828 PRICES OF LAND, LABOUR, &C. [PART Hi 



his gardqn-looking fields, and his neat home- 

 steads, would have visitors from far and near ; 

 and, while every one would admire and praise, 

 no soul would envy him his possessions. Mr. 

 GATE& would soon have all these things. The 

 hedges only want planting ; and he would feel 

 so comfortably to know that the Botley Parson 

 fcould never again poke his nose into his sheep- 

 fold or his pig-stye. However, let me hope* 

 rather, that the destruction of the Borough- 

 tyranny, will soon make England a country, 

 fit for an honest and industrious man to live in* 

 Let me hope, that a relief from grinding taxa 

 tion will soon relieve men of their fears of dying 

 in poverty, and will, thereby, restore to Eng* 

 land the." hospitality" for which she was once 

 famed, but which now really exists no where 

 but in America, 





