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THE WAY TO BE RICH and RESPECTABLE.

ADDRESSED TO MEN of SMALL FORTUNE.

In this PAMPHLET is given

An Eſtimate, ſhewing that a Gentleman, with a Wife, four Children, and five Servants, may, reſiding in the Country, with a few Acres of Land, live as well as, and make an Appearance in Life equal to, a Man of 1000l. a year, and yet not expend 400l. including the Rent both of Houſe and Land; and ſtill be able, in the Courſe of 20 Years, to lay by 2500l.

The Plan of Living, in this Eſtimate, is not ideal only, but has been abſolutely purſued by the Author many Years.

Such as are fond of Farming, will here find the Expences attending, and the Profits ariſing from, the Cultivation of Land, feeding of Sheep, &c. &c.

The SECOND EDITION.

LONDON: Printed for the AUTHOR; And ſold by R. BALDWIN, Pater-noſter Row; and all Bookſellers in Town and Country.

[Price 1s. 6d.]

THE Way to be Rich and Reſpectable.
ADDRESSED TO MEN of ſmall FORTUNE.

[]

THE great degree of luxury to which this country has arrived, within a few years, is not only aſtoniſhing but almoſt dreadful to think of. Time was, when thoſe articles of indulgence, which now every mechanic aims at the poſſeſſion of, were enjoyed only by the Lord or Baron of a diſtrict. Men were then happy to be the vaſſals or dependants of that Lord, and prided themſelves in little but their ſubmiſſion and allegiance. This was the ſtate of things during feudal government: but as, on the increaſe of trade, riches increaſed; men began to feel new wants, they became gradually leſs hardy and robuſt, grew effeminate as their property accumulated, and ſighed for indulgences they never dreamed of before.—Methods of conveying theſe indulgencies [4]from one part of the kingdom to another were then ſtudied; roads were made paſſable, and carriages invented.

For many ages coaches were ſo great a luxury, that none but old families were ſeen in them; and if they attempted, once in a dozen years, to travel a few miles in one, perhaps, in the courſe of the journey, a whole village with their teams were called in aid, to drag the heavy vehicle out of the clay, and ſet it on its wheels again:— riding on horſeback being the only means of viſiting a neighbour, beyond the reach of a walk, and that only in the ſummer-time. And it is but a very few years ſince, that ladies went about, from place to place, upon a pillion. Made roads were then unknown, and ſo little deſire had the people to ſtir, beyond the bounds of their pariſh, that even mending them was never thought of.

On the eſtabliſhment of poſts, a general communication was opened between all parts of the kingdom, and people received intelligence of every little improvement that was made: a deſire to inſpect thoſe improvements, gave men an excentric turn; they were eager to ſee what was doing at ſome [5]diſtance from home, and rambled wide for that purpoſe. The inconvenience, and indeed impoſſibility of travelling, but at certain ſeaſons of the year, led the way to the making of roads; making of roads drew thouſands abroad, and a wiſh to be thought opulent by thoſe whom they viſited, led them into luxury of dreſs. The homeſpun garb then gave way to more coſtly attire, and reſpectable plainneſs was ſoon transformed into laughable frippery.

In a few years, refinements took place in manners, and well had it been, were they merely refinements; but the misfortune is, they ſoon ſpread into extravagancies, and from being commendable, became objects of cenſure. In the reign of Charles I. luxuries were every where ſeen, and though the Civil Wars for ſome time ſmothered them, they broke out afreſh in the reign of Charles II. Wealth then poured in upon the nation; gentlemen vied with each in the appearance they made; many by theſe means were ruined, eſtates changed their poſſeſſors, a fluctuation of property began, and every ſucceeding year gave birth to freſh wants and new expences. Luxury however had not then gained its preſent [6]footing: it is true, the profligacy of the capital made ſome inroads upon the country, but the inhabitants of the country looked on it with dread and aſtoniſhment. Some of the nobility and principal gentry, at this time, ſpent part of their winter in London, but the reſt of the year they lived amongſt their tenants with their uſual hoſpitality. The expences of this age were confined to the education of their children, to their houſes, their buildings, their furniture, their attendants and their entertainments; and their tenants and neighbours were conſiderably the better for it: the more they circulated their property within their own eſtates, the richer their eſtates became, and the more powerful and reſpectable they grew. Effeminacy of manners was then ſeen only in cities; balls and aſſemblies were ſcarcely known, and equipages far from being general.

Matters however reſted not here. Things gazed at with aſtoniſhment quickly grew familiar: the infection of the firſt claſs ſoon ſpread among the ſecond, and what they formerly cenſured, they preſently approved. Gentlemen of ſmall eſtates began annually to viſit the capital; they gradually made their viſits [7]longer and longer, till, at laſt, it became the faſhion to reſide only in the country, when the heat made it intolerable in town. Stagecoaches were eſtabliſhed, the communication between London and the country became more and more open, a taſte for elegancies ſpread itſelf through all ranks and degrees of men, and an equipage was conſidered as a neceſſary of life.

