[480]. Between 1767 and his death in 1820, he wrote no less than a hundred volumes on agriculture. His bet is given in Sir J. Sinclair’s Life by Archdeacon Sinclair, i. 253.
[481]. At the end of 1801.
[482]. Communications to Board of Agriculture, iv. 232–5 (1805). Cf. Ann. Reg., 1801, p. 131.
[483]. E. g. that the members should always use mixed instead of pure wheaten flour.
[484]. Ann. Reg., 1801, p. 129.
[485]. As was done, e. g., by Chief Justice Kenyon, King’s Bench, Rex v. John Rusby, Nov. 1799.
[486]. See J. S. Girdler, Forestalling, &c. (1800), S. J. Pratt’s poem on Bread for the Poor (1800).
[487]. Girdler, l. c. pp. 46,48, &c.
[488]. Philps, Progress of Great Britain, p. 132.
[489]. Cf. the figures given in Malthus’ Tract on Value, pp. 69–79, and in Professor Rogers’ Six Centuries of Work and Wages, pp. 487 seq.,—both of them taken chiefly from Eden on the Poor.