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A12915 The commons complaint VVherein is contained tvvo speciall grieuances: The first, the generall destruction and waste of woods in this kingdome, with a remedy for the same: also how to plant wood according tyo the nature of euery soyle, without losse of any ground; and how thereby many more and better cattel may be yeerely bred, with the charge and profit that yeerely may arise thereby. The second grieuance is, the extreme dearth of victuals. Fovre remedies for the same. ... Standish, Arthur, fl. 1611-1613. 1611 (1611) STC 23201; ESTC S110882 23,961 47

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stockes to graft on and in the hedge rounde about to bee left thicke foure yardes betweene euery tree and so leaue as there may be left at the least three thousand fiue hundred besides Crab-trees These three thousand fiue hundred growing twenty yeares there may bee then two thousand stocked vp which will bee well worth twelue pence a piece to bee sold fiue hundred of the very best to remaine for Timber trees and a thousand to be topped which at euery ten yeares end may bee lopped for fire wood the tops of that thousand trees cannot be so little worth as fifty pound by which meanes at that twenty yeares end there may be gained by the two thousand trees that are stocked a hundred pound and fiue hundred trees left that within fourescore yeares may well bee worth fiue hundred pound the thousand trees remayning to bee lopped will grow after fiue pound per annum at the least and the ground being before barren hardly worth twelue pence an acre will be worth ten shillings an acre per annum for by the grasse and weeds that will grow the first sixe yeares and the lodging of the sheepe in the night when the weather is such as they cannot be folded and the shaddow of the trees which are so to bee planted that there may bee eleuen yards betweene euery tre except in the hedges The ground will be made very good meddow and will finde the sheepe hay enough with good winter pasture and warme shelter in sharpe weather And if water can be kept there may be bred with twenty pound cost fowle or pullen well worth twenty nobles per annum all charges borne if the plot for fowle be neare corne then may there bee best kept wilde Duckes and Mallards which doe neuer hurt corne in field If thc like planting of wood were on common Sheepe-walks Common pastures and Commons where the lands are so good as they might be sowen with Wheate or Rye with the mast the whole charge thereof would be made in three yeares with twenty pound gained at the least by the croppe of Wheate or Rye and a crop of Otes after betweene the grounds where the Mast is sowne as before is set downe If the like prouision were made in Parkes where wood decayeth and hay is scant for Deere it would bee very beneficiall to the owners and by the planting our Commons common pastures or common Sheepe-walks by the charges of the towne whereunto such grounds doe belong the charge will be inned as before is set downe in three yeares a present reliefe raysed by fowle to the poore of the towne of six pound thirteene shillings foure pence and after ten yeares three pound sixe shillings eight pence at the least by fruite after twenty yeares by two thousand trees that may be stocked one hundred pound to remaine for a stocke and fiue hundred trees to bee left for Timber and one thousand trees remayning to be lopped which may yeelde woode worth fiue pound a yeare by which meanes the townes where such prouision may bee made may not onely be greatly eased of the charge of their poore but also haue a stock whereby they may be alwaies discharged of such charges as may happen eyther to Church or King by the increase of the stocke And further take certaine knowledg that all barren and mossie grounds may be improued much by letting three yeares grasse rot on the ground and it is the onely way next vnto lime to destroy Mosse The second grieuance is the dearth of Victuals with remedy for the same COncerning Victuals the want thereof is very great in regard that all kind of Victuals is risen and growen more deere in price within these last sixe yeeres then in twentie yeeres before And if the dearth of Victuals shall so happen to increase but a fewe yeeres to come as by all likelyhoode it is like for to doe except some speedy remedy be prouided the poore man by his labours shall not get wherewith to relieue himselfe and family This dearth may bee much eased if that euery one that hath a Pigeon house might bee enioyned or otherwise required to breed yearely extraordinarily a certaine number of fowle or pullen as shall seeme best to their liking The manner and fashion shall be set downe by a plot for the purpose how they may be bred with the charge and profite that may yearely arise to the owners The reasons whereof are fiue first in regard that a plot to breed fowle or pullen in which may be made furnished with lesse charges then a Pigeon house yeeldeth more profite and nothing at all offendeth the people wheras the Pigeons are a great cause of this dearth and more chargeable then profitable to their owners and the losse that the Kingdom receiueth thereby is infinit as at large shall be proued Secondly that it is to be supposed that euery one that is able to build a Pigeon house is also able to make a plot for fowle or pullen to breed in and eyther is or should be the Lord of the Mannor who hath to his Mannor some conuenient ground to make a plot on for that purpose and to breed so many pullen or fowle yearly as he keepeth Pigeons Thirdly that