Page:Thoughts on the Education of Daughters.djvu/81

Rh Painfully enible of unkindnes, he is alive to every thing, and many arcams reach her, which were perhaps directed another way. She is alone, hut out from equality and confidence, and the concealed anxiety impairs her contitution; for he mut wear a cheerful face, or be dimied. The being dependant on the caprice of a fellow-creature, though certainly very neceary in this tate of dicipline, is yet a very bitter corrective, which we would fain hrink from.

A teacher at a chool is only a kind of upper ervant, who has more work than the menial ones. A go-