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    From A Parent to a Child

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    FAMILIAR EPISTLE FROM A PARENT TO A CHILD AGED TWO YEARS AND TWO
    MONTHS

    MY CHILD,

    To recount with what trouble I have brought you up--with what an
    anxious eye I have regarded your progress,--how late and how often
    I have sat up at night working for you,--and how many thousand
    letters I have received from, and written to your various relations
    and friends, many of whom have been of a querulous and irritable
    turn,--to dwell on the anxiety and tenderness with which I have (as
    far as I possessed the power) inspected and chosen your food;
    rejecting the indigestible and heavy matter which some injudicious
    but well-meaning old ladies would have had you swallow, and
    retaining only those light and pleasant articles which I deemed
    calculated to keep you free from all gross humours, and to render
    you an agreeable child, and one who might be popular with society
    in general,--to dilate on the steadiness with which I have
    prevented your annoying any company by talking politics--always
    assuring you that you would thank me for it yourself some day when
    you grew older,--to expatiate, in short, upon my own assiduity as a
    parent, is beside my present purpose, though I cannot but
    contemplate your fair appearance--your robust health, and unimpeded
    circulation (which I take to be the great secret of your good
    looks) without the liveliest satisfaction and delight.

    It is a trite observation, and one which, young as you are, I have
    no doubt you have often heard repeated, that we have fallen upon
    strange times, and live in days of constant shiftings and changes.
    I had a melancholy instance of this only a week or two since. I
    was returning from Manchester to London by the Mail Train, when I
    suddenly fell into another train--a mixed train--of reflection,
    occasioned by the dejected and disconsolate demeanour of the Post-
    Office Guard. We were stopping at some station where they take in
    water, when he dismounted slowly from the little box in which he
    sits in ghastly mockery of his old condition with pistol and
    blunderbuss beside him, ready to shoot the first highwayman (or
    railwayman) who shall attempt to stop the horses, which now travel

    (when they travel at all) INSIDE and in a portable stable invented
    for the purpose,--he dismounted, I say, slowly and sadly, from his
    post, and looking mournfully about him as if in dismal recollection
    of the old roadside public-house the blazing fire--the glass of
    foaming ale--the buxom handmaid and admiring hangers-on of tap-room
    and stable, all honoured by his notice; and, retiring a little
    apart, stood leaning against a signal-post, surveying the engine
    with a look of combined affliction and disgust which no words can
    describe. His scarlet coat and golden lace were
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