as a Pigeon house is builded for house-keeping so the fowle and pullen is more profitable as also shall be proued Fourthly that as the extreme dearth of victuals causeth many to breake vp hous-keeping and to put away their seruants whereby many through want fall to stealing and therby come to an vntimely end so an extraordinary breeding of fowle and pullen with other meanes as followeth may by Gods blessing so ease the extremitie thereof as men may as their auncestors haue in former ages delight in hospitality and thereby preuent many inconueniences that the extremity of dearth doth and may procure Fiftly and lastly the profite of the Fowle and pullen shal be proued to bee such as no charitable Christian can denie to performe Now to proue the difference of the charge and profite betweene a Pigeon house and a plot for fowle and pullen First all men of experience know that an ordinary Pigeon house of fiue yardes and a halfe square and foure yardes high to the euesings in which house there may bee contained tweluescore paire of Pigeons will cost fiue and twenty pound at the least and that it will be three yeares before it commeth to the best profite and when it commeth to that the best Pigeon house is seldome worth fiue pound per annum except it bee within threescore miles of London where all victuals are dearer then in other places of the Kingdome or a double house I will not stand to proue the opinion of the multitude of the charge of a Pigeon that she will eate if she haue liberty a quarter of corne in a yeare although I haue some reason to beleeue it for that two credible persons did affirme vnto me that they had lately seene halfe
a pinte of corne at one time taken out of an old Pigeons crop and offered to make proofe thereof by witnesses of good credite but I will admit of that which in common reason is not to be denied that Pigeons haue corne at will to feede on more then halfe the yeare and admitting that there bee tweluescore paire in a house of olde Pigeons as commonly there is and that euery olde pigeon in that time with her young ones should eate but two bushels which commeth to sixe score quarters at a house it is generally holden that they hinder the increase of that which would grow and spoyle as much as they eate from the time that corne groweth ripe in the fielde before haruest bee done and the seede times And thus in reason it doth appeare that in all the seed times of the yeare there is at the least sixteene weekes in which time she gathereth vp much corne that is least vncouered by the harrowes which a shower of raine would couer and so would growe and naturally all Pease and Beanes if they fall not deepe in sowing and bee very well couered they will swell out of the ground and lie bare vppon the ground and yet not withstanding Pease and Beanes and all other corne by nature groweth with the root first into the ground and then spingeth vpwards so that after the seede times bee done and the corne groweth greene till it gtow so high that the Pigeons cannot goe through it they gather vp the corne growing and breake off the blades and eate the corne all which will be confidently proued by all Husbandmen and Gentlemen especially by such as sometimes lend their minds to vnderstand the profite of husbandry This being allowed which by no meanes can be disproued it appeareth that twelue score paire of Pigeons deuoure destroy and hinder the increase of twelue score quarters of corne in a yeare Admit it were but halfe so much and that the corne were rated being Wheat Rye Barley and Pease but at two shillinges and a penny the bushell sixescore quarters commeth to a hundred pound per annum at a house Admit further that the sixt part thereof be the owners of the Pigeon house for so it is to be supposed that the Lord of the Mannor hath a sixth part of the towne then it followeth that his fiue pounds-worth of Pigeons costeth him sixteene pound thirteene shillings and eight pence at the least What other charge his Pigeons are vnto him I forbeare to relate the number of the Pigeon houses cannot be fewer then forty thousand with the Pigeons kept at houses Now to the charge and profite of fowle or pullen the plot and all things thereunto belonging will not cost aboue twenty pound to haue it secure and so as when occasion is that some of the wilde kinde is taken the taking of some may not offend the rest that are to remaine The plot must be especially for the wilde kinde of Duck and Mallard which are best to be kept both for profite and pleasure in a piece of ground where water is and may be got and kept al the yeare of two and twenty yards square to be moted about with a mote of a rode or pole of bredth which wil be twenty pole about to be made sixe foot deepe in the middest and something shallower towards the sides which will cost at fiue shillings a rode fiue pound The leuelling of the ground with quickset and workemanship foure pound the house being fiue yardes square and sixe foot high and hauing a little chamber ouer it to keepe Otes in to feed them the house to be but studded and thinly lathed two fingers betweene the lathes which house cannot cost aboue eight pound and the bridge and doore twenty shillings The plot being made put into it about Christmas threescore tame Duckes and twenty Mallards which will cost about three and fifty shillings foure pence or at Candlemas for want of Duckes fortie Hennes and ten Cocks to remaine till wilde Ducke egges be gotten to breede on in the meane time there are neither the Hennes nor the Duckes but their egges will be worth the corne branne and draines that the yong