IMPROVEMENTS IN TILLAGE 547
1
18
place, has been recorded by Arthur Young, who has left us =. a
an inimitable picture of rural England, as he knew it during
this period of transition. He was a man of very varied tastes ind ,
and interests, who had engaged in farming on a small scale. Young,
His observations, when making a business journey into
Wales through the south of England, excited so much
interest among agriculturists that he planned a northern
tour, with the express object of gathering information on
the state of rural England; he took considerable pains to
render his enquiry as complete as possible. He advertised
in the newspapers which circulated within the area of his
projected tour, and some of his correspondents were able to
supply him with accurate statistical information; in other
cases, he had to rely on what he could gather in conversation
with illiterate farmers, who were suspicious of his motives
for prying into their affairs. “My business was so very un-
usual that some art was requisite to gain intelligence from
many farmers, etc, who were startled at the first attack.
I found that even a profusion of expense was often necessary
to gain the ends I had in view: I was forced to make more
than one honest farmer half-drunk, before I could get sober,
unprejudiced intelligence.” The contrast between his own
habits of accurate observation and the slovenliness of many
of the farmers, is very striking. He asserts that he had who tas ”
the qualifications for his work which came from practical observer
acquaintance with agriculture; but he adds, “ what is of
much more consequence towards gaining real experience,
I have always kept, from the first day I began, a minute
register of my business; insomuch that upon my Suffolk
farm, I minuted above three thousand experiments; in every
article of culture, expenses, and produce, including, among a
great variety of other articles, an accurate comparison of the
old and new husbandry, in the production of most vegetables.
But in this, I would by no means be thought to arrogate any
other than that plodding merit of being industrious and
accurate to which any one of the most common genius can
attain, if he thinks proper to take the trouble” His book
abounds with figures in which he was at pains to reduce
L Northern Tour, 1. xiii. 2 75. 1. ix.
35—2