A.D. 1689 1776. and small farmers. 54 PARLIAMENTARY COLBERTISM ndependent life. But throughout the country generally hey seem to have been regarded as lazy and undisciplined?, ind public opinion was in favour of forcing them to take to more regular habits? The remaining class, whose fate elicited most sympathy was that of the small holders—whether tenants or freeholders _ who worked the land on traditional methods, and lived on the produce. They were regarded as the backbone of the country; but their cultivation was apt to be slovenly? and there were difficulties in allowing it to continue side by side with the improvements which more adventurous men were making on their estates. There are many complaints from the earlier part of the seventeenth century of the encroach- ment on pasture rights, so that the small farmers could no longer feed their stock*; or encroachment on the common fields might interfere with the customary husbandry of a village. Sir W. Dolben’s Act in 1773, which facilitated the improvement of the common custom of tillage so as to render it less necessary to break up the common fields into severalty, was an attempt to epable the old race to move with the times® but the trend of circumstances was too strong”: and U « Destroying of Manors began Temp. Hen. VIII., but now common, whereby the mean people live lawless, nobody to govern them, they care for nobody, having n0 dependence on any body.” Aubrey, Introduction to Survey of North Wiltshire. Miscellanies 1714, p. 80. 1 8. Taylor, Common Good, 37, Pseudonismus, Considerations, 9. See below p. 567 n. 1. The advocates of enclosure continued to insist that the commons were & source of moral evil as well as of economic loss, Reports 1844. v. Questions 71, 774, 1811, 3091, 4203. 8 The chief excuse for pushing on the enclosure of common fields lay in the prevalence of weeds; a single lazy farmer who allowed his strips to be covered with thistles and allowed these thistles to seed, would do an infinity of mischief to all his neighbours. The case of Farmer Riccart near Audley End brought this home forcibly to Arthur Young. Southern Counties, 386. 4 Compare the very interesting petition from Wooton Bassett printed by J. Britton, Beauties of Wiltshire, mm. 89. 5 Aubrey, Topographical Collections, 181. 6 T. Stone a Bedfordshire surveyor, writes as if a common custom of tillage was prevalent in his experience; he approves of Sir W. Dolben’s Act (13 Geo. IIT. c. 81), but regards it as inoperative. Suggestions for rendering the Inclosure of common fields and waste lands a source of population and riches (1787), p. 13. In 1801 the Act was revived with the view of enabling occupiers to take a crop of potatoes (41 Geo. ITI. c. 20). Slater, The English Peasantry, 87. 7 The exceptional case of Weston Subedge, where the communal system was maintained till 1852, is fully described by C. R. Ashbee. Last Records of a (otawold Community.