^ NORFOLK. 55 



in the conftruflion of the more complex 

 miplements of agriculture. Nay, the very 

 implement which gives rife to thefe obferva- 

 tions, conftrudted in Norfolk in the mod com- 

 plete manner, and furniilied with every ne- 

 cefTary appendage, has lain ufelefs upon a foil 

 it fuited, until a Norfolk plowman was fent to, 

 bold it ! How unreafonable, then, to expedc 

 utility from a drawing of it ! 



Thcfe circumftances are not fingular to the 

 Norfolk plow ; I have known them attend 

 other implements transferred from one part 

 of the ifland to another : and I will beg leave 

 to obfcrvc, herCj in general terms, that who- 

 ever wiflies to introduce an implement which 

 is in life in fome diftant Diilrid:, would do 

 well to have it not only canftrudted, but fct to 

 work, in the country where it is in ufe ; and 

 I will venture to add, that fuccefs cannot be 

 infured unlefs a perfon accuflomed to the work- 

 ing of it accompanies it, and fets it to work 

 in the Diftrict into which it is intended to be 

 introduced. 



This is, no doubt, an expenfive way of 



proceeding ; but it is a certain one : while 



'9vcry other expedient is throwing away, or 



E A at 



