Griggs & Dickinson—Printers, Whitehall.


FOOTNOTES:

[1] The best practical illustration of this opinion is found in the valley of the Po—where "every rood of earth maintains its man."

[2] Xenophon wrote several treatises on husbandry, and gave public lectures on it at Scillonte, whither a weak and wicked government had banished him.

[3] For the first part of this assertion we have the authority of Pliny; for the latter, the practice of their colonies both in Gaul and Britain.

[4] Of this last, there were three kinds, neither of which is now cultivated.

[5] The lupinus albus of Linneus: "many other vegetables are used for this purpose, particularly the bean, but do not answer as well as the lupin; when this is heated in an oven and then buried, it forms the most powerful of all manures." T. C. L. Simonde. Tableau de L'agriculture Toscane.

[6] Tanus and Numa were deified for services rendered to agriculture.

[7] Cicero de officiis. L. 2.