V. TO GR6VE-HILL. 



engendered in society by pride, ambition, 

 and all the other baneful passions of man, with 

 what delight do we contemplate those tran- 

 quil and happy days, when the warbling of 

 a bird, the noise of a distant waterfall, or 

 the sighing of the breeze as it swept in gen- 

 tle murmurs through the foliage, excited in 

 the mind emotions of the most rapturous 

 d'elight! 



The relationship by which children of 

 the same family are connected together, af- 

 fords a not less inexhaustible source of en- 

 joyment than parental and filial lore. Even 

 the different aes of children endear them 



o 



still more to each other. The eldest delights 



o 



in imparting to the youngest the knowledge 

 he has acquired. He regulates their sports,' 

 and excites their emulation, without abating 

 their conn; o-e. 



o 



if the various ap-es O f children contribute 



o 



to their pleasures and improvement, so the 

 difference of sex bestows an innocent charm 

 on the affection of brothers and sisters,' 



-which 



