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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. </h2>
<h3> DOMESTIC PLEASURES PLANNED. </h3>
<p>"I THINK, my dear," said Mrs. Temple, laying her hand on her husband's arm
as they were walking together in the garden, "I think next Wednesday is
Charlotte's birth day: now I have formed a little scheme in my own mind,
to give her an agreeable surprise; and if you have no objection, we will
send for her home on that day." Temple pressed his wife's hand in token of
approbation, and she proceeded.—"You know the little alcove at the
bottom of the garden, of which Charlotte is so fond? I have an inclination
to deck this out in a fanciful manner, and invite all her little friends
to partake of a collation of fruit, sweetmeats, and other things suitable
to the general taste of young guests; and to make it more pleasing to
Charlotte, she shall be mistress of the feast, and entertain her visitors
in this alcove. I know she will be delighted; and to complete all, they
shall have some music, and finish with a dance."</p>
<p>"A very fine plan, indeed," said Temple, smiling; "and you really suppose
I will wink at your indulging the girl in this manner? You will quite
spoil her, Lucy; indeed you will."</p>
<p>"She is the only child we have," said Mrs. Temple, the whole tenderness of
a mother adding animation to her fine countenance; but it was withal
tempered so sweetly with the meek affection and submissive duty of the
wife, that as she paused expecting her husband's answer, he gazed at her
tenderly, and found he was unable to refuse her request.</p>
<p>"She is a good girl," said Temple.</p>
<p>"She is, indeed," replied the fond mother exultingly, "a grateful,
affectionate girl; and I am sure will never lose sight of the duty she
owes her parents."</p>
<p>"If she does," said he, "she must forget the example set her by the best
of mothers."</p>
<p>Mrs. Temple could not reply; but the delightful sensation that dilated her
heart sparkled in her intelligent eyes and heightened the vermillion on
her cheeks.</p>
<p>Of all the pleasures of which the human mind is sensible, there is none
equal to that which warms and expands the bosom, when listening to
commendations bestowed on us by a beloved object, and are conscious of
having deserved them.</p>
<p>Ye giddy flutterers in the fantastic round of dissipation, who eagerly
seek pleasure in the lofty dome, rich treat, and midnight revel—tell
me, ye thoughtless daughters of folly, have ye ever found the phantom you
have so long sought with such unremitted assiduity? Has she not always
eluded your grasp, and when you have reached your hand to take the cup she
extends to her deluded votaries, have you not found the long-expected
draught strongly tinctured with the bitter dregs of disappointment? I know
you have: I see it in the wan cheek, sunk eye, and air of chagrin, which
ever mark the children of dissipation. Pleasure is a vain illusion; she
draws you on to a thousand follies, errors, and I may say vices, and then
leaves you to deplore your thoughtless credulity.</p>
<p>Look, my dear friends, at yonder lovely Virgin, arrayed in a white robe
devoid of ornament; behold the meekness of her countenance, the modesty of
her gait; her handmaids are Humility, Filial Piety, Conjugal Affection,
Industry, and Benevolence; her name is CONTENT; she holds in her hand the
cup of true felicity, and when once you have formed an intimate
acquaintance with these her attendants, nay you must admit them as your
bosom friends and chief counsellors, then, whatever may be your situation
in life, the meek eyed Virgin wig immediately take up her abode with you.</p>
<p>Is poverty your portion?—she will lighten your labours, preside at
your frugal board, and watch your quiet slumbers.</p>
<p>Is your state mediocrity?—she will heighten every blessing you
enjoy, by informing you how grateful you should be to that bountiful
Providence who might have placed you in the most abject situation; and, by
teaching you to weigh your blessings against your deserts, show you how
much more you receive than you have a right to expect.</p>
<p>Are you possessed of affluence?—what an inexhaustible fund of
happiness will she lay before you! To relieve the distressed, redress the
injured, in short, to perform all the good works of peace and mercy.</p>
<p>Content, my dear friends, will blunt even the arrows of adversity, so that
they cannot materially harm you. She will dwell in the humblest cottage;
she will attend you even to a prison. Her parent is Religion; her sisters,
Patience and Hope. She will pass with you through life, smoothing the
rough paths and tread to earth those thorns which every one must meet with
as they journey onward to the appointed goal. She will soften the pains of
sickness, continue with you even in the cold gloomy hour of death, and,
cheating you with the smiles of her heaven-born sister, Hope, lead you
triumphant to a blissful eternity.</p>
<p>I confess I have rambled strangely from my story: but what of that? if I
have been so lucky as to find the road to happiness, why should I be such
a niggard as to omit so good an opportunity of pointing out the way to
others. The very basis of true peace of mind is a benevolent wish to see
all the world as happy as one's Self; and from my soul do I pity the
selfish churl, who, remembering the little bickerings of anger, envy, and
fifty other disagreeables to which frail mortality is subject, would wish
to revenge the affront which pride whispers him he has received. For my
own part, I can safely declare, there is not a human being in the
universe, whose prosperity I should not rejoice in, and to whose happiness
I would not contribute to the utmost limit of my power: and may my
offences be no more remembered in the day of general retribution, than as
from my soul I forgive every offence or injury received from a fellow
creature.</p>
<p>Merciful heaven! who would exchange the rapture of such a reflexion for
all the gaudy tinsel which the world calls pleasure!</p>
<p>But to return.—Content dwelt in Mrs. Temple's bosom, and spread a
charming animation over her countenance, as her husband led her in, to lay
the plan she had formed (for the celebration of Charlotte's birth day,)
before Mr. Eldridge.</p>
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