The Bean-Field
; but in t appeared by the
arroinct nation had
anciently d ed corn and beans ere we men came
to clear to some extent, ed the soil
for this very crop.
Before yet any woodche road, or
t above the dew was on,
t it -- I o do
all your work if possible wo level
ty upon
ted, dabbling
like a plastic artist in t later in
tered my feet. ted me to hoe
beans, pacing slo yellow gravelly
upland, beteen rods, the one end
terminating in a s in the shade,
the green berries deepened
tints by time I . Removing the
ting fres tems, and encouraging this
weed ws summer
t in bean leaves and blossoms rathan in wormwood and
piper and millet grass, making tead of grass
-- ttle aid from horses or
cattle, or s of husbandry, I
e han
usual. But labor of to the verge of
drudgery, is per form of idleness. It has a
constant and imperiso t yields a
classic result. A very agricola laboriosus o travellers
bound o nobody knows where;
tting at th elbows on knees, and reins
loosely oons; I taying, laborious native of
t soon my ead of t and t.
It ivated field for a great distance on
eit of it; and sometimes
travellers gossip and comment
t for ;Beans so late! peas so late!quot; -- for I
continued to plant wo erial
suspected it. quot;Corn, my boy, f