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What does she say of the burning of widows in India? What is the law mentioned by Sinbad? What can you say of Lord Bute? Why did they not issue the shilling in Queen Elizabeth's time? What can you say of Henrietta? How came she to her end? What can you say of the Irish jury? Describe Rubens and Lady Jane Douglass' portraits. What of the Lady's law suit? Describe the several portraits.

No. 2. Leisurely, circumnavigate, protected, external, appeared, inscription, concealment, fugitive, religious, heedless, introduction, tightly, allegorical, connected, suspect, unhappy, admirably, produced, appendage, involved, occasionally, deception.

No. 6. Punctuate last verse.

No. 7. Grander and grandeur, pastor and pasture, fault and false, bridle and bridal, relict and relic, concur and conquer, chant and chance, affect and effect, accept and except.

No. 8. § 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 13. § 5.

No. 10. Analyze the first verse. § 1. Note.

No. 12. All the important words in the lesson.

Remark. Let the pupil remember that not the longest words are the most important always.

Part Second.

a Sound of ex? b§ 11. 4. c Sound of vowel? d Why!? e Sound of k? f £60,000 is nearly $3,000,000. g What figure of speech? h Why a comma? k § 26. 1. m Why parading?

No. 1. What can you say of the fig-trees? What was the remark of Bishop Hall? What can you say of the boy that smoked? What was the remark of a Scotchman? What does she say of the expense of tobacco and snuff? What does she say of a certain apothecary? What can you say of the confession of an Opium Eater? What did Coleridge do? What can you say of the flower garden? What can you say of exotics? How many took care of this garden? What can you say of birds? What of her witty remark? What blunder was made? What can you say of the trees on the walks of Mount Stewart? What did she wish she was? Why? The concluding remark?

No. 2. Collect, including, powerful, audible, irregular, luxuriantly, successfully, frightful, excellent, zealous, disagreeably, helpless.

No. 3. E-tar-nal-ly for eter-nel-ly, as-y-lum for a-sy-lum, vir-tu for virt-yue. stun for stone, nei-ther for ne-ther, jined for joined, bust-ing for burst-ing. No. 6. Punctuation omitted in first and last verse; correct them.

No. 7. Colonel and kurnel, purl and pearl, urn and earn, wart and wert, current and courant, goal and gaol, genius and genus, line and loin, beetle, beadle, and beagle.

No. 8. § 3. 6. 7. 8. 9.

No. 10. Let the teacher ask such questions on analyzing sentences as occur to him. It is a very important exercise.

No. 12. All the words in last verse.

LESSON XLI.

A LITTLE GIRL'S LAMENT FOR THE FAIRIES.

1. АH! wherec are all the fairies flown ?a
Why ceased their merry reign ?a
We're all so dull and solemnd grown,
I wish they'd comec again;c

'Mid lawns and bowers, when daylight's done,
Once more to dance and play ;-
There never has been any fun,b
Since fairies went away!

2. You wearyc me,-you tiresome doll !b
You cannot speak or walk ;c

A fairy's wand, my good Miss Poll,b
Would soon have made you talk !b
Then you and I, so merrily,

Had sported all the day:b

But now, oh dear!a that cannot be,
The fairies are away.

3. Now, there are none of them to ask
For water from the well;b

No diamonds now reward the task,
As Mother Goose doth tell;
No toads the naughty lips disgrace,
That say a sulky nay;b

This world is quite a stupid place,

Now fairies are away.

4. We cannot meet them at a spring,
When drawing water out,

For water to our doors we bring,
By leaden pipe or spout.c

One still finds toads; I've seen them crawl
About at close of day;

But diamonds,c-none; they vanish'd all

When fairies went away.

5. There's puss sits purring by the fire,
Or chases mice and rats;

The stupid thing! I do so tire
Of these dull, common cats!
A cleverer one my fancy suits,
Who can do more than play;
But, ah! there is no Puss in Boots,
Since fairies went away.

6. The bean-stalks in our gardens all,n
How widely Jack's outshonec 'em ;
Ours grow so slowly-never tall,—
And nought save beans upon 'em ;
No wealthy giants at the top,-
No gold, no harps to play,-
We'll ne'er see such another crop,
Now fairies are away!