Ducklings must be fedde withall till they can eate Oates The plot being thus ready and all things else send one with a horse for egges in March into Cambridge-shiere into the fennes or into any other neerer place where wilde duckes egges are to be got for money especially in the fennes if the people haue liberty to get them for in the spring time when the wilde duckes laye the poore sort will goe with a dogge into the fennes where their dog wil put vp the fowle out off their neasts and then if they finde many egges therein that be vnsitten they will take most of them away with a ladle or by some other meanes so that they neither handle the egges that they leaue behinde nor breathe vpon them and then will marke the place where the nest is so as they may readily come to it and once in a weeke wil fetch all the egges that are laide in the meane time and so make the ducke whose nature is to lay till her neast be full before she will sitte so poore as they may take her which oftentimes the hungry sort do The egges being thus got ready when the keeper of them seeth the hen or duck feather her neast and beginneth to sit then lay in the neast twelue wilde ducke egges And thus in two yeares the whole number of the wilde or tame may be bred in such sort as they may be taken off at the owners pleasure and a stocke of foure-score of the oldest to be left for breeding with twenty Mallards which foure score olde duckes will breed and bring vp commonly euery one of them eight at the least the whole number to bee three hundred and twenty couple to be solde are well worth eight pence the couple which ariseth to the summe of ten pound and a marke for their young ones Then the egges that they will yearely lay to be but worth fifty three shillings and foure pence at fiue a penny and the Fish thar may bee bred in the Mote yearely to bee worth thirteene shillings foure pence prouided alwayes that there breede no Pikes for they will destroy the yong Fowle but not the Pullen The whole Summe is fourteene pound deduct out of the same fiue pound to buy tenne quarters of Oates yearely which ten quarters will allow the Fowles aboue a bushell and halfe a weeke which is more then is needfull to be spent on them for except it be in Frost or Snow when the ground is couered or when they sitte and the young ones are not able to flye abroad a very small quantity will serue to giue them euery morning a few that euery one may get a dozen cornes As for their breede being once well haunted they will neuer away in the day if they may be in quiet
to eighteene hundred thousand pounds The timber and firewood that shall be planted in pasture ground as aforesaid will be clearely gained by the better breeding and feeding of the number of cattell more that may be bred by the pasture and straw that may be saued which is now spoiled and burnt the worth of beasts two hundred thousand twelue per annum at the least All which may be effected with lesse then three yeares purchase in pasture meadow grounds the whole charge of planting in barren ground may be recouered in lesse then sixe yeares after ten yeares the soile will be improued from twelue pence an acre per annum to ten shillings an acre per annum at the least The firewood of a thousand trees being well husbanded wil be worth twelue pence a tree at euery ten yeares end The ground is improued ten pound per annum and that the fiue hundred timber trees remaining will be better worth then fiue hundred pounds Of Fruit. IT is also proued that fruit trees may bee planted in twelue millions of acres at the least in this Kingdome which being rated at two shillings an acre sixe pence a tree the value thereof commeth to twelue hundred thousand pounds per annum out of which being deducted for the fruit already planted in this Kingdome two hundred thousand pounds yet there remaineth one million of pounds gained yearelie and that the fruit trees which shall be planted in orchards will not cost aboue three yeares purchase and in hedge rowes not one yeares purchase Of Fowle and Pullen AS concerning the breeding of Fowle and Pullen it is likewise proued that there may be well bred so many as will bee worth foure hundred thousand pounds per annum in this Kingdome after the rate of eight pence the couple one with another and that prouision being made for the destroying of vermine there will be Fowles enough soone bred in this Realme and that if euery owner of pidgeons should yearlie breede so many Fowles or Pullen as they keepe old pidgeons and euery man that hath grounds conuenient would make plots to breede on as is aforesaid it would greatly ease the dearth of victuals the charge whereof will not bee aboue three yeares purchase for the better vnderstanding whereof it is to be noted that it appeareth by the generall map of this Kingdome that it contayneth nine and twenty millions fiue hundred sixty eight thousand acres out of which number deducting fiue millions and the odde thousands of acres for high waies wild lying grounds and wasts not fit for planting there remaineth foure and twenty millions which being rated at a penny an acre amounteth to an hundred thousand pounds Suppressing of Pidgeon houses and destroying of Vermine ANd it is likewise proued that by suppressing halfe the Pidgeon houses of this Realme and of Pidgeons kept ouer Gates Chambers and other places for that purpose there may bee yearely saued so much Corne as is worth two Millions of pounds at the least which they destroy and spoyle which may bee effected without charge and that by the destroying of feather'd Fowles which in like sort destroy and