What is the caſe now? Are things otherwiſe than they were? No; expences are yet increaſing, and we are ſtill refining upon luxuries. The ſeveral cities and large towns of this iſland catch the manners of the metropolis, and are vicious and extravagant, in proportion to the wealth and number of their inhabitants. Scarce a town now, of any magnitude, but has its Theatre Royal, its concerts, its balls, and its card-parties. The notions of ſplendour and amuſement that prevail in the Capital are eagerly adopted; the various changes of the faſhion exactly copied, and the whole manner of life ſtudiouſly imitated. Flys and machines paſs from city to city; great towns become the winter reſidence of thoſe whom ſlenderneſs of fortune will not carry to London, and the country is every where deſerted.

[8]If I might preſume to dictate to the world, I would venture to ſay, that a man of landed property is never ſo reſpectable as when refident on his eſtate; when improving his lands and enriching his tenants; when his beneficence may be read in the looks of the poor; when his houſe is open, not with the ſtiffneſs of a public day, that tells the neighbourhood he would not be perplexed at another time, but with all the hoſpitality of an ancient Baron.

Gentlemen of very extenſive property may act as they pleaſe; the diſſipation and expences of a capital can no other ways injure them than in the opinion of their neighbours; but as to men of ſmall fortune, the leſs they ſee of London the better. Look round among the families we know, and we can eaſily trace the infection of the metropolis; the more they pay their viſits there, and the longer they continue, the more viſible are their follies, and not only their follies, but their failings and their vices. The honeſt frankneſs of the country gentleman is obliterated by the equivocal politeneſs of the courtier, and the open ſincerity of the good neighbour loſt in the artifice and deceit of the man of faſhion.

[9]For many years a country ſquire has been an object of ridicule: but, why? No other reaſon can be given, but that want of poliſh that too often characterizes the fops of the age. If we diveſt ourſelves of prejudice, he will not appear in ſo contemptible a light: it is true, he may want taſte and politeneſs, but he may poſſeſs qualities infinitely ſuperior. Honeſt unadorned freedom is preferable to ſtudied and faſhionable deceit. The country ſquire lives upon his eſtate, ſpends his patrimony among his tenants and his neighbours, (which form, as it were, but one family around him) and a ſpirit of hoſpitality opens his doors to every comer; while the fine gentleman viſits his domain, perhaps, but once in the ſummer, ſtays there as little as he can help, diſdains any familiarity with his neighbours, neglects his grounds, and leaves his tenants at the mercy of his ſteward, In ſhort, an effeminate life emaſculates the fine gentleman, and renders him unfit for any thing but ſipping of tea, and dealing the cards; whilſt the robuſt and manly exerciſes of the ſquire keep him healthy and hardy, and, inured to hunger, danger and fatigue, enable him, when [10]called upon in the public cauſe, to be of real ſervice to his country.

But it is to be lamented, that the true country gentleman is ſeldom to be found. The luxuries and effeminacies of the age have ſoftened down the hardy roughneſs of former times; and the country, like the capital, is one ſcene of diſſipation. If there be any economy in their expences, it is merely the ſaving of neceſſaries, to waſte on ſuperfluities: the private gentleman with three or four hundred pounds a year muſt have his horſes, his dogs, his pictures, his carriages, his parties of pleaſure, equally with him of five times his fortune: dreſs, ſhow and entertainment engroſs his attention; his lands are unimproved; debts accumulate upon him; he mortgages his eſtate; and, when he has lived to the end of his fortune, he either puts a dreadful period to his exiſtence, or wears out the remainder of his life, a beggar.

However alarming this picture may be, it is nevertheleſs a juſt one. As I take it, the happineſs of life conſiſts in health, eaſe, and competency, which is as much within the reach of a gentleman of three hundred pounds a-year, as one of three thouſand. If the articles [11]of living are dearer than they were ſome few years back, (and they certainly are, a hundred per cent.) it ought to quicken the induſtry of every one, to increaſe his income, if poſſible, or reduce his expence in proportion to his fortune.

It is not in the power of men, who have the income only of a ſmall eſtate to ſupport them, to encreaſe their revenues; but they may decreaſe their expences, or lay out their money to advantage. Frugality and economy have put many upon a footing with men of larger fortunes; and often made them far more reſpectable.—Nothing gives ſuperiority in life, but independency. Whilſt we are at the command of another, we are in a ſtate of ſubordination: it is being maſter of one's ſelf only, that makes a man free; and it is independency that makes him great.

Now, be our fortune as great as it will, we are never independent, whilſt we are in debt; and can a man be ſaid to be free, while it is in the power of his taylor or his ſhoemaker to confine him? A miſtaken notion, that a reduction in our way of living is diſgraceful, has led many a man to his ruin. Retrenching our expences, when we have lived too faſt, [12]is a proof of good ſenſe; it declares an abhorrence of our follies, and a determination to be in future free. It is highly degrading to make a figure at the expence of others. Villains of every denomination have done it; an honeſt man therefore will deſpiſe the thought; and, if his connections have inſenſibly led him on, from one expence to another, till he finds himſelf involved, he will purſue the earlieſt and the readieſt means to diſcharge his debts and ſet himſelf at liberty.

