[Hodge and His Masters by Richard Jefferies]@TWC D-Link book
Hodge and His Masters

CHAPTER VII
41/47

The form of the fields alone was an index to the character of the farmers who cultivated them.

Not one had a regular shape.

The fields were neither circles, squares, parallelograms, nor triangles.

One side, perhaps, might be straight; the hedgerow on the other had a dozen curves, and came up to a point.

With such irregular enclosures it was impossible that the farmer could plan out his course with the necessary accuracy.


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