Page:Thoughts on the Education of Daughters.djvu/170

160 We talk of amuements unbending the mind; o they ought; yet even in the hours of relaxation we are acquiring habits. A mind accutomed to oberve can never be quite idle, and will catch improvement on all occaions. Our puruits and pleaures hould have the ame tendency, and every thing concur to prepare us for a tate of purity and happines. There vice and folly will not poion our pleaures; our faculties will expand, and not mitake their objects; and we hall no longer "ee as through a glas darkly, but know, even as we are known."