deuoure Corne and hinder the increase of the same there may bee saued as much Corne yearely in this Realme as is worth three millions of pounds By the destroying of the before recited vermine there may be saued in fowles and pullen and egs which they destroy yearely the worth of fiue thousand pound at the least besides young Fawnes Lambes Rabbets and many other things by them destroyed I can make proofe where there were within this three yeare seuen dousen couple of Rabbets found on a heape carried together in lesse time then a moneth by a Stote Also by a generall destroying of Rats and Mice there may be saued yearely in bread cheese corne and other things which they deuoure and destroy foure hundred thousand pound at the least All or the most part of which vermine may be destroyed with lesse cost then the losse which is sustained by them in one halfe yeare by allowing a good proportion to euery man that destroyeth them as well young and olde as their egges and neasts which would incourage seruants and poore men to be industrious in destroying the said vermine and so the worke would soone be finished and the charge ended Summe nine millions two hundred thousand pound saued and gained by this proiect yearly to the performers besides the good that may grow therby to the Common-wealth That it might be prouided that no Tenants should be indamnified by their Land-lords by letting any of their Farmes whereupon they haue planted wood or fruite before they haue receiued sufficient profite of their labour without sufficient recompence for their charge FINIS
withall whereby this greeuance doth daily increase The reasons are many first the want of fire is expected without the which mans life cannot be preserued secondly the want of Timber Bricke Tile Lime Iron Lead and Glasse for the building of habitations Timber for the maintaining of husbandry for nauigation for vessels for bruing and the keeping of drinke and all other necessaries for house-keeping barke for the tanning of Leather bridges for trauell pales for Parkes poles for Hoppes and salt from the Wiches The want of wood is and will be a great decay to tillage and cannot but bee the greatest cause of the dearth of corne and hindreth greatly the yearely breeding of many cattell by reason that much straw is yearely burned that to the breeding of cattell might bee imployed the want of wood in many places of this Kingdome constraineth the foyll of cattell to be burned which should be imployed to the strengthning of land and so doth the want of hurdels for the folding of sheepe and the want of wood causeth too many great losses by fire that commeth by the burning of straw and so it may be conceiued no wood no Kingdome The remedies may be thus IF that all owners of land according to the nature of the soiles wherein there lands doe lie were enioyned to plant all their hedges with wood and not onely with thornes so thicke as conueniently trees may grow and prosper allowing foure yardes betweene tree and tree to be topped and lopped for fire-wood reseruing some part of their hedges where they may thinke it most couenient for their profite to bee planted with fruit trees or to plant all with fire-wood and plant fruit trees in Orchards according to their best liking And that they might bee further enioyned to plant for euery acre in their seuerall occupations foure trees more to be preserued for Timber for so many yeares before any of them should bee felled as the trees may be growne to be good Timber which will be neere fourescore yeares and that after that the trees bee growne to be Timber that none should be felled or at any time before or after wasted but so many to be planted and continued And that all such persons as haue at this instant their grounds furnished with wood in such sort as is required might bee also enioyned hereafter to plant and preserue so many trees and so much wood as heareafter they shall fell or waste And that all tenants might be enioyned in like sort to plant their hedges with trees for fire and to haue the lops to their owne houses for fire and to plant two trees for euery acre in their occupations for Tymber This being performed no wit can comprehend what good may in time grow thereby vnto the Kingdome although some tast may be taken by the planting of twenty acres as followeth with other directions for this purpose And for the better conceiuing thereof admit that a man haue twenty acres onely in his occupation of pasture ground wherein hee yearely breedeth or feedeth twentie cattell and that hee should for this purpose in close in the driest corner of that close halfe an acre and that there were no fence before about the same but that it were to be inclosed round with a good ditch and hedge which would containe forty eight Rode and that the charge at the first should cost three pound sixe shillings eight pence and that the maintayning thereof till the wood that is therein to be planted should bee past taking hurt by cattell which may be ten yeares should cost two pound thirteene shillings foure pence more being in all sixe pound more by the halfe then it can cost The halfe acre being thus inclosed digge therein about Christmas seuen score and tenne plots of a yard square leauing three yardes euery way betweene the plots digged let it lie with the grasse side downe till about Midsomer then digge it againe and againe abut Hollan-tyde when the Mast of Okes Beech or the Chates of Ash falleth from the trees then take of the same Mast or Chates according to the nature of the soile and set them halfe a foote a sunder and not aboue a hand bredth deepe