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IV. That the conscience should be developed, on the first dawning of reason, and cherished and strengthened, by constant use.

V. That this may be done by a suitable mode of questioning on the reading lessons, and on the occurrences in the school and neighborhood.

VI. That a Daily Record for self-examination, with an appropriate series of questions, would be highly useful. VII. That every school ought to be provided with a Tabular Catalogue of the Virtues and their opposite Vices, with suitable explanations, to which constant reference should be made by the pupils.

VIII. That the teacher ought daily to ask himself, whether he has performed all his duties towards his school.

CHAPTER XIII.

CONCLUSION.

THE following quotation, from Mrs. Austin's Preface to her translation from Cousin's Report on Education in Prussia, forms an appropriate close to the whole subject.

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"It seems to me, that we are guilty of great inconsistency, as to the ends and objects of education. How industriously have not its most able and most zealous champions been continually instilling into the minds of the people, that education is the way to advancement, that 'knowledge is power;' that a man cannot better himself' without some learning! And then we complain, that education will set them above their station, disgust them with labor, make them ambitious, envious, dissatisfied! We must reap as we sow. We set before their eyes objects the most tempting to the desires of the most uncultivated men; we urge them on to the acquirement of knowledge, by holding out the hope that knowledge will enable them to grasp these objects: if their minds are corrupted by the nature of the aim, and embittered by the

failure which must be the lot of the mass, who is to blame?

"If, instead of nurturing expectations which cannot be fulfilled, and turning the mind on a track which must lead to a sense of continual disappointment, and thence of wrong, we were to hold out the appropriate and attainable, nay, unfailing, ends of a good education; the gentle and kindly sympathies; the sense of self-respect, and of the respect of fellow-men; the free exercise of the intellectual faculties; the gratification of a curiosity that grows by what it feeds on,' and yet finds food for ever; the power of regulating the habits and the business of life, so as to extract the greatest possible portion of comfort out of small means; the refining and tranquillizing enjoyment of the beautiful in Nature and art, and the kindred perception of the beauty and nobility of virtue; the strengthening consciousness of duty fulfilled; and, to crown all, the peace that passeth all understanding;' if we directed their aspirations this way, it is probable that we should not have to complain of being disappointed, nor they of having been deceived. Who can say, that wealth can purchase better things than these? and who can say, that they are not within the reach of every man, of sound body and mind, who, by labor not destructive of either, can procure for himself and his family, food, clothing, and habitation ?"

In our country, if a young man take a single step beyond a common English education, it is considered as a matter of course that he is preparing himself for one of what are called the learned professions; as if general knowledge and well-disciplined minds were totally unnecessary for farmers, mechanics, and tradesmen! Go, little book! if thou shouldst succeed, in any degree, in undeceiving the community of this grievous error, in demonstrating the practicability and necessity of a thorough education for all, my time will have been well spent, my labors will have met with an ample reward.

APPENDIX.

LIST OF BOOKS FOR A DISTRICT SCHOOL LIBRARY; AND FOR A LIBRARY FOR AN AGRICULTURAL TOWN, OR A CENTRAL SCHOOL.

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Mrs. Child's Biographical Sketch-|| Weems' Life of Penn.

es.

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66 Marion.

Berquin's Children's Friend, 4|| Parley's Poetic Stories. vols.

Evenings at Home.
Sandford and Merton.

Scott's Tales of a Grandfather, 8
vols.

Miss Sedgwick's New England
Tale.

Illustrations of Lying, by Mrs.
Opie.

Gallaudet's Child's Book on the
Soul.

Gallaudet's Natural Theology.
Constance Latimer, with other

Tales, by Mrs. Embury.

The Palfreys, a Tale.

The Young Emigrants, published
by Carter and Hendee.
Fruit and Flowers.

Cottagers of Glenburnie, by Mrs.
Hamilton.
Rasselas.

Love Token for Children, by Miss
Sedgwick.

Panorama of Professions and
Trades.
Sigourney's Olive Buds.

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Aurelius.

History of Marcus

Dunlap's History of New York.
My Early Days.

Conversations of a Father with his Cook's Voyages.

Children.

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The Robins, by Mrs. Trimmer.
Introduction to the Knowledge of
Nature, by do.

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Chipman's Principles of Govern- || Paul's Letters to his Kinsfolks,

ment.

Marshall on Federal Constitution. Mackintosh on Law of Nature and Nations.

American's Guide, containing all the Constitutions, &c. Dr. Humphrey's Tour, 2 vols. Irving's Tour on the Prairies. 66 Astoria.

66 Sketch Book. Nuttall's Manual of Ornithology. Carpenter's Scripture Natural History.

Ware's Smallie's Philosophy of Natural History.

Smith's Class Book of Anatomy. Bell's Lessons on the Human Frame.

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Philosophy.

The Heavens, by Mudie.

Abbott's Abercrombie on the In- The Earth, by

tellectual Powers.

Abbott's Abercrombie on the Mo

ral Feelings.

do.

Library of Entertaining Knowledge.

The Old Bachelor, 2 vols.

Combe, on the Constitution of The British Spy, 2 vols.

Man.

Mudie, on Man.

Franklin's Works.

Works of Jane Taylor, 3 vols.

Wayland's Elements of Moral || Don Quixote, 4 vols.

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Dick's Works.

Bridgewater Treatises.
Walton's Lives.

Winslow's Young Man's Aid.
Brougham's Discourse on Natural
Theology.

Abbott's Mother at Home.
Neal's Charcoal Sketches.
Sartor Resartus, by Carlyle.
Humboldt's Travels in South
America.

Hall's Voyage to the Eastern
Seas.

Lesslie, Jameson, and Murray's Narrative of Discovery and Adventure in Africa.

Last of the Mohicans.

Irving's Tales of a Traveller.

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Sketch Book.

Brown's Arthur Mervyn.

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Miss Sedgwick's Works.
Mrs. Sigourney's Works.
Henry's Mackenzie's Works.
A Good Gazetteer.

Lavoisne's Atlas of History, &c. Lander's Expedition to the Ni- American Atlas on the plan of La

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