Such is the abſurdity in life, that men are rated in worth, according to the appearance they make. "Keep up appearances,"—ſaid a diſſipated poet,

Keep up appearances: there lies the teſt!
The world will give thee credit for the reſt.

This idle notion has brought on the deſtruction of thouſands. In this luxurious age, wealth is the only object of admiration; and to wear the appearance of wealth, we become expenſive and extravagant in our manner of living. Thus we go on, 'till we exhauſt the little property we poſſeſs; and, when we can keep ourſelves no longer afloat, on what is called Credit, we ſink into beggary and contempt.

[13]He who lives within his income, may be truly called a rich man. It is this that gives the Hollanders the reputation of being wealthy. They never live to the extent of their fortunes; and, of courſe, are able to do a deal of good. A family eſtate with them is ſeldom put up to ſale; whereas with us, inheritances are ever at market. A Dutchman contributes as largely and as chearfully to the exigencies of the ſtate, or to the erection of a public building, as he would to the repairs of his houſe, or the decoration of his garden.

To be reſpectable, it is not neceſſary to live in a certain line of life.—Every man may be conſidered as the centre of a circle; ſome of a larger, ſome of a ſmaller; and, in this light, he is of greater or of leſs importance, according to the character he bears.—He who has feweſt wants, and is moſt able to live within himſelf, is not only the happieſt, but the richeſt man; and if he does not abound in what the world calls Wealth, he does in independency.—Though he may not be a Peer of his own country, he is a Lord of the creation; may fill his ſtation equal to the firſt of men; and look down with pity and contempt [14]on the tinſelled ſycophant, though covered with an ermined robe, and parading with a ducal coronet.

I will allow, it is rather mortifying to ſee a neighbour of leſs pretenſions than ourſelves, living in a degree of ſplendour which we cannot reach. If his fortune be large enough, to admit of it, it is well; if not, he is an object of contempt. But, be it as it may, whilſt we have ſufficient to command the neceſſaries and indulgencies of life, (wanting the ſuperfluities) and do abſolutely enjoy them, we are in a ſituation equal to any man; and if we keep but a pair of horſes, and pay for that pair, we are far more reſpectable, in the eyes of ſenſible people, than he who is drawn in a coach and ſix, but his gate everlaſtingly crowded with importunate creditors.

Perſons with circumſcribed fortunes, or whoſe family encreaſes upon them, would do well to retrench their expences in time; or retire from towns, and lay out their money with economy. It is wonderful to think what an appearance in life a perſon may make for a little money, who reſides wholly in the country, and makes the moſt of what he poſſeſſes. [15]I ſpeak not to perſons in trade, as the ſcheme may be impracticable with them, but to gentlemen of ſmall fortune, who, in a rural retreat, with a few acres of land, may live as well on three or four hundred pounds a-year, as many do, on three times the ſum. The occupier of a middling farm enjoys all the neceſſaries and conveniencies of life, and many of its ſuperfluities. Where ſhall we meet with better health, than where temperance and exerciſe enliven our minds, invigorate our bodies, and give a conſtant flow of ſpirits? A country life is commonly a chearful one; we there meet few of thoſe rubs that embitter the hours of other men, and are the too conſtant attendants on ambition and vanity. It is there only that true happineſs and independency can be found; where honeſty and the beſt of manners mark the man; and where employment exempts from the ill effects of luxury

The following then is an eſtimate whereby, a gentleman, with a wife, four children, and five ſervants, living in the country, may, with frugality, ſave 2500l. in the courſe of twenty years, keep two of his children at a boardingſchool, [16]drink wine every day at his table, keep a carriage and four horſes, and make an appearance equal to 1000l. a year, for half the money; and may, with the further addition of a ſmall farm, live equally well for conſiderably leſs.

THE FAMILY ESTIMATE.

 Annually.
 £.s.d.
Rent of a houſe, with about 35 acres of land *6000
Taxes and tythes , about1150
Carried forward7150

[17]

 Annually.
 £.s.d.
Brought on7150
Bread, from the farm. See No. 2.   
Butter, ditto. See No. 5:   
Cheeſe, ditto. See No. 5.   
Milk and eggs, ditto. See ditto.   
Flour, accounted for with the bread No. 2.   
Meat and fiſh. See the eſtimate below, No. 3.1650
Poultry, from the farm   
Salt, vinegar, muſtard, oil, and ſpices, per week 1s. 7d.424
Vegetables and fruit from the garden *.   
Small beer, 2 gallons per day, which, brewed at home, and reckoned at 5d. per gallon, will allow ſufficient ale for the maſter's table, &c. without any   
Carried forward91124

[18]

