niK I!kk;hton road 



193 



seems a very remarkable discovery to have made) ; and 

 " that the inhabitants were savage ' —which is a discovery 

 not so remarkable, when one remembers that near Brighton 

 not long ago one of these savages ran at a lady with a 

 pitchfork for riding over a turnip-field. Poor Horace 



A Snapped Pole- 



had no such adventure as this — so far as I can learn ; but 

 it was clear to him that " George the Second might well 

 be the first monarch of the East Angles," and " that 

 coaches grew in Sussex no more than balm or spices " ; 

 almost immediately after which horticultural remark he 







