ES ae ee 8 ae: 
them as any of my neighbours who 
614 
for ‘the difcharge of the wat 
ploug was followed a aa 
tined _hharrows, the rollje@ the igus 
harrows, and laft of all by eight wo 
who picked up what ue vith pare 
mained. 
But . 



chy 








by renewing the Pe labour 
mentioned in the courfe cf the fummer, I 
croppedi it the 12 of Mberch with the Dae 


“dwarf arden pea, which were fet nearly 
one bufhe 7° acre by line. The crop 
wa ae one, which were taken” 
tot be for feed on the 5th of July 
lat. Having p ed a drefiing of lime 
and manure @at hand, I loft no time in 
, Dieparing the lend for turnips, and I 
_ have now as promifing an appeaga f 


foe fuch a crop as I ‘have defecribed to 
em and which they might have 
without the leaft diminution of » 
> means of deftroying weeds, or in- 
to the foil. 
“At fome future time, I will give you 












the particulars of my expences, and 
the e of the crop of peas, that a 
i may be formea of this.kind of 
If land is freed grom weeds 
] ay pointed cut, and it 
fof (what is alw ays ap- 
d by permitty 
Be pploved, 
fee. this 
 ° 
Jeétingsto gplough 
up fiub edi ¢ i 
: ene de | hall be4 
a contrary practice re ee & 
more able pen. than that of 
) Your humble yi 




force ier Dire. 
; 5, 1796. vie 


To whe Editor of the Monthly Magazine. “on 



pEMn : 
Pee: LERIDGE , 
ace to the birtheplases 
ane he would never Hawe infer red 
thefe lines in his ‘beautiful Monedy— 
- only one that has yet done honour 
the (abject: 
4 F native cot the flafh’d upon th 
« Aj hy Tiative cot, where ftill at cl 
“Peace fmiling fat—and. lift 
= lay. 2? 
The ftreet is as clofe an 

filth¥as any 
» 
sib oe» Boracte. ° 
nee and . Mrs, 
“taught children read, and few... 
When fuch is the e and fuch the. - 
inhabitants 
ten fb dirtily diftinguithed. At that pe- = 









a tallow im this neig! durhoe 
r ng of manure, am = 
le advantages wouldiarife, 
ufelef s  prasiee, 




3n St. Giles’s: there ts a aa {chook 
~ [Sept. h 
Chatterton. herfelf 
we cannot eafily conceive 
EACE fitting in, Pilegitreer. ~ * 
in his drefs, Chatterton had none of 
he careleffnefs by which genius is fo of- 
riod laced cloaths were worn, and he vies 
















fond of appearing in a fhowy fuit. It is 
fiyange that men “of genius fhould fo fre- ‘ 
quently with to render themfeles fin- « — 
guar b sir appearance, either by be-« | 
coming flovens, or, like Chat erton,and . 
Gray, 2 BY affect the op B extreme, 
n fo ¢ md fo com= 









ng man can now be ex- 
te edition of what- 
r under his own na 
t of Rowley, is fill to be defire 
publified pieces are in the ha 
SATCOTT, of Briftol, on w 
Thas_ refieCied a_ celebrity 
would otherwife have fought 
in vain, eith under ground or on the 
top of a churcR-fteeple. Some of thefe 
fhould Di releryer To publith them 
without fubsmitting them to the pruning © 
knife ee to injure ‘ead paeine 
of the author and to infult the dece 
- reader, Some beautitulgifioe ‘ 
yntained in the editions of } ‘ley, +5 
ir. BaRRer s iftory of Br fiol; 
2; pear amid that. dull ‘com. - 
Hon, like a few ftars in a dark night. 
, with the publifhed poems 
Chasreron, and his contributions to 
day, if colleéted 1 into 
life, would, form: an 7 
the public. Sub- — 











ie have been ae ere 
swould 
# 2B A 
a monument; fure 



é Month} ly Magazine. 
isk OF Ho 





/ down hi 
third ode. of os its 
to diffuade fous ed 
“entertaine ranst g the £ 
empite from” Rome to Trop. 
I. It is immediately obviousy 
four firft q ins are wholly - a 
eCted with reft of the poem, and 



; 
-fcent into Pen park-hole, é 
of St. Nicholas § 
: that 
