19 AUGUST 1837, Page 12

Cbe Country.

The accounts of the harvest are cheering. The Brighton Gazette lays- " The very fine weather has forwarded the corn so much that the wheat is now cipe almost everywhere and will require cutting very quickly. The appear. *nee of the crop is most promising in this neighbourhood, and several stacks have been made in excellent condition. The oats and barley have also improved eery much, and are fast getting ripe; a great breadth is cut, and some already housed. The peas are nearly all housed, and, we believe, will turn out well. Beans are short, but yet will yield pretty well. The turnips are suffering for want of rain, and so are the grass and rowens."

In the North, the weather has been very propitious. According to ate Glasgow Courier- " The present fine weather is rapidly bringing the crops to maturity. In va- rious places fields of barley have been already cut, and many more will be ready far the sickle in the course of this week. In the East country, the crops are as astral much further advanced than in the neighbourhood of Glasgow, and *hearing will become sooner general there than with us. The heavy fields, par- ti,eularly of wheat, have in particular localities, as with ourselves, been much beaten down and twisted by the late heavy rains, but a continuance of the pre. aro weather would lead us to hope that the injury is not irretrievable. On all aides, the agricultural prospects of the country are most flattering. Wheat is almost everywhere healthy and vigorous, both in the straw and ear, and gives promise of fully an average return. Oats will prove an excellent crop—much more so than appearances at one p'mind would have led us to anticipate. Pota- toes, if we mai' judge from the outward appearance of the fields, and the low price which they are now reaching in the market, will be both abundant and weeder in quality ; and hay, notwithstanding the unpropitious weather it had to straggle against at the commencement of the season, is a fair average: Indeed, in every department of husbandry there is cause for congratulationa'

There are also good accounts of the harvest from Ireland.

There is some improvement in the state of trade in the manufaeter, ing districts of Lancashire and Yorkshire.

We are sorry to say the lead markets in the mining district, ,, -- Derbyshire are very flat, the stock increasing, with very few sale, The raising of lead ore is very much confined.—Doncaster Gazdte.