and keepe it weeded well the first two yeares being sure that the spring be not troden on after which time there may be in September about the middest thereof the sappe being then in the roote all the young plants drawne vp to be planted in the hedges of the same close onely reseruing two in euery plot of the best being most likely to be trees and after sixe yeares there may be drawne vp halfe the rest to be planted else where leauing then onely a hundred and fiftie in which time the ground may be mowed betweene the plants so that thereby there is small losse for after the three first yeares the ground may be eaten with sheepe and after ten yeares the ground may be laid forth to the close as it was before with seuen score and ten yong trees which within fourescore yeares may well be worth so many pounds The hedges being planted as is set downe cannot yeeld so little fire-wood as may be worth twenty shillings a yeare the twenty cattell that there is to bee bred or fedde cannot bee lesse bettered then two shillings in a beast yearely by their quiet liuing in the wood thus planted keeping there the flesh that before they lost being before constrained by the extreme heate of the Sunne and Flyes for want of shadow or wormestall to runne vp and downe the close loosing the flesh in the heat that they got in the coole and so spoyling the water with running into it as seldome they could get their bellies full of water the want thereof breedeth many diseases And further by the quiet being of the cattell in the wood there is grasse saued yearely worth twenty shilings which before was spoyled by the cattels running treading and foyling of the grasse And by this meanes it appeareth that after ten yeares the twenty acres may be improued at the least fortie shillings a yeare by the cattell so that it is but three yeares profite thus to improue the twenty acres And this for the breeding and feeding of cattell all breeders and feeders will affirme and that a better breed of cattell may be raised of those grounds that wanteth good water for their cattell and shadow and for those grounds that wantes either can neuer breed good cattell or make so much profite of their Dairies as best may appeare betweene Lancashire and Lincolnshire and al other countries where such meanes of water and wood is wanting And by the wood the twenty acres is bettered at the least other fortie shillings a yeare for if it be cast it shall apeare that a tree growing till it be fourescore years olde being then worth twenty shillings it groweth after three pence a yeare So that so many timber-trees so many pounds besides the fire-wood What losse or gaine here is
required I leaue to be censured by the Reader OBIECTIONS It hath beene obiected that it is against a mans profite to preserue his woods for they grow but at three shillings foure pence an acre per annum the ground being conuerted to pasture it is worth tenne shillings an acre per annum And further it hath been said by some that they haue wood enough for them their heires let them plant wood that needeth either for building or any other vses and that it cannot bee conceiued how wood can bee planted in respect of the difference of soiles or how plants may be gotten to plant the Kingdome withall or that any such profite may arise and that there is Sea cooles enow to supply many wants THE ANSVVER THe Obiections are too true as may appeare to the world as touching wood but not in the rest as hath beene proued and might further appeare if a suruay were taken of the woodes now growing in this Kingdome for it would bee found that the fourth part is not able to maintaine it selfe threescore yeares without good maintayning and preseruing And as touching the difference of soile who knoweth not may heereby know that wood hath and will grow in most part of all this Kingdome being planted and preserued as first appeareth by the peakes of Darby shiere and other stonie countries where there is yet to bee seene Ashe woode growing about euery towne though very rockie as for Oke Beech Elme and Ashe it doth grow in flinty or grauelly ground as appeareth by the Chilterne Country as it is termed in many shieres and on the grauelly grounds euery way about London by Elme and for soft fennish groundes it appeareth about the townes that there is some and hath beene better store of Elme and Willow and other such like woods and would bee if it were planted and preserued The maner how to plant elme Willow is to lop a yong elme or Willow the lop beeing but of three yeares growth in the latter end of March or the beginning of Aprill when the sappe is vp in the boughes and the buddes ready to put foorth then cutte off the boughes so lopped cut them in lengthes of a foote long Coult-foote wise leauing the knot where the budde is to bee put forth in the middest then lay these short boughes in trenches where you would haue the wood to grow three or foure fingers deepe and couer them well with mould well troden leauing the knot barein moyst ground for the Willow the Elme will growe in harder ground If the Spring bee drie then water them and assuredly they will grow sooner to bee Trees then sets so will the bough of any Tree as well of fruit trees as others and the tallest and straightest of the same being taken about Lammas and as neere the body of the Tree as may be with a Knife cut the Barke of the bough cleane away of a hand breadth leauing not any Barke for the sappe to returne withall to the body the Barke being thus taken away then immediatly take a good quantitie of Clay and lay thereon some good earth of the side that is