June 10, 1776

Posted by sydney on Jun 10th, 1776

No one that has not attended to such matters, & taken down remarks, can be aware how much ten days dripping weather will influence the growth of grass or corn after a severe dry season.  This present summer 1776 yields a remarkable instance: for ’til the 30th of May the fields were burnt-up & naked, & the barley not half out of the ground; but now, June 10t there is an agreeable prospect of plenty.  A very intelligent Clergyman assured me, that hearing while he was a young student at the University, of toads being found alive in blocks of stone, & solids bodies of trees; he one long vacation took a toad, & put it in a garden-pot, & laying a tile over the mouth of the pot, buried it five feet deep  in the ground in his father’s garden.  in about 13 months he dug-up the imprisoned reptile, & found it alive & well, & considerably grown.  He buried it again as at first, & on a second visit at about the same period found it circumstanced as before.  He then deposited the pot as formerly a third time, only laying the tile so as not quite to cover the whole of its mouth: but when he came to examine it again next year, the toads was gone.  he each time trod the earth down very hard over the pot.

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