Collected Papers (original and Reprinted) in Prose and Verse, 1842-1862John Murray, 1862 - 293 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 61
Página 3
... fact becomes yet more instructive when we learn that " England proper " feeds about thirty out of the thirty - five millions of sheep on fifteen millions of hectares ; * Ireland and Scotland furnishing between them the remainder , in ...
... fact becomes yet more instructive when we learn that " England proper " feeds about thirty out of the thirty - five millions of sheep on fifteen millions of hectares ; * Ireland and Scotland furnishing between them the remainder , in ...
Página 4
... fact is , that we eat what our farmers can manage to grow for our subsistence . They cannot rear oxen , sheep , or swine in such numbers as to bring meat within the reach of the lower class , because they have nothing to give them ...
... fact is , that we eat what our farmers can manage to grow for our subsistence . They cannot rear oxen , sheep , or swine in such numbers as to bring meat within the reach of the lower class , because they have nothing to give them ...
Página 6
... fact is that ideas of profit , when once they have obtained possession of a farming mind , carry all before them ; thus a French traveller , naturally smitten with the desire of emulating our practice , and appreciating the merit of ...
... fact is that ideas of profit , when once they have obtained possession of a farming mind , carry all before them ; thus a French traveller , naturally smitten with the desire of emulating our practice , and appreciating the merit of ...
Página 8
... fact ; it forms one element of a great whole . It is not upon our cultivators that the accountability for our backward condition should be chiefly cast , neither ought we to rely on them altogether for future progress . And it is not so ...
... fact ; it forms one element of a great whole . It is not upon our cultivators that the accountability for our backward condition should be chiefly cast , neither ought we to rely on them altogether for future progress . And it is not so ...
Página 9
... fact of the infinite superiority of the soil of France over that of England ; not content with a general asser- tion , we have a comparison of the most elaborate kind set before us , proving that , tract for tract , zone for zone , the ...
... fact of the infinite superiority of the soil of France over that of England ; not content with a general asser- tion , we have a comparison of the most elaborate kind set before us , proving that , tract for tract , zone for zone , the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Collected Papers (original and Reprinted) in Prose and Verse, 1842-1862 Harriet Grote Vista completa - 1862 |
Collected Papers (original and Reprinted) in Prose and Verse, 1842-1862 Harriet Grote Vista completa - 1862 |
Collected Papers (Original and Reprinted) in Prose and Verse, 1842-1862 Harriet Grote Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
admiration agricultural ancient Boarstall Burnham Beeches Byron Captain Popple Captain Sayer character Charles Eyre church common condition cottage Coxe cultivation district Donington Park East Burnham England English Eyre fact farm farmers Faucher favour feeling France French friends furnished gentleman habits hamlet hand human husband inhabitants interest John John Hampden labour Lady Grenville Lady Grenville's land late Lavergne Léon Faucher less letter Liberty living Lord Byron Lord Grenville Lord John Russell Lord Moira Manor matter Memoirs ment mind Moore Moore's nation neighbours never noble obtain occupied parish party period persons political poor population portion possession Post 8vo present production regard rent residence rich rural Russia seems Sir Thomas Aubrey social society Steeple Claydon steward subsistence tion turf turves whilst woman women wood