 Annually.
 £.s.d.
Brought on91124
additional charge, that is 5s. 10d. per week, or *1534
Tea 2s. 6d. per week, or6100
Sugar for all purpoſes, 2s. 6d. per week, or6100
Candles, 6 lb. per week, at 7s. 8d. per dozen ., 3s. 10d. per week9194
Coals, 8 chaldron per year, laid in at 1l. 14s. per chaldron .13120
Charcoal, 10 ſacks, at 1s. 6d.0150
Carried forward14420

[19]

 Annually.
 £.s.d.
Brought on14420
Soap, ſtarch, blue, and occaſional aſſiſtance for waſhing five perſons, 7s. per week *1840
Whiting, fullers earth, &c. 2d. per week , or088
Wine, punch, &c. 13160
Threads, tapes, and all ſorts of haberdaſhery, 1s. 9d. per week, or4110
Powder, pomatum, blacking, &c. 10 6d.s per week160
Carried forward18278

[20]

 Annually.
 £.s.d.
Brought on18278
Repair of furniture; earthen ware, &c. 3s. per week, or7160
Wages of a man ſervant, to act in the capacity of coachman, and to manage the farm900
Livery for ditto, to be worn occaſionally300
Wages of a man ſervant, to act in the capacity of gardener * and footman1200
Carried forward21438

[21]

 Annually.
 £.s.d.
Brought on21438
Livery for ditto, to be worn occaſionally when waiting at table, or following the carriage400
Boy; no wages, but cloathed from his maſter's old wardrobe *500
The wages of two maids, 1400
Two children kept at ſchool, 20l, each4000
Extra expences attending them, as breaking up, being at home in the holidays, pocket money, &c.600
Cloaths for four children, (the mother's caſt cloaths to be made up occaſionally)2400
Carried forward30738

[22]

 Annually.
 £.s.d.
Brought on30738
Cloaths for the maſter, with pocket expences3500
Ditto for the miſtreſs, with ditto3000
Apothecary engaged by the year, (no bill ſent in)400
Expences of the farm, ſee No. 2.3800
Duty of a four-wheeled carriage,500
Wear and tear of ditto, and harneſs * for even money5164
There muſt be laid up one year with another, for 20 years, in order to leave each child and a widow, if there ſhould be one, 500l. each7500
 £. 50000

OBSERVATION.

[23]

It may not be unneceſſary to remark, that 15 or 20 per cent. may be ſaved by paying ready money for what we buy; beſides preventing things being charged the family never had. Buy your grocery and ſuch things, as country ſhop-keepers have from London, always in London; and ſuch things they purchaſe at diſtance from town, endeavour to get at the firſt hand in the country.

No. 2. The Farming-Eſtimate.

Acres. £.s.d.
13Of graſs for horſes. See the horſe-eſtimate, No. 4. p. 30. nine acres of this are to be laid up for hay. The expence of making and thatching, with the aſſiſtance of your own men and horſes, will be about 5s. per acre250
13Carried forward250

[24]

Acres. £.s.d.
13Brought on250
9Of graſs for cows. See the cow-eſtimate, No. 5. p. 33. four acres of this are to be laid up for hay the expences, as above, 5s. per acre100
  350
8Of oats will yield about 36 quarters of which the four horſes will conſume 17½ qrs. See the horſe. Qrs. eſtimate, No. 4. p. 30. 17½   
 For Poultry and pigs 13½   
 For ſeed to re-crop the ground — 5   
 Quarters 36   
 The expences attending this, will be as follow,
 £.s.d.
Mowing0120
Getting in, about100
Threſh. 36 qrs. at 1s. 3d.250
3170
30Carried forward720

[25]

Acres. £.s.d.
30Brought on720
2Of wheat, producing 40 buſhels, 8 gallon meaſure, will furniſh a family of 9 perſons with flower and bread, at a quartern loaf, each per week, and leave 5 buſhels of grain to recrop the land. The expence attending it will be * as follows:
 £.s.d.
Weeding050
Reaping100
Threſhing0126
Getting in300
1176
32Carried forward8196

[26]

Acres. qr.buſh.£.s.d.
32Brought on  8196
3Of beans, will produce about 7½ quarters of which it will take to fatten twelve porkers, about 1½ buſhel each24   
35Four bacon hogs at 1 quarter each40   
 Seed to re-crop the land10   
  74   
 The expences attending the crop will be
 £.s.d.
Setting0150
Hoeing twice180
Cutting0100
Threſhing0113
  343
 Cutting 450 faggots of furze, at 3s. per hundred, for heating the oven twice a-week  0140
 Carried forward  12179

[27]

Brought on12179
Cutting 1250 faggots of furze for heating the copper, daily *2110
Extra-expences on 4 horſes. See the horſe eſtimate, No. 4. page 30.7100
Decline in value of 3 cows. See the cow-eſtimate, No. 5. page 33.2100
Wear of harneſs annually, about0140
Wear of Implements ditto, about6170
Expence of fences and other ſundries, for even money503
 £.3800

OBSERVATIONS.