to bee layed next the tree and lap the said Claye and Earth about the bough vpon the Barke next to the place where the Barke is taken off a hand breadth at the least and mosse it and bind it as a graft so let it stand till the midst of September then sawe it off and set it were you would haue it to grow and as neere as you can with the same side to the Sunne as was before and assuredly they will grow to be trees for to be lopped for fire and your fruit trees will some of them beare fruit the first yeere but the second certainely if the yeere be seasonable And so will litle yong roots of Elme being taken when the sappe is in them and set as quick sets by which meanes the Fennish countries may haue Elme Timber fire-wood and wormestall or shelter for their cattell And as for Sea-coales there is no assurance how long they may indure it is apparant that Coale mines doe decay too fast in most Countryes and are too chargeable to many Countryes in respect of carriage and in most mines are not to be got without the vse of much wood What further benefite may be made on sheepe-walkes Downes or Heathes by planting of wood where the grounds are barren IF for example that on euery Sheepe-walke whereon there is or may be kept fiue hundred sheepe there were plowed vp about Christmas twenty acres in the lowest bottom of the walke for this purpose where water may be kept all the yeare aswell for the breeding of Fowle as for the other profites all which may be maintained vnder one charge by the Shepheard without fencing for that on such Downes little cattell commeth Being so plowed let it lie till Midsomer if then it be perceiued that there will be Mast that yeare then plough it againe and then let it lie vntill about Hallowmas Then take the Mast of Oke Beech and the Chats of Ashe brused Crabbs after the veriuice is pressed out and hawes mingle these together to sow about the sides and endes of the ground about a yard broad and vpon the rest sow no hawes but some few kernels of Crabs then begin at a side and sow fiue yards of bredth plough vnder this Mast and Chats very shallow then leaue sixe yardes in breadth and sow and plough fiue yardes more and so from side to side And bee sure to leaue a yard and halfe at the last side The rest of the head-lands to lie till the rest of the Close bee sowen in March with Otes that the cattell may not hurte the Mast sowen by treading on it The close being thus sowen with Mast and Otes in the meane time there would be a house builded for the shepheard to dwell in where he may best ouersee the ground for his ease The charge thereof first of the house fiue pound the plowing thrice and the harrowing two shillings eight pence an acre eight pound the Mast and getting it readie fortie shillings for fiue quarters of Otes to sow the ground fiftie shillings for the getting of Otes in haruest and carrying of them into the barne fiftie shillings and so the whole charge is twenty pound whereof the Otes will yeeld fifteene pound if they increase but six of one Then when the spring is of two yeares growth there may be drawne vp part of the spring which may be imploied for quicksets whē the remainder is six years of growth there may be more drawne vp to be set at which drawing there may be got as many as will bee well worth fiue pound leauing then none but forty foure of eyther side of euery row fiue yards betweene euery one and here and there to leaue some speciall one that is like to bee a fine tree for Tymber and some hundred or more of the Crab-tree
cheaper then any other victuals by the plenty of fruit such store of Cydar may be made and kept without losse vntill it may happen that a deere yeare of corne may come which then may be spent in drinke and barly be conuerted to bread corne and by this meanes corne may alwaies be sold at reasonable prices in this land This may bee prooued by the best Merchants who will auerre that Cyder will keepe seuen yeares And by this meanes such store of Corne and Cyder may alwayes be in the Realme that much treasure may be brought into the land for Corne Cyder and many other commodities that may be spared whereby the Kingdome may be greatly enriched and the customes increased to the good of the King The second is idle for what man of experience knoweth not but that the Farmour that liueth by tillage by feeding of beefs muttons hogs pullen many other things that may be fed or bred by corne may make at all times if hee thinke corne too cheape in the market by these meanes a sufficient price of his corne for the buyer and seller Moreouer much more ground may be conuerted to the feeding and breeding of cattell and to dayries all which is as the world now goeth very conuenient the rather for that by experience it hath beene continually seene that whereas corne is deare one yeare in seauen yet for other fiue or sixe yeares it is at a more reasonable rate then other victuals which yearely rise in price and seldome or neuer abate And further if corne be very cheape it may be transported as it hath beene with Pery and Cyder into other Countries so that if the Farmours should loose something in the prices of their corne yet they shall gaine much more in their house-keeping and other necessaries And whereas it may seeme distastfull to some to plant their Fruit trees in the Hedges admit that there should be an Acre inclosed wherein may be planted fourescore fruit trees euery tree may haue a eleuen yards roome to grow on whereby the ground may take no hurt by Woodes which after ten yeares will yeeld one yeare with another and one tree with another a bushell of fruit rated as before