It would require more hands to manage a stock of sheep, gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and drive them to markets, than the profits of the whole stock would be capable of maintaining. Dogs - Page 98by George Frederick Pardon - 1857 - 324 pagesFull view - About this book
| 1824 - 984 pages
...mountainous land in Scotland would not be worth a sixpence. It would require more hands to manage a slock of sheep, gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and drive them to markets, than the proƱts of the whole stock were capable of maintaining. Well may the shepherd feel... | |
| England - 1824 - 758 pages
...mountainous land in Scotland would not be worth a sixpence. It would require more hands to manage a stock of sheep, gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and drive them to markets, than the profits of the whole stock were capable of maintaining. Well may the shepherd feel... | |
| Scotland - 1824 - 792 pages
...mountainous land in Scotland would not be worth a sixpence. It would require more hands to manage a stock of sheep, gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and drive them to markets, than the profits of the whole stock were capable of maintaining. Well may the shepherd feel... | |
| James Hogg - 1829 - 694 pages
...mountainous land in Scotland would not be worth a sixpence. It would require more hands to manage a stock of sheep, gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and drive them to markets, than the profits of the whole stock would be capable of maintaining. Well may the shepherd... | |
| James Hogg - Fiction - 1829 - 242 pages
...mountainous land in Scotland would not be worth a sixpence. It would require more hands to manage a stock of sheep, gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and drivtthem to markets, than the profits of the whole stock would be capable of maintaining. Well may... | |
| James Hogg - Scotland - 1837 - 382 pages
...mountainous land in Scotland would not be worth a sixpence. It would require more hands to manage a stock of sheep, gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and drive them to markets, than the profits of the whole stock would be capable of maintaining. Well may the shepherd... | |
| Royal Agricultural Society of England - Agriculture - 1852 - 660 pages
...Without the shepherd's dog, the mountainous land in England and Scotland would not be worth sixpence. It would require more hands to manage a flock of sheep,...drive them to market, than the profits of the whole would be capable of maintaining." And though, this may be more true as regards the wild and headstrong... | |
| American literature - 1846 - 602 pages
...be incurred, in the absence of these animals, by the employment of herdsmen to manage the sheep, to gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and to drive them to markets, would be more than the profits of the whole flock would be capable of maintaining.... | |
| 1846 - 610 pages
...be incurred, in the absence of these animals, by the employment of herdsmen to manage the sheep, to gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and to drive them to markets, would be more than the profits of the whole flock would be capable of maintaining.... | |
| 1846 - 810 pages
...be incurred, in the absence of these animals, by the employment of herdsmen to manage the sheep, to gather them from the hills, force them into houses and folds, and to drive them to markets, would be more than the profits of the whole flock would be capable of maintaining.... | |
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