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Annals of the parish ; and, The Ayrshire legatees

de John Galt

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13Cap1,523,207 (1.5)Cap
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER XXXIX Year 1798 A dcai th?Mr Cayenne takes measures to mitigate the evil?He receives kindly some Irish refugees?His daughter's marriage. JL HIS was one of the heaviest years in the whole course of my ministry. The spring was slow of coming, and cold and wet when it did come: the dibs1 were full, the roads foul, and the ground, that should have been dry at the seed-time, was as claggy as clay and clung to the harrow. The labour of man and beast was thereby augmented; and all nature being in a state of sluggish indisposition, it was evident to every eye of experience that there would be a great disappointment to the hopes of the husbandman. Foreseeing this, I gathered the opinion of all the most sagacious of my parishioners, and consulted with them for a provision against the evil day; and we spoke to Mr Cayenne on the subject, for he had a talent by-common in matters of mercantile management. It was amazing, considering 1 Dibs. Puddles. his hot temper, with what patience he heard the grounds of our apprehension, and how he questioned and sifted the experience of the old farmers till he was thoroughly convinced that all similar seed-times were ever followed by a short crop. He then said that he would prove himself a better friend to the parish than he was thought. Accordingly (as he afterwards told me himself) he wrote off that very night to his correspondents in America to buy for his account all the wheat and flour they could get, and ship it to arrive early in the Fall; and he bought up likewise in countries round the Baltic great store of victual, and brought in two cargoes to Irville, on purpose for the parish, against the time of need, making for the occasion a garnel of one of the warehouses of the cotton-mill. The event came to pass as had been fore...… (més)
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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER XXXIX Year 1798 A dcai th?Mr Cayenne takes measures to mitigate the evil?He receives kindly some Irish refugees?His daughter's marriage. JL HIS was one of the heaviest years in the whole course of my ministry. The spring was slow of coming, and cold and wet when it did come: the dibs1 were full, the roads foul, and the ground, that should have been dry at the seed-time, was as claggy as clay and clung to the harrow. The labour of man and beast was thereby augmented; and all nature being in a state of sluggish indisposition, it was evident to every eye of experience that there would be a great disappointment to the hopes of the husbandman. Foreseeing this, I gathered the opinion of all the most sagacious of my parishioners, and consulted with them for a provision against the evil day; and we spoke to Mr Cayenne on the subject, for he had a talent by-common in matters of mercantile management. It was amazing, considering 1 Dibs. Puddles. his hot temper, with what patience he heard the grounds of our apprehension, and how he questioned and sifted the experience of the old farmers till he was thoroughly convinced that all similar seed-times were ever followed by a short crop. He then said that he would prove himself a better friend to the parish than he was thought. Accordingly (as he afterwards told me himself) he wrote off that very night to his correspondents in America to buy for his account all the wheat and flour they could get, and ship it to arrive early in the Fall; and he bought up likewise in countries round the Baltic great store of victual, and brought in two cargoes to Irville, on purpose for the parish, against the time of need, making for the occasion a garnel of one of the warehouses of the cotton-mill. The event came to pass as had been fore...

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