Page:Hannah More (1887 Charlotte Mary Yonge British).djvu/73

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE BAS BLEU AND THE BAS BLANC.
61

walk) with any finery of my own invention, and, like other moderns, you will find I have failed only in proportion as I have neglected my model. After all, I wish the work may not be thought too long; but of this he to whose use it is dedicated will be the best judge. His feelings must determine, and that is a decision from which there lies no appeal; for in this case, as in most others, le tact is a surer standard than the rules. I beg your pardon for so tedious a preface to so slight a performance; but the subject has been near my heart as often as I have had the work in hand, and as I expect it will long survive all my other productions, I am desirous to place it in the Pepysian collection, humbly hoping that, though neither defaced nor mutilated, it may be found as useful as many a black-letter manuscript of more recondite learning.

"I am,
"Dear Madam, &c.
"L'Amie des Enfans."

The spring passed, as usual, in sojourns with Mrs. Garrick and Mrs. Kennicott, and in the society of the Bas Bleu ladies, Bishop Porteus, Mr. Pepys, and Dr. Johnson, whose health was fast declining; but Hannah was constant to her regular habit of returning home in time for her sister's holiday, when it was their great delight to spend the day, carrying their provisions with them, on the rocks at Clifton and King's Weston, then