92 Additional Notes. 



the pleasure, which they have afforded to many of our senses : as to 

 our sense of warmth, of touch, of smell, of taste, hunger and thirst; 

 and secondly, which bear any analogy of form to such objects. 



When the babe, soon after it is born into this cold world, is ap- 

 plied to its mother's bosom, its sense of perceiving warmth is first 

 agreeably affected; next its sense of smell is delighted with the odour 

 of her milk; then its taste is gratified by the flavour of it, after- 

 wards the appetites of hunger and of thirst afford pleasure by the pos- 

 session of their objects, and by the subsequent digestion of the ali- 

 ment; and -lastly, the sense of touch is delighted by the softness and 

 smoothness of the milky fountain, the source of such variety of hap- 

 piness. 



