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Gentleman's Magazine 1891 part 2 p.132
wit and active energy, which adopt every advantage of
chemistry, and adapt themselves to every demand of the
townspeople who are close to his fields. I was about to
obtain relief in somethings like Donald's method - "I shall
tamm the Boat if you will, and the Trouts - and the Loch
too!" - but it is better not.
Perhaps the revelations which have been made in Ireland will
prevent any strong representations appearing as to the
dwellings which are thought suitable for some of the
Yorkshire tenant-farmers. I can only judge from the limited
number of instances which I have seen, and I must say that
this fine old stronghold of the English yeoman is not
without its tenements which are only partially roofed,
destitute of every necessary adjunct of civilised life, and
utterly uninviting.
But even in the least luxurious farm-house, where the
inmates one and all have a hard struggle to earn a living,
there is much to interest and attract. The horse which makes
its weekly journey to the market town carries generally an
alluring assortment of produce. After an interval of decay,
butter-making is improving rather than declining of late
years; poultry-keeping is increasing; mushrooms and
blackberries are becoming staple articles of sale; and we
hope soon to see game and honey added to the list. Fruit has
been neglected, although it would do much to assist the
weekly income; vegetables and flowers are now very rarely
grown. Let the traveller point out any human race throughout
the world whose members are more naturally formed to bring
about a perfect state of farming than the race of Yorkshire
dalesmen. They are strong and active, careful, shrewd, and
persevering. If once started and filled with a little
cheerful confidence, some member of the family of the
moorland farmer would know each bee, be familiar with the
haunts of every hare, select good fruit trees, put in the
most suitable vegetables, and have a plentiful supply of
eggs and poultry at all times, besides being easily first in
all the larger branches of the business - horse, cattle, and
sheep. No one like a Yorkshireman can understand entirely
the pleasure of "the trivial round, the common task"; and he
would soon take earnestly to the only means of meeting
foreign competition. To encourage and assist him would not
be an unworthy effort of the landlord class and of the
public.
So much for the potentialities of this worthy tenant race.
Some of their ways are strange. I do not find them very much
at church. The question is worth asking - how far his
necessary duties to his stock excuse this abstinence, and
how far the clergy trouble themselves to interest and
attract their parishioners. Their absence from
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