El lUl— 
F702. a Persian tale, 30r 
society ; and that rewards fheuld be given to parents fos 
the number, health, morals, education, and dustry of 
their children, or be in a certain degree exempied from 
’ taxes on these accounts. 
That rewards fhould be given for a system of educa- 
tion suited to the principles and nature of the govern- 
ment. 
That the direction of industry to healthful and uncor- 
rupting branches of manufacture and trade, ought to oc- 
cupy the attention of the legislative body, and have its: 
due weight in all its deliberations and. laws. 
That in all schools the radical: principles of a free go~ 
vernment ought to be taught and digested in the form of 
a political catechism ; and that punifhments in schools, as 
well as rewards, ought to be inflicted or decreed on the 
same principles, and guided by the same forms, as in the 
state. 
Finally, that no law or institution fhould take place, 
contrary, in its principle or consequence, to the maxims 
and religious philosophy of Him who was the founder of 
the system of love towards God, and general heneveieste 
towards man. 
O what a multitude of thoughts at once, 
Awaken’d, in me swarm, while I consider 
What from within I feel myself, and hear 
What from without comes of.en to my ears, 
Ill sorting with our present state compar’d! 
Tam, dear Sir, with much regard, your faithful hymbie 
servant, AS Ty, 
A PERSIAN TALE. 
A certar rich man of Arabia was sitting down to liis re- 
past, at a plentiful table, when a poor countryman, oppref- 
sed with hunger, unexpectedly arrived from the place. of 