N. B. The crops on the lands ſhould be changed every year, but this will not alter the real product.

[28]In cultivating theſe 35 acres of land, the horſes will be employed only about 52 days in the year, which, on an average, is only one day in the week: of courſe your farming ſervant will often be at liberty to threſh your corn, and do many other things: this will ſave much of the money I have charged for labour.

I have allowed a fourth horſe in this eſtimate, as, ſhould the gentleman be fond of riding, he may keep one for that purpoſe. The other three I would recommend ſhould match in colour and ſize, and ſhould have nag tails; as, ſhould one fall lame, another is ready to ſupply its place; beſides they may occaſionally be uſed as ſaddle-horſes; or were the whole four to match, with a very little extra-expence in the harneſs, and an additional jacket to lay by, they might all be put to the carriage at times.

No. 3 The Meat-Eſtimate.

Twelve porkers ſhould be killed yearly, that is, about one a-month, and 4 hogs for bacon, thus, [29]

Twelve porkers, at 7 ſtone each, or 56 lb. give of meat672 lb.
Four hogs * for bacon, at 25 ſtone each, or 100 lb. gives800 lb.
 1472

1472 lb. of meat is about 28lb. weekly, equal to four days proviſion for 9 perſons, and

Fowls, ducks, turkeys, pigeons and geeſe, will give the fifth day's proviſion for the ſame number.

The expence of the above is included in the farm. All that is neceſſary then to be paid for meat, is the proviſion of a days: thus [30]

 £.s.d.
9lb. beef or mutton, at 5d.039
5lb. fiſh * at 6d.026
Per week,063
Or per year,£. 1650

No. 4. The Horſe-Eſtimate.

Horſes may be turned out to graſs from about may 20, to October 20, they then ſhould be taken into the ſtable and ſtraw-fed, with corn, till about February 20; after this they ſhould be fed with hay and corn till May 20 again.

Now it will require of graſs to feed 4 horſes through the ſummer, with the addition of lattermath and turning into ſtubble,4 Acres.
When fed with hay, each horſe will eat about 5 truſſes per week; [31]Brought on but I allow 6 truſſes to afford for hay cut into chaff; this amounts to about two loads for each horſe; 8 for the four.4 Acres.
If a pair of theſe horſes are uſed often in the carriage, they ſhould never be kept upon ſtraw; of courſe, while the other two are fed on ſtraw, theſe will eat about 5½ loads more of hay; this, with the 8 loads reckoned above, will be the produce of9
 Acres 13

I allow each horſe half a peck of oats a-day, from Oct. 20 to May 20; that is, 3 quarters, 2 buſhels, 1 peck, which, for the four, is about 13 quarters; but it may be neceſſary to give the carriage horſes the ſame quantity all the ſummer, which in the whole conſumes 17 quarters and a half. The other two horſes need no corn in the ſummer, unleſs; very hard worked.

N.B. To ſave graſs and oats, green clover might be given to horſes in the ſtable, till near [32]the middle of October; for while they feed on this, corn is not neceſſary.

 £.s.d.
Horſes ſhould have as much chaff as they will cat. Beſides the chaff of the corn, give each a buſhel of cut chaff daily (hay and ſtraw mixed) which will coſt a half-penny per buſhel cutting, and that for the time he is in the ſtable will be 210 buſhels, &c.089
Shoeing, once in ſix weeks, at 1s. and 10d. per ſet; the price paid by farmers,0148
Phyſic, per even money *067
Decline in value of 4 horſes annually600
 7100

No. 5. The Cow-Eſtimate,

[33]
 Acres.
Suppoſing a cow to be dry three months in the year, during which time ſhe may be fed upon ſtraw, there will require only 9 months good feed. Now, one acre and a half of graſs will feed her well from the time you lay your paſtures up for hay; ſuppoſe from the middle of April to the middle of October (ſix months) with the occaſionally turning them on the common and into the ſtubbles. The ſpring graſs of thoſe paſtures, before laid up for hay, will keep her from the middle of February to the middle of April (one month) ſo that there are but two months to feed her on hay, and ſhe will, in three months, allowing a little for waſte, eat about two loads, that is at the rate of 40lb. per day. Thus the three cows will eat ſix loads, the produce of4 Acres.
And alſo the graſs in ſummer of
 

[34]A cow, with this keeping, will yield milk and cream for the family, and on an average, about 132lb. of butter and 215lb. of cheeſe, but in order to this they muſt be young cows.

Three cows then will yield annually 396lb. or about 7lb. and a half per week, enough for the family.

Alſo 645lb. of cheeſe annually, that is about 12 lb. per week, enough for the family.

The ſkimmed milk will go a great way towards keeping the pigs; and three calves annually will ſerve to meet other little expences not thought of. Care muſt be taken to have two of theſe cows always in milk.

