Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry,: As Well for the Champion Or Open Country, as for the Woodland Or Several; Together with A Book of Huswifery. Being a Calendar of Rural and Domestic Economy, for Every Month in the Year; and Exhibiting a Picture of the Agriculture, Customs, and Manners of England, in the Sixteenth CenturyLackington, Allen, and Company, 1812 - 374 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 21
... plants for planets , may be observed and compared . " Five hundreth points of good husbandrie : as well for the Champion or open countrie , as also for the Woodland or Severall , mixed in every Month with Huswiferie , over and besides ...
... plants for planets , may be observed and compared . " Five hundreth points of good husbandrie : as well for the Champion or open countrie , as also for the Woodland or Severall , mixed in every Month with Huswiferie , over and besides ...
Page 4
... Plant respe and rose , And such as those . Go , gather up mast , Ere time be past . Mast fats up swine , Mast kills up kine . 29 . Let hogs be rung , Both old and young . 30 . No mast upon oak , No longer unyoke . 31 . If hog do cry ...
... Plant respe and rose , And such as those . Go , gather up mast , Ere time be past . Mast fats up swine , Mast kills up kine . 29 . Let hogs be rung , Both old and young . 30 . No mast upon oak , No longer unyoke . 31 . If hog do cry ...
Page 20
... plant is one of the misfortunes arising from a dependence on foreign trade , which war or other casualties may interrupt . Our soil in many places is excellently adapted for the culture of hemp ; and in fact , we possess the 25. Hemp ...
... plant is one of the misfortunes arising from a dependence on foreign trade , which war or other casualties may interrupt . Our soil in many places is excellently adapted for the culture of hemp ; and in fact , we possess the 25. Hemp ...
Page 22
... plant acorns which escape their search . For animals which chew the cud , mast cannot be proper . 1 Though hogs may be left at li- berty in the woods , where they fre- quently do good by rooting ; there can be no doubt that they ought ...
... plant acorns which escape their search . For animals which chew the cud , mast cannot be proper . 1 Though hogs may be left at li- berty in the woods , where they fre- quently do good by rooting ; there can be no doubt that they ought ...
Page 32
... plant may gain strength before winter . 2 White wheat is more tender and sooner ripe than red wheat ; and therefore should , for obvious rea- sons , be first sown . 3 These maxims are confirmed by the experience of all ages , and need ...
... plant may gain strength before winter . 2 White wheat is more tender and sooner ripe than red wheat ; and therefore should , for obvious rea- sons , be first sown . 3 These maxims are confirmed by the experience of all ages , and need ...
Other editions - View all
Five Hundred Points of Good Husbandry: As Well for the Champion Or Open ... William Fordyce Mavor,Thomas Tusser No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
Abstract barley better cattle champion CHAP cheese Christ Christmas Cisley cock compas corn crave crop dairy doth dung edition of 1580 endeth Essex fallow farmer fear fence fimble fruit garden Geld give grass harvest hath hemp herbs Hesiod hop-yard hops horses husband husbandry huswife Ill husbandry Ill huswifery keep labour lambs land lesson Lest live look Lord Paget malt meadow meat Michaelmas needfull neighbour never Norf oats pasture pease Pilcrow plant plough Plough Monday poor profit quickset rake season seed seldom servant serve sheep shew short Remembrances soil sown stanza straw Succory Suffolk t'one thee thine thing Thomas Tusser thou thresh thrift thrive tillage tion tithing trees trim tumbrel VARIATION verjuice verse weather weeds wheat wife winter wive wood
Popular passages
Page 2 - Tide flowing is feared, for many a thing, Great danger to such as be sick, it doth bring ; Sea ebb, by long ebbing, some respite doth give, And sendeth good comfort, to such as shall live.
Page xl - North winds send hail, South winds bring rain, East winds we bewail, West winds blow amain; North-east is too cold, South-east not too warm, North-west is too bold, South-west doth no harm.
Page 275 - Wife, some time this week, if the weather hold clear, An end of wheat sowing we make for this year : Remember thou therefore, though I do it not, The seed-cake, the pasties, aud furmenty pot. Twice a-week Roast. Good plowmen, look weekly, of custom and right/ For roast meat on Sundays, and Thursdays at night.
Page xxxix - At Christmas play and make good cheer, For Christmas comes but once a year.
Page 23 - HUSWIFERIE, over and besides the booke of Huswiferie, corrected, better ordered, and newlie augmented to a fourth part more, with divers other lessons, as a diet for the Farmer, of the properties of Winds...
Page 20 - No sooner a sowing, but out by and by, with mother or boy, that alarum can cry; And let them be armed with sling or with bow, to scare away pigeon, the rook, and the crow.
Page 169 - It strengtheneth drink, and it flavoureth malt, And being well brewed, long kept it will last, And drawing abide — if ye draw not too fast.
Page 277 - In sickness, hato trouble ; seek quiet and rest. Remember thy soul; let no fancy prevail; Make ready to God-ward ; let faith never quail : The sooner thyself thou submittest to God, The sooner he ceaseth to scourge with his rod.
Page 14 - When gains were gone, and years grew on, And death did cry, from London fly, In Cambridge then, I found again, A resting plot ; In college best, of all the rest, With thanks to thee, O Trinity ! Through thee and thine, for me and mine, Some stay I got.
Page 75 - To welcome good neighbour, good cheer to have some. Good bread and good drink, a good fire in the hall, Brawn, pudding, and souse, and good mustard withal. Beef, mutton, and pork, shred pies of the best, Pig, veal, goose, and capon, and turkey well drest, Cheese, apples, and nuts, jolly Carols to hear, As then in the country, is counted good cheer.