True happiness resides in things unseen Oh the dark days of vanity while here Father of light and life Thou good supreme With knowledge conscious peace and virtue pure If I am right thy grace impart Still in the right to stay If I am wrong O teach my heart Save me alike from foolish pride At aught thy wisdom has denied O lost to virtue lost to manly thought Communion sweet communion large and high Benevolence. God loves from whole to parts but human soul ་ Happiness. Know then this truth enough for man to know The only point where human bliss stands still And but more relish d as the more distress d d Less pleasing far than virtue s very tears Gratitude. When all thy mercies O my God In wonder love and praise Oh how shall works with equal warmth The gratitude declare That glows within my ravish d heart Thy providence my life sustain d To all my weak complaints and cries Ere yet my feeble thoughts had learnt Unnumber d comforts to my soul From whom those comforts flow d When in the slipp ry paths of youth Thine arm unseen convey d me safe Through hidden dangers toils and death And through the pleasing snares of vice When worn with sickness oft hast thou Thy bounteous hand with worldly bliss Ten thousand thousand precious gifts Through ev ry period of my life And after death in distant worlds When nature fails and day and night Through all eternity to thee For O eternity s too short To utter all thy praise The Voyage of Life. Self-flatter d unexperienc d high in hope When young with sanguine cheer and streamers gay We cut our cable launch into the world And fondly dream each wind and star our friend All in some darling enterprise embark d But where is he can fathom its event Amid a multitude of artless hands Ruins sure perquisite her lawful prize Some steer aright but the black blast blows hard O er them and o er their names the billows close Like a flag floating when the bark s ingulf d With swelling sails make good the promis d port PART V. EXERCISES TO PROMOTE PERSPICUOUS AND ACCURATE WRITING. FIRST, With respect to single words and phrases. CHAPTER I. Containing violations of the Rules of PURITY. See Vol. I. p. 294, and the Key, Part 5. Chap. 1. WE should be employed dailily in doing good. I wot not who has done this thing. He is no way thy inferior; and, in this instance, is no ways to blame. The assistance was welcome, and timelily afforded. For want of employment, he stroamed idly about the fields. We ought to live soberly, righteously, and godlily in the world. He was long indisposed, and at length died of the hyp. That word follows the general rule, and takes the penult accent. He was an extra genius, and attracted much attention. The hauteur of Florio was very disgracious, and disgusted both bis friends and strangers. He charged me with want of resolution, in the which he was greatly mistaken. They have manifested great candidness in all the transac |