dominated English agriculture. * Breeding was unselective and the majority of commons and pastures were over- stocked with lean sheep and undernourished cattle. Ineffi- cient as the farming was, the profits were very great. There was an incessant demand for wool and the government bounty on corn stimulated arable farming. The big farming profits encouraged the movement towards enclosure. It also made the possession of great estates a highly desirable form of investment and of course this again encouraged experi- ments in agrarian technique. From the end of the seventeenth century, possibly since the Civil War, there had been a tendency for estates to grow larger, and this was beginning, by the early eighteenth cen- tury, to affect the nature of rural society. By prudent marriages and careful purchases, some of the aristocratic families of the seventeenth century amassed estates which made them far richer than many of the sovereign powers of Germany. The Duke of Newcastle in 1714 possessed estates in twelve different counties and his income was £40,000 p.a. The Dukes of Bedford were richer; scarcely an acre of Bed- fordshire did not belong to them: in every county there were a few families, usually aristocratic, who possessed similar riches. This made them a class apart from the small squire. The distinction was further underlined by the way of life which these agrarian millionaires designed for themselves. The point of pride was the rural palace. There was no modesty felt about the ostentation of wealth. Castle Howard, Wentworth Woodhouse, Houghton intoxicated contem- poraries with their size and grandeur. To give them a fit set- ting nature was subdued with exquisite art and the English ____________________ | * | Enclosure was the replacement of two or three large open fields round a village, whose strips were owned individually but whose crops and stock were controlled by the community of owners, according to ancient rights and practices, by smaller, individually owned fields whose cropping and stocking could be controlled by the owner. Such a change affected the whole structure of rural society. | -18- |