heights ploughed to the top on our right , while on our left are woods of goodly timber , stretching to the distance of several miles , interspotted by an occasional field of grass or corn , ultimately terminating ...
... stand , we have these heights ploughed to the top on our right , while on our left are woods of goodly timber , stretching to the distance of several miles , interspotted by an occasional field of grass or corn , ultimately terminating ...
Página 27
... standing in all shapes and positions , from the respectable cottage of the tradesmen with its garden , to the crumbling hovel of clay and wood occupied by the labourer , at a rent of L.3 and L.3 , 10s . a - year without a garden . It stands ...
... standing in all shapes and positions , from the respectable cottage of the tradesmen with its garden , to the crumbling hovel of clay and wood occupied by the labourer , at a rent of L.3 and L.3 , 10s . a - year without a garden . It stands ...
Página 36
... stands in a valley at the confluence of two streams , which form a goodly river named the Avon ; on each side of ... Standing on the high mound where once stood the citadel of Old Sarum , a mile and a half north of Salisbury , the view ...
... stands in a valley at the confluence of two streams , which form a goodly river named the Avon ; on each side of ... Standing on the high mound where once stood the citadel of Old Sarum , a mile and a half north of Salisbury , the view ...
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Términos y frases comunes
acres agriculture Ballinamuck ben't Berwickshire better bread called Castlebar cattle Clonmel conacre corn corn-law cottages crops cultivation district Dorset draining Dungarvan Earl East Lothian ejectment employed England English expense farm farmers field garden gentleman give grass hand heard horses improved Ireland Irish keep Kilkenny labourers land landlord landowners League lease Limerick live London look Lord Lord John Russell Lordship Lothian manufactures manure Mayo meadows meal ment miles neighbours never oats once paid parish park Parliament persons pigs plough political poor population potatoes present produce profit railway Rathkeale rent rich road Scotland seen sheep shew shillings shillings a-week side Sir Robert Sir Robert Peel Sligo soil squire tell tenantry tenants things tion told town trade trees turnips village wages wheat workhouse young
Pasajes populares
Página 78 - In witness whereof the parties above named have hereunto set their hands the day and year first above written...
Página 246 - Jacob said unto his sons, Why do ye look one upon another? Behold, I have heard that there is corn in Egypt: get you down thither, and buy for us from thence; that we may live, and not die.
Página 197 - When lime, whether freshly burnt or slacked, is mixed with any moist fibrous vegetable matter, there is a strong action between the lime and the vegetable matter, and they form a kind of compost together, of which a part is usually soluble in water. By this kind of operation lime renders matter, which was before comparatively inert, nutritive...
Página 395 - Above the green elms, that a cottage was near, And I said, " If there's peace to be found in the world, A heart that is humble might hope for it here...
Página 84 - John Bright is, in talent, a second Peel ; he was born in the same atmosphere. Let his career be observed — he has entered upon it.
Página 219 - The advantages of trenching over summer fallow are, in my opinion, very decided, as it is not only cheaper, but, as far as I can yet judge, much more effectual. I am so satisfied of this, not only from the experiments above noticed, but from the apparent condition of the land after it has carried the crop, that I have this autumn cultivated about a hundred acres with the spade, and the crops at present are very promising.
Página 202 - Since the period when the last statistical account was written, the state of the parish has been much improved ; farms, which were entirely pastoral, now bear luxuriant crops, the fields have been neatly inclosed with...
Página 600 - A truism," you may exclaim in Manchester ; " we know all this : tell us something new." Were this paper only to be read in Manchester, or within fifty miles of it, what has just been said, and what is about to be said, would probably be omitted.
Página 191 - ... there, and a few more, stunted and denuded of their ornamental branches, beyond, this park, with its fine valleys and finer eminences, once so magnificently wooded, now so shabbily bare, opened upon our view. The road went towards the left and again wheeled to the right. On the brow of a gentle slope stood the castle, like a huge ill-shaped barn — grey, treeless, shelterless, and in most part roofless.
Página 218 - ... could be had ; and as, in all agricultural operations, losing time is losing money, — as the rent must be paid whether the land is carrying a crop or not ; so that in taking one year to fallow the land, and another to grow the crop, two years' rent must be charged against the crop, or at least there must be a rent charged against the rotation of crops for the year the land was fallowed. As I felt satisfied that, by trenching with the spade, the land would derive all the advantage of a summer...