7. And books-and maps-and lessons-ah!
They're fit to bend one double ;
A fairy for one's godmamma,c
Would save one all the trouble.
Quite wise without instruction, she
Could make one in a day;

But now there's no such luck for me!

The fairiest are away.

8. Farewell to fairy finery!

To fairy presents rare;

No slippers made of glass have we,
As Cinderella's were ;-

Nor pumpkin coach-nor coachman ratm

Nor lizard footman gay;

Nor steeds those mice that feared no catm
Now fairies are away.

9. They meet no longer by the light
Of moonbeams 'neatho a tree;
Why! one might walk abroad all night,
And not a fairy see!

One would but catch a cold or fever,
Before the dawn of day;

And these are things that happened never,
Till fairiest went away.

10. Farewell to all the pretty tales,
Ofn merry Elfins' dining

On mushroom tables, in the dales,
Lit by the glow-worm's shining;
And tripping to the minstrel gnat,P
Hisn jocund measure singing,
While o'er their heads the lazy bat,
A silent flight was winging.

11. Farewell like theirs my song is donec
But yet once more I'll say
There never has been any funm
Since fairies went away.

a What inflection? b Give the reason for the punctuation. of the vowel? d Sound of n? n § 45. m § 46. t § 49. 1. this comma? p Sound of g?

No. 2. Tiresome, disgrace, leaden, instruction, slowly.

No. 3. Punk-in for pump-kin.

No. 6. Punctuate last verse.

c Sound

o Why

No. 7. Reign, rein, and rain, muscat and muskcat, either and ether, loath and loathe, marsh and mash, dent and dense, colture and culture, order and ordure, radicle and radical, mettle and metal, rood and rude, least and less, deference and difference, shelling and shilling.

No. 8. With what tone of voice ought verse fifth to be read?

No. 12. All the words in last verse. Look in Dictionary for every word you do not fully understand.

LESSON XLII.

TIME.*

It is of the utmost consequence that we improve our time. "Never," says one, delay till to-morrow, what reason and conscience tell you ought to be performed to-day. To-morrow is not yours, and, though you should live to enjoy it, you

* Let the pupil learn to value time, when he reads, how many great men have valued it.

must not overload it with a burden not its own." "God, (says another,) who is liberal and generous in all other gifts, teaches us, by the wise economy of his Providence, how circumspect we ought to be in the right management of our time; for he never gives us two moments together; he gives us only the second as he takes away the first, and keeps the third in his hands, leaving us in an absolute uncertainty whether he will give it us or not."

2. Grotius used to take for his motto, "Hora ruit," to put himself in continual remembrance, that he should usefully employ that time which was flying away with extreme rapidity; and yet, so great a sense had he of the non-improvement of it, that, with all his learning, when he came to die, he exclaimed, "I have wasted my life in incessant toil, and have done nothing."

3. Dr. Cotton Mather was so careful to redeem his time, that, to prevent the tediousness of visits, he wrote over his study door in capital letters-" BE SHORT."

4. Mr. Henry Jessey, a non-conformist minister, had the following motto put over his study door:

"Whatever friend comes hither,
Dispatch in brief, or go,
Or help me busied too."

5. Titus, the Roman Emperor, throughout the course of his whole life, called himself to an account every night for the actions of the past day; and as often as he found he had slipped any one day without doing good, he entered upon his diary this memorial," Perdidi diem;" I have lost a day. Thus may every man say, who suffers a day to pass without doing something for God, for his soul, or for his fellow creatures.

6. "Take care of the pence, for the pounds will take care of themselves," was a very just and sensible reflection of old Mr. Lounds, the famous Secretary of the Treasury under William III., Anne, and George I. "I therefore recommend to you," says an author, "to take care of minutes, for hours will take care of themselves. Be doing something or other all day long, and not neglect half hours and quarters of hours, which, at the year's end, amount to a great sum."

7. "An Italian philosopher," says Dr. Johnson, "expressed in his motto, that time was his estate; an estate, indeed, which will produce nothing without cultivation, but will always abun

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