JO 
Meadow usually mowed for Hay, and 
leaving the Crop of Apples to the chance 
of a “Lucky Year.” 
Should a Farmer (there are many, no 
doubt, besides Pinsent, of Chudleigh, and 
the Mays’, of Dunsford ,) by better ma¬ 
nagement than common, have Apples in his 
Orchards every Season, — such Orchards are 
denominated, by the unthinking, “Lucky !” 
and little or no observation would be made 
on his superior Knowledge, or the superior 
Method of Cultivation he practised.—No! 
“ Lucky,” is the term preferred by self love, 
as that passes no strictures on the obser¬ 
ver’s mis-management! Indeed, it would 
occasion no surprise, if, rather than be 
guilty of such a libel on himself, he were 
to attribute Pinsent’s success to the pro¬ 
tection and visits of Mr. Coleridge’s 
friends, “ The Pixies of Chudleigli Rock." 