at sixe pence the bushell this profit will amount to fortie shillings the Acre at that rate Admit further that the charge of inclosing of this acre round about being 8. Rode of breadth and twentie in length should cost 18. pence a Rode to haue a good Ditch double or treble set with quick Thornes and Hedged round about on the outside of the Ditch which Hedge will last wel three yeares at the three yeares end towards the later end of March cut the quicke wood vpward with a knife close by the ground weede the grasse cleare vp from about the rootes the wood of the old Hedge will pay for the labour and then the first charge is foure pound and foure shilling Then Hedge it new againe which may cost thirtie and sixe shillings that Hedge will last well till the quicke wood bee past taking hurt for that in those three yeares after it is cut it will grow higher then it would do in ten yeares being not cut and so thick that nothing can get through it In the meane time whilest the Fence is in growing if there bee strewed in a Nurserie the kernels of a hundred Apples or kernels of Crabbes or set when or before the quicke wood is set there will be more sets then that ground requireth which being well preserued will bee big enough in three or foure yeares to graft vpon The charge being sixe pound is but three yeares purchase The third and fourth grieuance For destroying of Virmine THe greatest deuourers of Corne of these kinde are Rookes Crowes and Sparrowes the number whereof is infinite and so is the quantitie of Corne which they destroy yearely They also greatly hinder the increase of Corne which when they cannot find it lying aboue the ground they scratch it vp with their Clawes or picke it vp with their Bils Blades and Rootes and when Corne is eared then if it happen to be laide both Rookes and Pidgeons light vpon it and so spoyle it that if it were worth fortie shillings an Acre before in one weeke they will make it not worth tenne shillings the Acre One kind of these Crowes liue much vpon Chickens and Fowle and by their Egges and kill yong Lambes and doe much hurt besides There are also many other flying Vermine that destroy Phesants Partridges Fowle Pullen and young Rabbets which are Buzards Kites Ring-tailes and Pyes all which or the most part of them may easily be destroyed in three yeares onely by the pulling downe of their nests in breeding time not suffering any of them to breed euery man to vndertake for his owne ground vpon a penaltie to the vse of the poore of the Parish Two other great spoylers of Fowle are the shooting in Peeces and water Dogs the one galleth more then they kill and get that are lost so doth dogges when the Fowle are young and in moulting time And much Lead and Poulder might bee saued by reason that euery man may haue Hawkes meate by his Fowle and Pullen OBIECTIONS THat true it is that is alleadged that the Vermine before mentioned are as hurtfull to the common wealth as is alleadged and that many yeares since by Act of Parliament there was a special law made for the generall destroying of all kind of vermine that could bee thought vpon as Foxes Badgers Polecats wilde Cats Stotes and all other whatsoeuer which was as much as then was thought conuenient THE ANSVVER It appeareth that such an Act was made for the destroying of vermine aforesaid and of other vermine but so smal an allowance was made that no man made accompt thereof wherefore by allowing a good proportion for this businesse they may bee soone destroyed and the charge soone ended and then all vermine being destroyed and Pidgeon houses suppressed excepting onely such as are allowed by the Common Lawes of this Kingdome it cannot be thought that corne will euer be deare Of Wood. THus it is sufficiently proued that wood being generally planted for euery acre of this Kingdome being at least foure and twenty millions the timber trees growing til they be fourescore yeres old cannot be lesse worth then twenty shillings a tree whereby it appeareth that euery tree groweth after the rate of three pence per annum foure trees being planted in euery acre commeth to twelue pence an acre per annum so that the summe ariseth to twelue hundred thousand pounds per annum by reason that the tenants are but to plant two trees in an acre And the trees for firewood that are required togither with the mast that may grow thereupon will be as much worth as the timber and admitting that the fourth part of the Kingdome be already replenished yet the gaine by wood and timber of the other three parts will arise
the dearth of Victuals by planting of Fruite FOr as much as by the experience that is taken out of most of the Countries of this Kingdome especially out of some parts of Worcestershire Glocestershire Herefordshire wher it is generally affirmed that there be sundry men that raiseth to their purses yearly two hūdred pounds by Fruit trees growing there in their hedges and fields ouer and besides what hee spendeth in his house in Cider and Perrie And that there are some persons that haue thirtie or fortie Hogdsheds in a yeare for Tithe And further it appeareth that in most Townes of this Kingdome there haue beene prouident Husbands that haue planted Orchards which in effect are now decayed which haue not onely beene very beneficiall to themselues but also to the Commonwealth and there be yet some few that do plant some an Acre of ground which is yearely worth fiue pound at the least in Fruite In respect whereof and for other good considerations if it were prouided in regard the like profit may be yearely raised in the greater part of this Kingdome to the