Page:Thoughts on the Education of Daughters.djvu/101

Rh one as well as himelf. Univeral benevolence is the firt duty, and we hould be careful not to let any paion o engros our thoughts, as to prevent our practiing it. After all the dreams of rapture, earthly pleaures will not fill the mind, or upport it when they have not the anction of reaon, or are too much depended on. The tumult of paion will ubide, and even the pangs of diappointment ceae to be felt. But for the wicked there is a worm that never dies—a guilty concience. While that calm atisfaction which reignation produces, which cannot be decribed, but