The farmer's encyclopædia, and dictionary of rural affairs: embracing all the most recent discoveries in agricultural chemistry : adapted to the comprehension of unscientific readers |
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Page 31
... horse's tushes do not appear for some time after the foal - teeth are cast , and the new ones come in their room , it is gene- rally owing to the foal - teeth having been pulled out before their time , by the breeders or dealers in horses ...
... horse's tushes do not appear for some time after the foal - teeth are cast , and the new ones come in their room , it is gene- rally owing to the foal - teeth having been pulled out before their time , by the breeders or dealers in horses ...
Page 32
... horses are apt to grow grey over their eye - brows , and very often over a great part of their faces ; and all horses , 6 12 1 A 3 10 18 when very old , sink more or less in their backs ; and some horses , that are naturally long ...
... horses are apt to grow grey over their eye - brows , and very often over a great part of their faces ; and all horses , 6 12 1 A 3 10 18 when very old , sink more or less in their backs ; and some horses , that are naturally long ...
Page 43
... horses . ( Varro , i . 50 .; Virg . G. i . 317 .; Colum . ii . 21 .; Pliny , xviii . 30. ) They do not seem to have ever bound their corn into sheaves . ( Colum . ii . 21. ) Threshing was performed by the tramp- ling of oxen and horses ...
... horses . ( Varro , i . 50 .; Virg . G. i . 317 .; Colum . ii . 21 .; Pliny , xviii . 30. ) They do not seem to have ever bound their corn into sheaves . ( Colum . ii . 21. ) Threshing was performed by the tramp- ling of oxen and horses ...
Page 53
... horses . The attention and care that have thus been paid to their breeding have met with an appropriate recompense . In no other country is there to be found such breeds of ... Horses . - That the ancient Britons had horses with 53 E 3.
... horses . The attention and care that have thus been paid to their breeding have met with an appropriate recompense . In no other country is there to be found such breeds of ... Horses . - That the ancient Britons had horses with 53 E 3.
Page 54
... Horses . - That the ancient Britons had horses with which they impelled their war chariots , we know upon the authority of those who had seen them - Cæsar , Strabo , and others . In the epitome of Dion Cassius , by Xiphelin , those horses ...
... Horses . - That the ancient Britons had horses with which they impelled their war chariots , we know upon the authority of those who had seen them - Cæsar , Strabo , and others . In the epitome of Dion Cassius , by Xiphelin , those horses ...
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acid acre agriculture alumina animal appear applied ashes bark barley beans birds bones branches bread breed bushels cabbage carbonate carbonic acid cattle clay cock's-foot colour common contain corn covered crop cultivated Dict disease drachms drill dung early earth eggs employed England farm farmer farriery feet fiorin Flor flowers fruit garden grain grass green ground growing growth gypsum horses inches insects Journ kind labour land larvæ leaves lime loam magnesia manure milk mixed nutritive matter oats panicle pastures peat perennial plants plough portion potash produce provincial quantity riety roots salt sand says Scotland season seed sheep Silica silicious soil sometimes sown species spring stalks stamens stem straw substances surface tenant term tion tivated trees turnips varieties vegetable weeds wheat winter wood yellow
Popular passages
Page 158 - ... shall be guilty of felony ; and, being convicted thereof, shall be liable, at the discretion of the Court, to be transported beyond the seas for life, *or for any term not less than seven years, or to be imprisoned for any term not exceeding four years : and, if a male, to be once, twice, or thrice publicly or privately whipped (if the Court shall so think fit,) in addition to such imprisonment...
Page 37 - Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, Till there be no room, and ye be made to dwell alone in the midst of the land...
Page 36 - And Mesha king of Moab was a sheepmaster, and rendered unto the king of Israel an hundred thousand lambs, and an hundred thousand rams, with the wool.
Page 104 - Tis with our judgments as our watches, none Go just alike, yet each believes his own.
Page 42 - The consequence was, that they who had always disdained the Roman language, began to cultivate its beauties. The Roman apparel was seen without prejudice, and the toga became a fashionable part of dress. By degrees the charms of vice gained admission to their hearts: baths...
Page 83 - Thy plants are an orchard of pomegranates, with pleasant fruits, camphire, with spikenard, Spikenard and saffron; calamus and cinnamon, with all trees of frankincense; myrrh and aloes, with all the chief spices: A fountain of gardens, a well of living waters, and streams from Lebanon.
Page 256 - Gallon is determined by the act to be such measure as shall contain ten pounds avoirdupois of distilled water, weighed in air, at the temperature of 62° Fahrenheit, and the barometer at 30 inches, and such measure is declared to be the
Page 36 - And on all hills that shall be. digged with the mattock, there shall not come thither the fear of briers and thorns : but it shall be for the sending forth of oxen, and for the treading of lesser cattle.
Page 277 - Thus he changes from the walk to the trot, and from the trot to the gallop, according to his inclination. In each of...
Page 98 - If any notable quantity of sulphate of lime (gypsum) existed in the soil, a white precipitate will gradually form in the fluid, and the weight of it will indicate the proportion. Phosphate of lime, if any exist, may be separated from the soil after the process for gypsum. Muriatic"' acid must be digested upon the soil, in quantity more than sufficient to saturate the soluble earths ; the solution must be evaporated, and water poured upon the solid matter. This fluid will dissolve the compounds of...