Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: TTiese ftna, vtz fiereea. lada At cn: af d plng V T ij-'n tfc luascrer iH O0di ctft fonng, VTii. iLCie tul rsi, ire -weep dfjarted bBs, And Hope expires w Intea lfi i SSL 'Tie Hard Work to do JVottw; ?When a eMld, or any mb else, is -veil, it k the hardest work in the iratld to do nothing When a child is sitting or lolling about and doing nothing?averse to play?for plav is a child's anx-ation?the chances are that he is poorly, and that his ease requires investigation. To have nothing to do To do nothing God help the child and everyone else that has nothing to do .' They are more to be pitied than the veriest labourer that toils in the fields A labourer does work, is compelled, fortunately for him, to work, and by working fulfils the law of God: In the sweat of thy face shall thon eat bread, till thou return unto the ground.?Genesis iii. 19. 382. To Know that ichieh liefare us Lies in Daily Life is the Prime Wisdom, is the saving of a man?one of the greatest, if not the greatest, England ever produced. To know how to act wisely, how to speak advisedly, and how to fulfil the daily duties?more especially in the training of our children?is the prime wisdom. 383. To Wall- Circumspectly.?How applicable it isto a mother's case that she walk circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise. If such were more general, how many an accident might be prevented; how many a disease might be nipped in the bud; how many a heartache might be spared; how many a tear might he saved from being shed; how many a sting of remorse might be averted; but, alas circumspection, in many a nursery, is frequently not to be found ?all is left to blind chance, and nurses and children are allowed, as they well may, to take care of them- il 384. To Throw a Perfume on the Violet.?Some mo...