 £.s.d.
The decline in value of theſe cows will be annually, about2100

IF a gentlemen, by way of amuſement, or leſſening his expences, will add about fifty acres of land more to his thirty-five, he may, with the ſame number of ſervants, excepting a little aſſiſtance at harveſt, reap the following advantages, with this difference only, that it will require a little more of his own attention, [35]and leave his men and horſes leſs at leiſure to wait upon him. He muſt then ſend the produce of his farm to market, and, inſtead of keeping a horſe merely for the ſaddle, he muſt admit him to draw occaſionally: But even here, he may have his horſes for his pleaſure, on an average, two or three days in the week.

Theſe fifty acres I will ſuppoſe to be arable, and as land will produce more one year than another, I will give a courſe of crops for ſeven years, and ſhew the annual profits on an average. The courſe then ſhall be, ſuppoſing the ground to be tolerably good,

  • 1 Turneps
  • 2 Wheat
  • 3 Barley
  • 4 Clover
  • 5 Clover
  • 6 Beans
  • 7 Oats

Although it will be neceſſary to have ſome of each kind every year, the amount, at the year's end, with good management, will be the ſame.

[36]

TURNEPS.
The natural expences in the firſt courſe will be as follows:
Expences.£.s.d.
Seed, 2lb. per acre, at 6d. per lb.2100
Hoeing twice, at 10s. per acre2500
Rent, tythe and taxes, 25s. per acre62100
Extra tear and wear, fencing, &c.800
 9800

Produce.£.s.d.
Fifty acres, fed with ſheep12500
Expences9800
Profit2700

2. WHEAT.
Expences.£.s.d.
Seed 2½ buſh. per. acre, at 5s. 6d.3470
Carried forward3470

[37]

 £.s.d.
Brought on3470
Weeding, 5s. per acre12100
Reaping, 10s.2500
Aſſiſtance to get it in300
Threſhing 25 loads, at 3s. per quarter, and binding ſheaves18150
Rent, tythes, &c.62100
Wear and tear, and fencing, &c.800
 16420

Produce.   
Fifty acres, at 2½ quarters at 11l. per load27500
One hundred load of ſtraw10000
 37500
Expences16420
Profit210180

3. BARLEY, and Clover ſown amongſt it.
Expences.   
Seed-barley, 4 buſhels per acre, at 4s. per buſhel4000
Weeding, 5s. per acre12100
Carried forward52100

[38]

 £.s.d.
Brought on52100
Expences.   
Mowing, 2s.500
Raking, 2s500
Additional aſſiſtance to houſe it300
Threſhing 225 quarters, at 2s. per quarter22100
Rent, tythes62100
Clover ſeed, 10lb. per acre12100
Wear and tear, fencing, &c.800
 17100

Produce.   
Fifty Acres producing 4 1/ [...] quarter per acre; two hundred and 25 qrs. at 32s.36000
Expences17100
Profit18900

45. CLOVER.
Expences.   
Mowing, at 2s. 6d. per acre650
Making and ſtacking 5s. ditto12100
Carried forward18150

[39]

 £.s.d.
Brought on18150
Ditto the ſecond crop18150
 37100
Binding 150 loads, at 1s. 6d. per load1150
Wear and tear, fencing, &c.800
 56150
Rent, tythes, and taxes62100
 11950
Ditto the ſecond year11950
 238100

Produce.   
Fifty acres at the two crops, about 3 loads per acre, at 40s. per load30000
Fifty acres after-graſs, fed by cattle, at 10s. per acre2530
 22500
Ditto the ſecond year32500
Carried forward65000

[40]

 £.s.d.
Brought on65000
Expences two years238100
Profit418100

6. BEANS.
Expences.   
Seed, two buſhels per acre, at 4s.2000
Setting, at 5s. per acre12100
Hoeing, twice, at 12s.3000
Cutting, at 5s.12100
Aſſiſtance to get in300
Threſhing, 150 qrs. at 1s. 6d.1150
Rent, tythes, &c.62100
Wear and tear, &c.800
 159150

Produce.   
Fifty acres, producing three quarters per acre, at 32s.24000
Expences15950
Profit80150

[41]

7. OATS.
Expences.£.s.d.
Seed, 5 buſhels per acre, at 2s. 6d.3150
Weeding, at 2s.500
Mowing, at 1s. 6d.3150
Raking, at 2s.500
Hands to get in300
Threſhing 250 quarters, at 1s. 3d.15126
Rent, &c.62100
Wear, &c.800
 13426

Produce.   
Fifty acres, yielding five quarters per acre, at 1l. if ſold at a proper time25000
Expences13426
Profit115176

[42]

A general View of the PROFITS for the ſeven Years.
 £.s.d.
Turneps2700
Wheat210180
Barley18900
Clover, two years,411100
Beans80150
Oats115176
 103506
The eighth year ſhould lie fallow, to renew the ground; therefore deduct the rent, &c. and wear and tear, &c, of this year70100
 964106

964l. 10s. left profit in eight years, is at the rate of 120l. 10s. per year. This deducted from 425l. the amount of the family expences, page 22. leaves 305l. 10s. the total expences of keeping the family, &c.