great profit of the Planters and benefit to the Commonwealth which will likewise bee a speciall meanes to disburden vs of the greatest part of this grieuance for that thereby the extreme price of Victuals will be greatly eased That there may be a certaine number of fruite trees planted in all the Hedges as of Apples Wardens and Peares and most of all Apples where White-thorne and Crab-trees doe or may hereafter grow being planted viz. For euery Acre of enclosed ground foure trees which can no way be hurtfull or hinder any other profit whatsoeuer that may be raised out of hedges The fruite that by this meanes may be raised yearely can not be lesse worth then twelue hundred thousand pounds if the fruit were sold but for sixe pence a bushell And this I may proue two seuerall wayes First by experience taken from Crabbes it is knowen to all Huswiues that a bushell of Crabbes will make two gallons and a halfe of Veriuice and so much some of the best Chandlors in London haue affirmed to mee I haue also inquired of some of the better sort inhabiting in the Countries before recited as I haue trauelled through those Countries for this purpose for my better experience how much Cider a bushell of Apples will yeeld or a bushell of Peares of Perrie whose answeres for the most part were that a bushell of ordinarie Apples would at the first presse yeeld two gallons and a bushell of Peares for the most part two gallons and a halfe and by putting a gallon of faire water into the Apples so pressed and letting it stand some twelue houres sometimes stirring them and then presse them againe would yeeld another gallon but not so good for long lasting as the first The second is this that in a bushell there is about tenne score of the greatest Pippins let some of them to the number of twentie bee baked in a Pot for the purpose or take twentie of them and roste and that man will be holden for a monster that can eate so many at one meale which may bee sold for a penny and the surplusage being fourescore will recompence the labour that is taken about them By either of these meanes I hope it will bee allowed that of themselues they are worth the rate before set downe and being baked in Paste a good and profitable vse is made of them in many mens houses by sauing other victuals and when it pleaseth God to blesse those few fruit trees that are in this Kingdome it wil something abate the extreme prices of victuals This present yeare may be an instance and all Drouers of Cattell will affirme that they haue felt the smart of the plentie of fruite and the inhabitants of the Citie of London will acknowledge that the fruit that commeth thither easeth something the prices of victuals The greatest hinderance which may be to these good workes of planting fruit and wood will be confessed of most men by their experience who haue in their times seene many men beginne to plant orchards and set quick-wood to the end to haue hedges in many places especially by high wayes for the sauing of corne and at the first will make some prouision for the preseruing of the same which afterwards some by coueting the grasse growing in the orchard putteth some kinde of cattell therein which breaketh and spoileth the grafts others by want of maintayning the fences whereby their expectation cost and labour is lost and so in quick-wood after a great cost in planting for a little more cost in maintayning all is troden downe and lost in like sort much good spring wood is spoiled by cattell by want of good fencing Thus either by couetousnesse niggardlinesse or negligence many good actions are ouerthrowne to the losse both of the owner common-wealth my counsell herein is to beginne wel and to perseuer therein vnto the end Obiections against planting of fruit FIrst that if they bee planted in hedges they will bee stolen and the hedges broken for them Secondly that such plenty of fruit would make corne ouer-cheape for the Farmour Thirdly that if the hedges were so thicke planted with trees in closes or fields that are not aboue sixe acres they will be very hurtfull for that if such closes or fields shall happen to bee sowen with corne or mowen for hay the trees will so keepe off the Sunne and winde that in wet haruests it will greatly hinder the drying of hay and corne Fourthly that his land is his owne and he will not be constrained to vse it otherwise then he listeth and that such as haue a thousand acres or more in occupation may haue so much fruit as he shall not know what to doe with it The answere to these Obiections THe first I grant in part that fruit being planted but in particular may be stolen and little good may grow thereby but being generally planted as is required what cause may any charitable man haue to complaine or what man complaineth in any of the Countries before recited from whence example for this purpose is taken of stealing his fruit where the hedges are as thicke with fruit trees and other trees as is required For scarcity causeth stealing but in those Countries the trees in the hedges hang as commonly full of fruit on the high waies side as on the other and the hedges of fields and closes in those Countries and in some other Countries are as thick of fruit trees and other trees as are required and yet notwithstanding such as haue corne or hay in little closes make shift to get it drie Thus the first third is answered What charity is in the fourth I referre to the censure of the indifferent Reader For it is in reason to be conceiued that hardly halfe of the people of the Kingdome hath not grounds to plant on but would buy them at the rate set downe being