Page:The Wanderer (1814 Volume 1).pdf/26

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( xxii )

you to be, I thought condemned since your large library, of which I was then the principal librarian, contained only one work of that class[1]: how much deeper must now be my blush,—now, when that spring of existence has so long taken its flight,—transferring, I must hope, its genial vigour upon your grandson[2]!—if the work which I here present to you, may not shew, in the observations which it contains upon various characters, ways, or excentricities of human life, that an exteriour the most frivolous may enwrap illustrations of conduct, that the most rigid preceptor need not deem dangerous to entrust to his pupils; for, if what is inculcated is right, it will not, I trust, be cast aside, merely because so conveyed

  1. Fielding's Amelia.
  2. Alexander Charles Lewis d'Arblar.