OBSERVATIONS.

[43]

All lands will not yield the ſame courſe of crops, but the produce in ſeven years will be nearly the ſame.

I have ſuppoſed the ground to be tolerably good, and a particular attention to be paid in keeping it clean, well dreſſed, and in good tilth: for this purpoſe no ſtraw is to be ſold off the farm but wheat ſtraw. It is all to be converted into fodder and dung.

If the farming ſervant can be ſpared at times, he may threſh much of the grain himſelf; this will be a ſaving: and there are ſtill many advantages to be reaped, if a man will enter into the ſpirit of farming, from a neighbouring common, in breeding ſheep, bringing up heifers, &c. and keeping geeſe.

In ſhort, a tolerable good farm will, upon an average, produce, with good management, 30s. or 40s. per acre, free of all expences.

The price that corn bears, will often make an alteration in the profits of a farm, but I have ſet it a medium price.

If you wiſh to keep dogs, I will ſuppoſe [44]the game you kill, to pay the expence of them.

To ſuch as wiſh to keep a few ſheep, the following eſtimate will be acceptable.

Fine large ewes with lamb, may be bought in at Michaelmas, at about 22s. each, which in the July following will ſell again for

 £.s.d.
 110
The lamb will then ſell for170
The wool of the two, ſhorn before ſold, will ſell for about046
 2126
Deduct the firſt coſt120
Leaves profit1106

OBSERVATIONS.

It will take about an acre of graſs to fatten five ſheep; but, where graſs is not plentiful, they may be fed on ſtubble till Chriſtmas, then on turneps till May-day; next on rye, and then on clover till ſold. No meadows will do for ſheep in the winter, that are wet enough to let them ſink up to the firſt joint of their legs; it will rot them.

[45]Note. An acre of turneps will feed 100 for the ſpace of ten days, or about eight ſheep from Chriſtmas-day to May-day.

N. B. Dung of ſheep, when folded upon land, for the richneſs of the manure, is equal in value to the profits ariſing from the ſale of them.

The principle Implements neceſſary for a ſmall Farm, are

  • A waggon, and a harneſs for ditto.
  • A broad-wheeled cart, and a harneſs for ditto,
  • A plough.
  • A pair of large harrows.
  • Ditto ſmaller.
  • A roller.
  • A winnow.
  • A ſeed kit.

Shovels, rakes, meaſures, ſacks, ſieves, &c. and the whole may be bought new for about 60l.

If a gentleman does not underſtand farming, he may ſoon acquire the knowledge from a clever ſervant.

[44]
[...]
[45]
[...]

[46]The following eſtimate will ſerve to ſhew into what expences ſome perſons run, for want of produce and economy, expending that on a carriage, which would maintain a family comfortably and elegantly.

The Expence of keeping a Poſt-coach and Four, in a Gentleman's own Stable, if he is obliged to buy his Provender.

 £.s.d.
Rent of a ſtable in town, for four horſes1000
Coachman's wages1600
Board wages *, at 8s. per week20160
Livery complete1000
Poſtilion's wages1200
Board wages for ditto, 8s. per week20160
Livery complete1000
Duty of carriage500
Oil, greaſe, and wear of combs, &c.2120
Set of wheels uſed in about two years400
Carried forward11140

[47]

 £.s.d.
Brought on11140
Farrier, on an average, a ſet of ſhoes to each horſe once in about ſix weeks3150
Hay, about 7 ½ truſſes per week, or about 11 loads per year, at 3l. 10s.38100
Oats, a peck a day for each horſe, that is, about 46 quarters, at 18s. per quarter *2680
Straw, about 6 loads, or 4 truſſes per week, at 25s. per load7100
Wear and tear, and new painting once in two years 3600
Decline in value of the horſes 2400
Every additional horſe for the ſaddle will coſt as follows, and indeed there is no coach and four to be kept without five horſes, leſt one ſhould fall lame at any time.   
Stabling2100
Farrier100
For ſhoes0186
Carried forward251156

[48]

 £.s.d.
Brought on251156
Hay, about 3 ½ truſſes, or 5 loads17100
Oats, a peck per day, about 11 quarters9180
Straw, one truſs per week, about 1 load and a half1176
Decline in value of the horſe600
Wear of ſaddles, &c. about0136
 287146

Note. Theſe expences may be reduced, but not to make a genteel appearance. No allowance is here made for the occaſional death of a horſe, nor for waſte of hay and corn.

N. B. There are turnpikes, and ſundry charges, when out, that ought to be conſidered alſo as part of the expence of keeping a carriage.

