Page:Thoughts on the Education of Daughters.djvu/61

Rh ubject with the novelit; reading, therefore, will often co-operate to make his fair admirers inignificant.

I do not mean to recommend books of an abtracted or grave cat. There are in our language many, in which intruction and amuement are blended; the Adventurer is of this kind; I mention this book on account of its beautiful allegories and affecting tales, and imilar ones may eaily be elected, Reaon trikes mot forcibly when illutrated by the brilliancy of fancy. The entiments which are cattered may be oberved, and when they are relihed, and the