FINIS.
Notes
*
Of theſe 35 acres, about 22 ſhould be graſs. If ſomuch paſture land cannot be got, ſhift muſt be made by laying down lands with artificial graſſes, ſuch as clover, lucerne, ſaintſoin, &c. The additional produce of which will ſufficiently atone for the expences attending them. Many houſes may be procured for this price, and geateel once, even within 20 miles of London; if further off, for much loſs.
Suppoſing the houſe and land rated at 40l. a-year, and the houſe to pay for 20 windows. I allow 2s. per acre for tythe, but nothing for the highway rate, which is 1l. 7s. per annum. as the horſes may do the ſtatute duty.
*
I have not reckoned ſeeds, as the garden will product theſe.
*
In this eſtimate a quarter of malt is allowed to 76 gallons of ſmall beer, and 36 gallons of ale. The copper heated with furze, or heath, cut from the neighbouring common, or wood off the farm.
Mould and common candles may be bought together, at the price of common ones. Wax candles in the parlour occaſionally, will not make 20 ſhillings ayear difference in the expence, they burning double the time of tallow.
Theſe muſt be fetched from the wharf by your own horſes, and the copper muſt be heated daily with furze, or heath, which may be cut on the neighbouring common. See the farming-eſtimate, No. 2. page 23.
*
The two men to be waſhed out, at their own expence.
Sand, brick-duſt, wood to light fires, &c. are not reckoned, as theſe may be procured in the country without money.
Wine, allowing five bottles a week, half of it Port wine, half made wine. Port wine, if a pipe, is bought between two or three friends, and bottled at home, will not coſt the buyer more than 1s. 5d. per bottle; the made wine half the price, together, 5s. 3 ¾d. What is ſaved in wine, may be expended in brandy or rum.
10
§ The maſter and miſtreſs muſt each dreſs their own hair.
*

The following book will aſſiſt upon this buſineſs, price One Shilling, paſted in marble paper, and not bigger than a pocket almanack, ſold by J. BELL in the Strand, the Garden-Companion for gentlemen and ladies; or, a Calendar, pointing out what ſhould be done every month, in the green-houſe, flower, fruit, and kitchen garden: With the proper ſeaſons for ſowing, planting, &c. (with the time when the produce may be expected) ſo as to have a regular ſucceſſion of flowers and vegetables throughout the year. To which are added, a complete lift of the flowers and ſhrubs that blow each month. With ſome curious obſervations.

With the help of this book, any country ſervant may be inſtructed to look after a ſmall piece of ground at a very little expence; make that ground go a great way, and ſupply their tables with every thing in ſeaſon. The ladies alſo are here inſtructed how to diſpoſe their flowers to the beſt advantage, and to procure a general bloom throughout the year.

*
This boy to drive the plough occaſionally, or ride and drive when the carriage is uſed as a poſt-charſe, or to ſend on meſſages.
They may be had for much leſs, at a diſtance from London.
*
By applying to ſome coach-makers, you may change your ſet of wheels every year for a ſtrong ſecond-hand ſet at 1l. the ſet, which will reduce the expences of this article. A good faſhionable ſecond-hand carriage may be frequently met with for about 20l. which, when freſh painted, at about the expence of 6l. will look as well as new.
*
The corn muſt be ground and ſifted at home with a hand-mill, &c. the bran will then help to keep the hogs. Yeaſt is not reckoned in the article of bread, there being methods to preſerve yeaſt; or the yeaſt from the brewings may be ſoid, which will buy yeaſt when wanted.
*
Four faggots will heat either the oven or the copper. The expence attending this article may be ſaved, as the men ſervants may cut the furze at leiſure times. The farming man ſhould underſtand all kinds of huſbandry; hedging, thatching, &c. &c. Thus, many of the expences charged might be ſaved.
*
One ſow is ſufficient to ſupply the family with ſixteen hogs yearly.
Leſt living on ſwine's freſh four days in a week ſhould be thought improper, it may be obſerved, that your butcher will occaſionally take a ſide of pork and give other meat in exchange, thus you need eat pork only two days in the week and the other two, bacon or ham with poultry.
*
Salt fiſh, bought of a wholeſale dealer, will not coſt more than 3d. per lb. which will allow more to be paid for freſh fiſh: beſides, if near a river, ſome kinds of fiſh may be caught occaſionally.
*
Your ſervant ſhould be able to bleed, and as to phyſic, the Gentleman's Pocket-Farrier, price 1s. ſold by J. BELL in the Strand, London, will direct how to cure an ailing horſe, at even a leſs expence than this; every remedy in that book, has been proved experimentally efficacious. Note, It is ſo ſmall as to lie in a pocket book, and teaches you how to treat a horſe, if ill upon the road.
*
This article is much the ſame, whether he is kept in the houſe or not.
*
Beans are not neceſſary, unleſs the horſes are very hard worked.
This eſtimate ſuppoſes the equipage to be kept up with a degree of elegance.
Horſes of about 40l. value each.
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Zitationsvorschlag für dieses Objekt
TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 5066 The way to be rich and respectable Addressed to men of small fortune In this pamphlet is given an estimate shewing that a gentleman may live as well as a man of 1000l a year and yet no. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-5ED3-D